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Family Crafts Its Heritage in Art Supplies Business

Renek Gaszewski:

Renek Gaszewski Fine Art Nude ModelsThe atmosphere in Continental Art Supplies is electric with possibilities.
As students from CSUN and others browse through the Reseda shop, they see more than brushes and paints and acid-free watercolor pads. Like chefs, they know these raw materials can be turned into wonders — works of the imagination that may outlive their creators. As a young man with an armful of supplies says while waiting to pay: “Happiness is a blank canvas.” Read the rest of this entry »

Family Crafts Its Heritage in Art Supplies Business

The atmosphere in Continental Art Supplies is electric with possibilities.
As students from CSUN and others browse through the Reseda shop, they see more than brushes and paints and acid-free watercolor pads. Like chefs, they know these raw materials can be turned into wonders — works of the imagination that may outlive their creators. As a young man with an armful of supplies says while waiting to pay: “Happiness is a blank canvas.”
Continental, the first independent art-supplies shop in the West Valley, will celebrate its 40th anniversary Sept. 9. Today it is managed by 44-year-old Steve Aufhauser, who took over the family business in 1982, after his 29-year-old brother Larry died in a scuba-diving accident.
But Continental was started by Steve’s parents, Robert and Greta Aufhauser. Heir to a family bank in Munich in the 1930s, Robert sensed there was no future for a Jew in Germany and fled first to Belgium, then to England, where he worked for British intelligence during World War II. In 1947, he fell in love at first sight with Greta, a young artist who had waited out the war in her native Amsterdam.
The Aufhausers married and moved to Los Angeles and, once they were established, decided to go into business for themselves. The family legend is that Greta was reading The Times classifieds one Sunday when she saw that an art supplies store was up for sale. Robert’s response was: “Oh, look, Ringling Bros. is looking for a tightrope walker.”
“I don’t know the first thing about being a tightrope walker,” Greta said.
“I don’t know the first thing about selling art supplies,” Robert countered.
Robert never enjoyed banking, but he knew business. Greta, a painter and educator who caused a major stir when she introduced nude models to her adult education classes in 1949, knew what artists needed and was able to make suggestions about what to stock. Robert jokes that they founded the store “as a cheap way for her to get art supplies.”
The Aufhausers were living on the Westside when they started their business, a small store up the street from the current shop at 7041 Reseda Blvd.
“To make a living in art supplies, you have to have colleges and industry,” Robert explains. “In the West Valley, there was no competition. That’s why I moved out here.”
Today the business still depends on a steady stream of art students from CSUN, Valley, Pierce, Moorpark and other local colleges. “We try to be an extension of the learning process,” says Steve, who works closely with the art faculties and sometimes lectures on such topics as the toxicity of various materials.
But the store also attracts people who have discovered an inner artist — one who suddenly wants to paint or do collage with surprising urgency. The top floor of the shop is filled with handmade and other specialty papers, and there you see customers lovingly running their hands over the samples. You can almost see their finished projects in their eyes.
In addition to students, Steve says, the typical customer “is a 54-year-old housewife with children out of the house.” He also sees lots of professional artists who work all day with computers (in animation, for example) and who come in because they still feel the need to create the old-fashioned way on nights and weekends.
How does a family art-supply store survive in a world of art-supply chains? Steve tries to offer something extra, like an extensive collection of books that both teach technique and pique the imagination. The shop also expects its clerks to give customers informed advice as well as ring up their purchases. And Steve tracks customers’ purchases and makes sure that the oil painters aren’t inundated with ads that only a water colorist would be interested in. “Nobody wants to get junk mail,” he says.
In addition, Steve and four of his fellow independents formed a buying cooperative almost three years ago. Calling itself I AM ART, the group now has 12 members nationwide. The cooperative has nothing like the power of the giant chains, which can even influence which art-related products are manufactured. But 12 retailers have more clout than one, and the group is able to negotiate deals with suppliers that make some discounting possible.
The cooperative is also able to support small suppliers who make what the members see as superior products. For Steve, one of the things that makes art and art supplies interesting and “cool” are all the unusual niche products that allow a person to be uniquely creative.
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He gives as an example the artist-quality paints produced by the M. Graham Co. This tiny firm consists, Steve says, “of six people in the woods of Oregon dancing around caldrons of color.” The cooperative not only boosts the firm’s income, it reinforces the company’s vision of making the highest quality paints in ways that protect the environment.
Steve gets excited when he talks about new galleries, such as Northridge’s VIVA, coming to the Valley. Artists need to have places where their work can be displayed, and the public needs to be exposed to art, he says. “In the San Fernando Valley there should be more than one arts district,” he argues. “Maybe it will be Canoga Park, maybe it will be Reseda.”
Since Steve is a person who waxes eloquent about natural willow charcoal and tubes of the highest quality gouache, you have to wonder what medium he chooses to express his own creativity.
He grins and confesses: “I cook.”

