art Jen Palmer art Jen Palmer

Wallpapers

I was really into this piece and made a background so I wanted to share, go ahead and save your preferred color!

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art, artwork, news Jen Palmer art, artwork, news Jen Palmer

Simulacra Exhibition at Sulfur Studios

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I’ve got four works in this group exhibition at Sulfur Studios in Savannah, GA. If you can’t make the opening reception (masking is required) or don’t feel comfortable doing so, you can view the exhibition images here - though the pieces I made are a level up in person!

I’m excited about participating in this exhibition because it was a perfect fit. The work I make is about radical hope - a concept in which we have acceptance of our current state, and hold certainty for a future state for which we cannot yet understand and does not yet exist. My work holds space and reflects upon ever-shifting forms. Informed by bodily knowledge, using traditional painting and drawing materials, I intuitively create works that give space to these forms to live. To further this exploration and reflection, I enter a body of work into an AI platform that generates new work in my visual language. While I haven't drawn or painted this space, it exists and resonates within me. Its realness is as much as any mental state we may experience.

I hope you get the chance to check it out! Let me know what you think & if you have any questions for me!

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artwork, news, art Jen Palmer artwork, news, art Jen Palmer

HOPE Exhibition at the Roaring Artist Gallery

HOPE is a themed group exhibition, running through October 31st, 2021, at the Roaring Artist Gallery (This amazing virtual gallery run by the lovely and talented Katie Bradford Osborne), benefitting the L-CMD RESEARCH FOUNDATION. You can visit the virtual gallery and view my piece in the show, or view them on the website. “Sureness” is available for purchase through the gallery.

I’m excited to be participating in this exhibition, and that everyone can experience it virtually, I truly appreciate the thoughtful curation.

I hope you take the time to explore and enjoy all the arrangements of beautiful art in this virtual space, and maybe decide to bring a piece into your actual space as well.

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art, artwork Jen Palmer art, artwork Jen Palmer

VIDA Open Studio

Scarves, bags, masks, and pillows are available at my VIDA Open Studio. The Eco Repreve mask has been popular, and I still use my VIDA masks with the filters daily. Also, if you’re excited about fall being right around the corner, I think you’ll enjoy the tones of some of my new pieces!

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artwork, art, release, news, process Jen Palmer artwork, art, release, news, process Jen Palmer

REMIX

REMIX Exhibition promotional by Playform

REMIX Exhibition promotional by Playform

I’m excited to be participating in REMIX an exhibition by Playform, exclusively on Rarible. The NFT art works will be available on Aug. 9th, and some of the artists, including myself, will be participating in an artist talk. If you want to hear more about making work with no code AI, NFTs, discussion on mashup, and new technologies, here’s the link:


About REMIX

Appropriating, amalgamating and collaging have been prevalent artistic methods throughout history. Marcel Duchamp’s “Fountain '' and Warhol’s “Botticelli” are some examples of re-contextualizing throughout the art historical canon. Inspired by the artistic concepts of sampling and mashup, Playform Studio presents a Studio group exhibition, “REMIX.”

Defining new ways of creating in the age of AI, “REMIX” explores the ever-emerging relationship between technology and art. Works from “REMIX” will also be available as NFTs, exclusively on Rarible.

Featured artists include: 
Carla Gannis, Chris Trueman, Andrew Tricaso, Trygve Skogrand, Jen Palmer, Nathaniel Stern, Albert Abdul-Barr Wang, Roxy Savage, Katya Grokhovsky, Irina Raicu, Michael Pierre Price, Yeli Rodriguez, and Witold Riedel. 


YOU CAN PLAY TOO!


Play with REMIX Artwork in Playform Stylize

The exhibition release is in affiliation with Playform’s Stylize feature which offers Playform users to apply the style of their favorite artists onto any photo, image or sketch. The final works featured in the exhibition are options of “Pre-Defined Style” within the Stylize feature. Playform users are invited to "remix" their own images with these new styles!

Here are some of the images I've remixed with my own Pro Art Filter! (click to view them in the lightbox)

Screenshot of Playform, featuring an image with my REMIX Pro-Art Filter applied

Screenshot of Playform, featuring an image with my REMIX Pro-Art Filter applied

Screenshot of the Playform Stylize Interface.

Screenshot of the Playform Stylize Interface.

You can use Playform from a mobile device or computer. You select your style, then upload your image. You can choose which process, and how much style and composition affect the result. Just go to https://playform.io/jen to check it out! Oh, and share your stylized images with me on Instagram or via email!



