Tag Archives: painting

Hate It Or Love It: This Breezy’s New Album Cover

Here’s what Chris Brown and two other brains came up with for the cover of his new album F.A.M.E., due out at the end of next month. In the background, behind Chris’ giant dome is a mural he worked on with graffiti artist Kid Zoom and painter Ron English. And if you notice, even though the album’s acronym of a name now stands for “Fans Are My Everything,” you can still see the title’s old meaning “Forgiving All My Enemies” all over the mural. Also included in the visual: a little kid at war, a boxing baby, and a newborn in a HAZMAT suit? Are you feeling it?

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Hate It Or Love It: This Breezy’s New Album Cover

The Week in Animal News: Chimp Paints Masterpieces, We Eat Less Meat, and More (Slideshow)

Photo: Christian Rabeling Jimmy the chimp loves painting — and he’s darn good at it. Find this amazing story — plus a look at the new species discovered in 2010, the effect of media coverage on factory farming, how humans are causing shark attacks, and more in the Week in Animal News. … Read the full story on TreeHugger

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The Week in Animal News: Chimp Paints Masterpieces, We Eat Less Meat, and More (Slideshow)

MTV Launches Music Meter Artist-Ranking Service

New chart will track the popularity of new acts via social media buzz. By Gil Kaufman The MTV Music Meter Photo: MTV If you just went by the traditional music charts, you’d think that Susan Boyle is the hottest things since Willow Smith. But in many senses, you’d be wrong. On blogs, Twitter, YouTube and other social media sites, you’re not likely to see people posting viral spoofs of Boyle’s videos (does she even have any?) or tweeting about her latest red-carpet appearance (does she make any?). But with the launch of Music Meter on Tuesday (December 14), MTV is aiming to provide a new chart that gauges which artists are truly capturing the imagination of wired fans right now. Instead of relying solely on conventional metrics such as CD sales or radio play, the Music Meter ranks the top 100 artists based on their social media buzz, streams on video sites, and radio and sales data, providing a real-time portrait of up-and-coming and talked-about artists. Each listed artist is featured in a widget-like box with a drop-down menu that offers links to preview and purchase songs, as well as tabs with videos, photos, tweets, news stories and a bio. There’s also a “similar” button that will help users find other artists they might like based on those that have ranked on the chart. “We have a long history at MTV of locking arms with artists in the beginning of their careers and providing them with an opportunity to grow their audience base,” says MTV spokesperson Kurt Patat. “And you have lots of chances to discover music by Lady Gaga and Justin Bieber, so when we were thinking about what we wanted the Music Meter to be, we thought of it as a discovery tool people can come to and find new music.” Unlike the recently launched “Ultimate Chart,” a similar digital-media-fueled site from analytics company Big Champagne, or Billboard magazine’s new “Social 50” tally, which ranks the most-active artists on social-networking sites, MTV’s Music Meter isn’t topped by such usual suspects as Rihanna, the Black Eyed Peas and Bieber. So, despite their viral strength, you won’t find many of those chart kings and queens at the top of the Music Meter (though you can search for them if you want and get all the same details). Instead, it’s an eclectic mix of acts known and lesser known — country, pop, hip-hop and world music — whose sounds people are digging at this moment. On Tuesday (December 14) morning, the list was topped by “Cooler Than Me” singer Mike Posner , followed by hard rockers My Darkest Days , country singer Easton Corbin , rapper Waka Flocka Flame , new wave revivalists Neon Trees , country gal Sunny Sweeney , R&B singer Jazmine Sullivan , reality-TV singer Jackie Evancho , superduo x and San Francisco indie rockers Girls. Further down the chart you will find everyone from up-and-coming rockers the Ready Set (#12) and singer-songwriter Matt White (#19) to rapper Yelawolf (#14) and Romanian singer Edward Maya (#27). And that’s the point, according to Patat. If the big stars were included, Music Meter would hardly change from day to day. This way, music fans can get exposed to a universe of acts that they may have never heard of or seen before and expand their horizons. The website will officially launch in March, but the beta site is up now. Patat says it’s the first of several exciting music products MTV plans to roll out over the next year. “MTV has played the role of curator for a long time and with so much music out there and everyone having access to thousands of songs, sometimes it’s hard to know what to listen to,” he explains. “So we’re giving you what the world is saying is cool and allowing you to discover much more from there.” What’s your opinion on MTV’s Music Meter chart? Share your thoughts in the comments.

