There’s something mischievous about the tinkling laugh that punctuates Shiqing Deng’s otherwise demure demeanor. Her work has a similar quality— it is one thing on the surface but there are layers of information, innuendo and, yes, humor—coursing beneath it. Although she claims her work is not meant to be serious or a form of social commentary, decoding the symbolism insists otherwise.
Deng, whose friends call her “Demo, ”is the recipient of the 2023 Bennett Prize, the largest prize offered solely to women figurative realist painters. She will be awarded $50,000, giving her the opportunity to spend the next two years creating new work in the figurative realist style for a solo exhibition that will ultimately travel the country. She plans to use the funds to help with rent for her Brooklyn studio, art supplies and realize her desire to make more ambitious work—even larger, more experimental—and, though she hesitates to share, assist with the expensive process of securing a Visa. Not only will the Bennett Prize mitigate legal fees, but it also strengthens her credibility as an applicant.
Born in Xi’an, China, Deng earned her bachelor’s degree in fine art in Beijing at the prestigious China Central Academy of Fine Art. The school had a connection with New York Academy of Art and in 2016 she decided to apply for their MFA program. The school appealed to Deng because its focus was more traditional and on the figurative, rather than many art schools in New York City which lean contemporary and conceptual. She was also looking to get out of Beijing, because of the pollution and because most artists painted in the same style—“So much so that if you covered the signature you wouldn’t know whose work was whose,” says Deng.
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Esta historia es de la edición August 2023 de American Art Collector.
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Dream-like Aura
There is something simultaneously haunting and beautiful about the paintings of Stephen Mackey.
Through the Mirror
It’s been said that art is a mirror for the person looking into it. The viewer sees themselves. Even when the subject doesn’t look like them, or is even human, or is even living. Artists may be painting very specific things from their own being, but the viewer can instantly rewire that to fit their lives with just one glance.
Epic Proportions
Grrowing up on a farm in West Texas, Michael Tole was perusing his family's 1956 Collier's Encyclopedia when the color plates of Baroque paintings caught his attention. Today, he paints inventive Baroque and Rococo figurative extravaganzas that look like they could be part of a Renaissance art collection.
Roadside America
This January, Altamira Fine Art will be hosting a solo exhibition for Scottsdale, Arizona-based artist Geoffrey Gersten.
Close to Home
For Spencer Simmons, 2018 was a milestone year. Only 24 at the time and a few years after earning a fine art degree from Arizona State University, Simmons won the Donald Jurney Traveling Fellowship which enabled him to paint and study in Europe for several months.
CASEY CHALEM ANDERSON A Love for the Land
New England artist Casey Chalem Anderson is captivated by the idea of place.
Face to Face
For well over a month, 33 Contemporary Gallery, in collaboration with 33PA, is hosting a group show at its Palm Beach County, Florida, showroom, that explores modern approaches to the timeless genre of portraiture. Opening January 9 with a reception from 6 to 8 p.m., and running through February 28, the show will feature 12-by-12-inch portraits by talented members of the PoetsArtists community. For those who can't attend in person, the exhibition will also be online on Artsy for its duration.
Fresh Energy
Art Palm Beach returns to Florida with a diverse range of contemporary art.
A Historic Tradition
Salmagundi Club presents the 148th annual exhibition of works in black and white.
B.C. NOWLIN & SHARI LYON Skyward
C. Nowlin is, and always has been, unapologetically true to himself. In high school, he got kicked out of art class because he insisted on painting burning buses to illustrate a school field trip.