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artwork, art, materials, process Jen Palmer artwork, art, materials, process Jen Palmer

Pinspiration Project

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I started taking screenshots of my Pinterest feed a while back. I'm not sure what I was even going to do with them, I just was interested in the way the algorithm shows me things that I like, but also creates some sort of connections between the images it's showing me. A black bird. A tattoo of a bird and berries. A berry cobbler recipe. A lady with short hair. A drapey layered outfit in shades of black. An abstract painting with blotches of purple. There is something similar that the algorithm is picking up on. These connections somehow relate to my taste. What is it? What does it say about me? What can I learn from this information?

I've used Pinterest since it came out, finding it a positive space to explore ideas. Using boards to pin my project inspiration, plan parties, collect quotes, connect with people who liked these niche things, or experienced chronic illness.

For this project, I took the screenshots where I found interesting connections, and I separated the images so that the software doesn't implement the grid form of Pinterest - I'm interested in what happens between the concepts of these images.

I fed these 200+ images to the Playform platform, and am currently waiting to see what happens!

Can machine interpretation give us useful information about ourselves? Will it reflect something of my values back to me? My tastes? My interests? What form will these take? ...

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art, artwork, materials, process Jen Palmer art, artwork, materials, process Jen Palmer

Let me tell you about my new romance…

I joined the virtual studio at Playform, and am currently working on a project based on recent collected works. I was truly excited to discover this platform for creating AI art, and maybe have previously underestimated my love for all things digital?

In thinking about it, I realized that I can trace my digital art-making back to my video painter, and maybe back to those days in kindergarten when we had computer class, and got to make art on the Macs? I'm one of those millennials who didn't have to be tech-savvy - we didn't have the internet until around when I went to college. I didn't even know I was tech-savvy until somewhere in my 30's and I realized I was giving out a lot of help, and it was surprising to me that people didn't understand it. Now, I would definitely consider myself an early adopter. It makes sense that I am because I feel ridiculously excited about the potential I see. Partially because exploring that potential gives me such a sense of joy. I think this is deeply related to radical hope. It's not something that exists here yet, but I can feel its existence. I noted that same sense of joy was frequently present when editing photographs, playing with texture and color, layers, versions...

These explorations are my way of studying, understanding something more. It feels like a word I can't recall, a place I can't remember my way to - It is so strong, but it is also emptiness. The matter is in the relationship, in the space between. The Playform platform is a tool to help me explore this space!

How does it work? There are computers that the platform is connected to, and I uploaded around 50 of my works of art. The computers essentially then learn those images, the forms, lines, colors, etc., and create renderings of new work. Those renderings can be further developed, mixed, and used in ways I haven't even discovered all of yet.


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Developing models on Playform


I'm (obviously) enthusiastic about this new digital tool, and how it truly fits into my work.

Case in point - The other day, I was just sitting in my studio, smiling to myself thinking about Arthur Batut and his ideas on virtuality.

"To reproduce with the help of photography a figure whose material reality does not exist anywhere, an unreal being whose constituent elements are scattered over a certain number of individuals and which can only be conceived virtually, is it not a dream?" - Arthur Batut (translated from French)

Ah, so thrilling! Did I mention Batut lived from 1846 to 1918? What would he even think of something like Playform? We can't know the answer, but I'd love to hear yours!

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community, punk, music, art, life Jen Palmer community, punk, music, art, life Jen Palmer

Punk is forever.

Recent research has shown that the music you listen to as a teen and young adult will shape you - forever. Think about what you were listening to then. How do you think it affected you? I certainly know not all of us were listening to songs about unity, freeing political prisoners, and human rights in general. Since I grew up in pre-internet times in rural PA, I didn’t have a lot of access to anything beyond. I was hungry for art and music and community. One of the main things my friends and I connected over was music - we cherished our traded mixtapes, CDs, and eventually digital playlists. We went to shows, to gather, to meet other people who felt like us, to feel accepted. Pittsburgh has its own breed of punk rock, too. It’s deeply planted in our local history as part of the rust belt and worker’s rights. I think about the determination of a bunch of kids, to get to a freezing cold fire hall in the middle of a snowstorm in Johnstown (before we even had GPS), just to sing along to a few of our favorite songs, and how that determination has shown itself in the years since - to challenge the systems, to refuse to accept the damages of our society, to talk to each other, to organize, to act.

This year has been especially challenging. I reflect on who we are, as individuals of this community, and how we’re doing in 2020. We are making art and music. We are spreading knowledge and supporting each other. We are raising money for others. We are feeding others. We are making masks and donating them to people who need them. We are setting up testing stations. We are marching in the streets. We are speaking out, making calls, organizing to educate voters. We are trying to keep our families and workplaces safe. We are demanding better wages. We are calling for justice. For healthcare. For education, For freedom from debt and capitalism. We are (virtually) holding each other’s hands, reminding each other to rest.

I have known that this group of people is bright and passionate, but this year, the way everyone has responded, makes me love them all the more.

 
 
 
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