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MTV Launches Music Meter Artist-Ranking Service

Michael Jackson Album-Cover Artist Explains Hidden Meanings In His Work

Kadir Nelson leads MTV News through his tribute to the King of Pop. By James Montgomery Kadir Nelson Photo: MTV News It is a testament to the legendary life of Michael Jackson that no matter how big a canvas artist Kadir Nelson used to tell MJ’s story — and at 9 feet wide and 4.5 feet tall, he used a pretty big one — he kept running out of room. It seems that Jackson’s reign as the King of Pop was just too lengthy, his list of achievements too large and his life too all-encompassing to be summed up in even the most massive of murals. “Michael’s life was so huge I couldn’t get it all into the painting,” Nelson told MTV News. “So I would take images from throughout his life that were milestones … images that would resonate with his fans. And even doing that was a challenge.” Still, Nelson gave it his best effort, and the result was “The King of Pop,” his epic tribute to Jackson’s life, which struck such a chord with the late icon’s estate (and his label, Sony Music) that it was chosen as the cover for the upcoming Michael album . But what fans see on that album is just a fraction of Nelson’s original work. ” ‘The King of Pop’ is the life story of Michael Jackson, so what you see on the album cover is the centerpiece of the mural; Michael is wearing his famous bejeweled glove, and he’s wearing a golden suit of armor, and he has this collar around his neck, like what you would see in a French painting of King Philip,” Nelson explained. “The theme for this painting is ‘royalty’ and ‘pop,’ because Michael was the King of Pop. So you have Michael being crowned by two Cupids, he has his birthstones in his crown. He’s wearing a soft, velvet drapery over his armor, because Michael had a very soft heart. Also, his hand is placed over his heart, because he had a big heart, and he put that big heart into everything he did.” And radiating from that royal image is Jackson’s life story, which begins with images of his childhood in Gary, Indiana, extends upward to a gallery of his musical influences (Barry Gordy, Diana Ross, Smokey Robinson and Marvin Gaye, to name just a few), and then explodes with the launch of his solo career, starting with his star-making turn at the “Motown 25” television special (where he unveiled his “moonwalk” dance) and rolling right along to his Thriller heyday. There are also portions of the painting dedicated to his Bad, Dangerous and HIStory albums, images of his children, the omnipresent media that followed him everywhere, and the women he shared close relationships with (Liz Taylor, Lisa Marie Presley and Madonna). There are also, as Nelson explained, coded images hidden throughout the painting, everything from bubbles (blown by his pet chimpanzee, of course), an apple (because, as the painter explained, “kids would call [Jackson] ‘Applehead’ on his Neverland Ranch”), Peter Pan soaring off into the Northern Lights (meant to symbolize Jackson’s ascension after his death) and, perhaps the most striking image of all, a golden throne atop a mountain: Jackson’s throne, never to be occupied again. “It’s empty,” Nelson explained, “Because no one will ever sit in it now that he’s gone.” What do you think of the Michael cover? Share your thoughts in the comments! Related Photos Michael Jackson’s ‘Michael’ Cover Decoded Related Artists Michael Jackson

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Michael Jackson Album-Cover Artist Explains Hidden Meanings In His Work

