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ArtBabble launched in beta mode January 24, 2009. Now on April 7, it enters the next phases of its life, with new tweaks, lots of new videos, and the arrival new museums and organizations to offer direct connections to artists, museums and the art world. ArtBabble is still growing and it's just the beginning. Babble On.
Welcome to artbabble.org, the online destination for art video content. ArtBabble is designed for anyone interested in art, regardless of background.
Artists interviews, documentaries, engaging talks, and exhibition videos are provided by a variety of arts organizations.
Access quality content immediately through our series, channels, artists, partners, or by search.
Many of the videos come with transcriptions, and close captioning, and available in HD. There are also many other ways of discovering great art content.
Use the share feature to embed a video to your blog or show your friends on Facebook. Download in high quality to your computer or ipod, and viewers can leave comments or questions even at specific points in the video.
ArtBabble supports deeper exploration and new learning opportunities with the notes feature. You can access additional info related to a video in this area.
Visit a Flickr group, check out a book on amazon, dive into a blog post, or discover another related video on ArtBabble.
Welcome to ArtBabble. Continue your exploration and discover new stories about art. It's just the beginning. Babble on!
lovely
This is a public art project with recently arrived immigrants in Mpls.
Please click and watch, and look for our interactive public art launch soon!
i know right
i reaLLY LIKE YOUR Art and they are nice looking
Its me!
Who's that narrator? Great voice.
I like Art Babble! Great idea.
Frankie Roberto
(posted from the Davies Lab)
Thanks Konrad Marshall for your recent article that led me to this new and fresh website from IMA. Also, thanks again Konrad for your insightful article on my current exhibition at the Athenaeum Theatre in beautiful downtown Indianapolis.
Indy artists: Steven Kelso's soul search on canvas
April 01, 2009 by Konrad.Marshall | Staff
Exhibit features large-scale works with religious themes
You can’t help but think of Salvador Dali when you meet Steven Kelso. There’s the mustache, sure. But also that rollicking mind that can’t help but leap from one seemingly tangential non sequitur to the next.
There’s a childish glee to the way Kelso carries himself, then you see his work, hanging on the high walls of the lobby outside the former home of American Cabaret Theatre. The cavernous space of the Atheneum building is perfect for his lucid large-scale paintings, which plumb religious themes and plop them down inside a topsy-turvy world on canvas.
A member of the non-denominational Indy Metro Church, Kelso has been painting for decades, but this weekend kicks off his first major show Downtown in 10 years. He said he wanted to create his own personal Musee du Louvre with the exhibition by presenting the works salon-style, as a conglomeration of perspectives — from apocalyptic and dark to celebratory and illuminated to psychological and hyper-personal.
On one canvas, he brings to mind Chuck Close. On the next, Alfons Mucha. And all the major players are here, from Madonna with child to Jesus to the devil and the four horsemen of the apocalypse.
“I was called early to paint this type of subject matter,” Kelso said. “Kind of like good versus evil in the spiritual realm.”
Windows of the Soul: The Anthology
What: Large-scale art works by Steven Kelso, hosted by Athenaeum Foundation
Where: Athenaeum Theatre, 401 E. Michigan St.
Great. I hope to see european museums in the future (mainly France and Great Britain).
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