Naked truth of art volunteers

In their hundreds, they line up to take off their clothes - all in the name of art.
In the latest of a series of what one might call strip-art” ventures, about 500 volunteers undressed on a cold and wet Sunday for an installation by New York-born artist Spencer Tunick.
A mostly young crowd posed on escalators at London’s Selfridges department store as well as in various parts of the store before the shop opened to the public.
Earlier this month, 160 volunteers took part in a “nude happening” run by the same artist to launch London’s Saatchi Gallery.
Tunick has held similar naked installations at outdoor venues in Montreal, Canada, and Sao Paolo, Brazil - attracting thousands of participants.
And the clearly willing participation of several hundred Britons in his UK installations is just one example of a trend that is putting paid to the image of the famous British, erm, stiff upper lip - despite the country’s off-putting weather.
Of course, the idea of stripping naked for art is hardly new, as many an art class life model can testify.
But mass nudity has become quite the fashion.
In February, 240 volunteers aged five to 95 agreed to be wrapped in cling film to allow plaster casts to be made of their bodies for an exhibition by sculptor Antony Gormley.
Their figures will form Gormley’s latest exhibition, Domain Field, which opens at the Baltic Arts Centre in Gateshead in May.
One of the volunteers, Paul O’Neill, said he was surprised at how normal the experience felt.
He said: “I had my doubts about whether I could go through with it but there was a definite moment of no return.
“Once I had passed it I had a wonderful - if slightly surreal - afternoon.”
Fellow volunteer Davie Hay said: “I found the experience very interesting, humorous, humbling, calming and something that I’m proud to have taken part in.”
Peter Wilson said he wanted the opportunity to take part in a large art project.
“I was hooked to the idea straight away and applied instantly,” he said.
“The casting itself was unusual, but a thoroughly relaxing and enjoyable experience.”
Tunick is becoming famous around the world for his series of installations photographing nude crowds in urban landscapes.
Bodies are composed into sculptural shapes and bizarre formations to feature on buildings, streets and cityscapes.
Mike Grenville, 53, who took part in the Saatchi event, said it had been a relaxed and positive experience.
He said: “It was just curiosity. I was interested to see how Tunick handled it and what people were there.
“We’re all basically the same in different shapes and sizes. Once you have taken all your clothes off, it’s a very friendly and communal feeling.”
But Ivan Massow, the former chairman of London’s Institute of Contemporary Arts, said Tunick’s Selfridges installation upset him because it was “so transient, it disappears, it is pure idea“.
He posed for two naked portraits because he wanted “to prove that concept or conceptual thought could meet canvas, something tangible”, he said.
The Selfridges event was a departure for Tunick, as he swapped the open air for the interior of the store.
He told the BBC: “Usually people do it outdoors because there is an amount of tension and vulnerability in the body that comes up against the concrete world.
“That tension creates a desire to be nude in a public place outside.
“I’m just happy that people wanted to engage in indoor space.”

Renek Gaszewski Fine Art Nude Models Photographer

Welcome to Renek Gaszewski's Blog! As you probably already know we offer the largest, freshest, classiest collection of nude art and fine photography in the world. Our daily updated site offers beautiful, natural, nude girls captured in sensuous, professional, dazzling photos of the highest aesthetic quality by the World's best photographers! Renek Gaszewski also has an extensive archive of high quality movies GModels is a complete immersion in flawless beauty. Welcome to the most imitated nude art site in the World. See more at Web Site: Gaszewski.com...

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Renek Gaszewski Fine Art Nude Models Photographer

Welcome to Renek Gaszewski's Blog! As you probably already know we offer the largest, freshest, classiest collection of nude art and fine photography in the world. Our daily updated site offers beautiful, natural, nude girls captured in sensuous, professional, dazzling photos of the highest aesthetic quality by the World's best photographers! Renek Gaszewski also has an extensive archive of high quality movies GModels is a complete immersion in flawless beauty. Welcome to the most imitated nude art site in the World. See more at Web Site: Gaszewski.com...