Michael Jackson Asked Album-Cover Artist To Paint Him Before He Died

Kadir Nelson only spoke to Jackson once before the singer’s death. By Gil Kaufman Kadir Nelson Photo: MTV News When it came to putting together Michael, the first posthumous album of material from late King of Pop Michael Jackson, everyone was working with half a playbook. The producers of the singer’s first studio album since 2001 had to figure out what the notoriously detail-oriented Jackson would want them to do with the grab bag of songs he was working on at the time of his death. Even the artist behind the album’s iconic cover, a Renaissance-painting-like mash-up of iconic images from throughout Jackson’s career, was forced to go on his understanding of what Michael would have approved of. That artist, Kadir Nelson, sat down with MTV News last week to walk us through the thicket of images on the cover and explain how he came to create the visual summary of the pop icon’s solo career. Nelson said the ball started rolling in 2003, when Michael was working on songs for his Number Ones collection at Marvin’s Room, the legendary Los Angeles recording studio founded by R&B great Marvin Gaye in 1975. Jackson saw a pair of paintings Nelson had made chronicling Gaye’s life and fell in love with the images. “As a result of seeing it, he called me one afternoon and he said, ‘I really like your Marvin Gaye painting … I want one, about me … but I want it bigger.’ Because Michael liked things to be big,” Nelson said. But, as with so many projects begun by Jackson, after Nelson followed the singer’s advice and read the autobiography “Moonwalker” and did some research on the painting that was to hang in Michael’s home, other things came up and the project fell through the cracks. Then, following Jackson’s death in June 2009, his longtime friend and now estate co-executor John McClain rang Nelson up and said the gig was back on. “[He said], ‘It’s time for you to do that painting that Michael wanted you to do,’ ” Nelson recalled. ” ‘Don’t ask any questions, just do the painting and we’ll figure out what to do with it later.’ ” The resulting image plays into Jackson’s lifelong belief that bigger is better, with a regal Michael staring out in the central image while wearing a prince’s Victorian blouse with a high, ruffled collar, a silver-gloved hand placed over his heart and a jewel-encrusted crown hovering over his head. Around that central image are painted nods to everything from such classic videos as “Beat It” and “Thriller” and a spaceship from one of his favorite movies, “E.T.” and MTV’s Moonman, a reference to the fact that Jackson’s videos helped make the channel the force it is today. The sadness of Jackson’s death made Nelson a bit hesitant at first, but he said he realized he was getting a rare second chance to follow through on the abandoned project, so he was quick to say yes. “I did it because I felt that it would be a very important document … and a tribute to Michael’s life,” he said of the finished work, titled “The King of Pop.” He described it as a “panoramic celebration of Michael’s life, music and career” and said he strode to make it as perfect as possible to match the level of perfection Jackson insisted on in his music and art. “I felt that I owed it to him, to his family, to his fans, to do the best job possible.” Though Nelson only spoke to Jackson that one time in 2003 over the phone, he worked with the singer’s brother, Jackie Jackson, on the image over a five month period at the studio where the Michael album was being completed and said that Jackie gave some insight into his sibling’s thoughts. When the final image was produced, MJ’s brothers Jackie and Marlon Jackson and McClain gave it a thumbs-up and said he did a good job. Like the video for the first single, the Mark Pellington-directed “Hold My Hand,” it’s an artistic leap that attempts to tap into Jackson’s elusive magic, but Nelson feels like he succeeded. He considers the final product — his biggest-ever canvas at more than 9 feet wide by 4.5 feet tall — his Sistine Chapel. And like Michelangelo’s signature work, Nelson labored long and hard on the painting, putting hours in from August 2009 until January 2010 and then again on and off until October. What do you think of the finished product? Share your reviews in the comments! Related Photos Michael Jackson’s ‘Michael’ Cover Decoded Related Artists Michael Jackson

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Michael Jackson Asked Album-Cover Artist To Paint Him Before He Died

"Car-Free" Painting is Sure to Make Cyclists Smile

Painting by Kiuchi Tatsuro , used with permission. Cyclists Can Dream, Can’t They? TreeHugger reader Cynthia D. sent me this painting by Tatsuro Kiuchi, and I immediately loved it. The style is very interesting – it reminds me a bit of some old European comic books I found in my aunt’s basement when I was young – but what makes this worth posting on TreeHugger is the nice inversion. Cyclists in the main lanes, and a separate lane on the side of the road with decals for cars. It’s not something we’re likely to see in the near future, but… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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"Car-Free" Painting is Sure to Make Cyclists Smile

M. Night Shyamalan Explains Origins Of ‘Devil’

‘Night Chronicles’ trilogy is a world where the ‘worst things happen,’ director tells MTV News. By Josh Horowitz M. Night Shyamalan Photo: MTV News M. Night Shyamalan is not letting the rather mixed reviews for “The Last Airbender” darken his easygoing spirit or dampen his creative verve. Late last month, as “Airbender” continued to rake in dough overseas, Shyamalan sat down with MTV News to chat about his upcoming “Devil,” which follows five strangers trapped in an elevator — one of whom just might be the Prince of Darkness. The film is the first in his planned “Night Chronicles” trilogy, a series based on his original ideas and helmed by other directors, and Shyamalan seems to relish the idea of getting out of the director’s chair and into the role of producer, a job he likened to being the goalie on a hockey team.

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M. Night Shyamalan Explains Origins Of ‘Devil’

MLK Sculptor also Painted Glenn Beck in Manure

A lot of liberals think Glenn Beck is full of, well, manure, but one artist Michael Murphy has taken it further than most. He did a picture of Beck using manure instead of paint. And now, anti-Beck demonstrators have hired Murphy to create a sculpture … honoring Martin Luther King Jr. The Washington Post  reported  Aug. 17 that Murphy will unveil “The People’s Memorial to King” in Washington, D.C., on Aug 28, the anniversary of King’s “I Have a Dream” speech. Conservative television and radio host Glenn Beck is scheduled to host a rally that day at the Lincoln Memorial, where King delivered his speech in 1963. The sculpture unveiling is part of a counter-demonstration called “Celebrate the Dream,” which the Post described as “a grass-roots network of artists, community organizers and social activists.” But the Post’s report ignored an intriguing link between the conservative activist and liberal artist: Murphy’s 2009 portrait of Beck, which used “bull manure” as paint. Politico  reported  on Murphy’s painting in September 2009. On his  website , Murphy described the painting as “bull manure and pigment on canvas.” “Murphy, who specializes in large-scale public art installations, said his vision was to create a sculpture that would convey the ideal of ‘unification and bringing people together,'” the Post said of the King sculpture. “Murphy describes the piece as a ‘directional’ sculpture ‘that has four specific vantage points. … If you were to stray from the ideal point of view, the message gets lost,’ Murphy said.” Like this article? Sign up for “Culture Links,” CMI’s weekly e-mail newsletter, by  clicking   here.

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MLK Sculptor also Painted Glenn Beck in Manure

Kanye West’s ‘Power’ Video Should Be ‘Provocative,’ Director Says

‘It kind of leaves you with the feeling that something’s about to happen,’ Marco Brambilla tells MTV News of 90-second clip. By Steven Roberts Kanye West Photo: MTV News Kanye West’s “Power” video , which premieres Thursday (August 5) at 11 p.m. on MTV, is a collaboration between the Louis Vuitton Don and artist Marco Brambilla . When MTV News caught up with the director Wednesday afternoon, he said he and West attempted to paint a portrait of power in the clip. “There’s a lyric in the song — ‘No one man should have this much power’ — so the video kind of answers its own question,” Brambilla said. “It poses the question: ‘What does power and access look like?’ And then: ‘How delicate is it to preserve that moment of time?’ ” Brambilla said they wanted to take a contemporary look at the idea of someone being immortal then becoming mortal, and show it in a way that would connect to art history. He used the Sistine Chapel as a reference point, including a Michelangelo fresco that comes to life. West is the central figure of the piece and represents “power.” Brambilla said West has gone through a tumultuous past year, as expressed in the lyrics of “Power,” and is in a moment of transition. For the video, Brambilla used the photo-montage style of his “Civilization” video installation, which is what caused West to seek out the artist in the first place. “I shot images of the casting, people who came in as dancers and models and actresses in the various poses, and then it was put together as a photograph originally,” Brambilla said. “We had very little time to shoot it. We only had a day to shoot, it so I basically know exactly how each element would look, where each element would go and how the whole piece would choreograph, because there’s about 24 layers of video in the piece, and they are all interconnected. So it’s almost like a visual ballet in a way, and it had to be pre-planned in a very specific way to make it cohesive and to make it work. That was the most challenging part of it: how to [translate] it from a still, a painting, and then make the painting come alive into the filming and the photography.” Amazingly enough, Brambilla was able to accomplish this in a minute and a half. The “Power” clip might only be 90 seconds, but Brambilla said that wasn’t the plan going in. “I made it very clear at the beginning that I wasn’t really interested if it was going to be a music video,” he said. “I wanted to do something which was more like a visual accompaniment to the track, and so it didn’t really need to be any specific length and it didn’t really need to be the whole song. It needed to kind of introduce the song in a different way and a fresh way, and I came with this continuous shot with no cuts, no lip sync, and the minute, minute and a half just … seemed like the perfect amount of time to show a video portrait. “It didn’t answer all the questions,” he added. “It just becomes more provocative and a little bit more tense at the end, because it cuts away just before the action within it resolves itself, so it kind of leaves you with the feeling that something’s about to happen.” Don’t forget to tune in to MTV tonight at 11 p.m. ET/PT for the premiere of Kanye’s “Power” video and check MTVNews.com for full coverage of the clip. Related Videos Kanye West Flashbacks Related Photos The Inspiration For Kanye West’ ‘Power’ Video Related Artists Kanye West

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Kanye West’s ‘Power’ Video Should Be ‘Provocative,’ Director Says

Would You Spend $200,000 on This Seven-Year-Old’s Paintings? [Overachievers]

Meet Kieron Williamson , a seven-year-old kid from Norfolk, England. Like a lot of kids, Kieron likes to paint—landscapes, mostly, using watercolors. The only difference is, Kieron just sold 33 of his paintings—for a total of $200,000. More