Open Studio Dec 7-8-9!

This is a great weekend to pick up original art for Christmas NE Minneapolis from working studios in cool old buildings.

Our studio is open this weekend and I would really like to get some of these pieces in homes instead of on my walk.

This year I have over 90 originals mounted, custom matted, and shrink wrapped to make it easier and cheaper to frame. I am going to put 30% off on all of these and I believe Marcy is doing something similar.

Solar Arts and Indeed Brewery will have food trucks, some music, craft beer, and great artist this weekend.

Come pick something up or just say hi. Your encouragement is a big deal and supports this part of our lives!

Dec 7-8 Thur Fri 6:30-9:00 and 12-9 on Saturday.

Solar Arts Building - 2nd floor by the stairs - 711 NE 15th ave NE Minneapolis - above Indeed Brewery



2017 State Fair Sketches - 5 years running!



A great, and this time rainy, sketch day at the MN State Fair.  This is my 5th year in a row!

With the rain and humidity my paintings took longer to dry so that changed up my strategy a bit.

These images are in the rough order of execcution with the exception of the pig. I put my favorite first!

This is mostly from my new paint kit based on Liz Steele's 2017 water color set up.

The book is 8 1/2" x 11" water color paper. Most of these take me between 25 -45 minutes.



Dreaming Pig

This was my 3rd or 4th drawing in. This was fun because two of the kids who show the pigs had questions while I did the piece. This is my favorite of the bunch and was featured on an MPR post with other beautiful work from sketchers from the same day. How cool is that?



I always start with a Twisted Sister Sausage for my warm up sketch. It was really raining here. Not my favorite sketch (past years were better) but I really learned how the paper and paints were acting will all of rain and humidity. So...it is probably the most valuable sketch of the day.  Certainly the tastiest.



The rain dictated indoor sketches, so this year is animal heavy.  This first sketch was fun because the kid who owned the turkey talked to me a little.  The bird was fun to draw but he wasn't really crazy about me standing there.


This Rooster most certainly was not crazy about me painting him.  I think that is why is looking a little like an aggressive eagle.  Such a beautiful bird. I was trying to stay loose and capture some of the beautiful colors in the black feathers.  It is always interesting to paint in a high traffic area.  You can see people wanting to ask but not ask.  I always talk to anyone who engages me. I imagine if I wasn't 6'-5", 270# and bald I might get more takers. Despite that I generally wind up having several dozen conversations about the paintings during the day. 


I needed to walk around and let these dry. I finally found an open table mostly out of  the rain and did a quick sketch of this musician as the other two dried and received a few touch ups.



Where the rooster did not want to be painted, these two sheep didn't mind being painted at all.  If you look close you can see rain drops in the pre mixed grey while I walked around waiting for them to dry.


The pig was next. I have drawn a pig every year. I guess it is a thing now.



These last two sketches were my wrap up.  It was half an hour before we met as a group and I finally found a covered place to sit.  I typically wrap up with people sketches. This was done sitting with a nice couple who had family showing animals.  I was explaining my kit and sketching nearby people. My favorite was the guy holding the wooden staff in a clear rain coat holding court with a huge corn dog in his hand. So I labeled him "The Corn Dog Messiah"

Thanks to Marty Harris and Roz Stendahl and the Metro Sketchers for organizing!

Anyway, I hope you enjoyed these!






Art-A-Whirl 2017!

Hello everyone,
If you are a friend of mine on facebook (where I am much more active - https://www.facebook.com/nuttdraws/)you have heard plenty about it, but we have been working hard to get ready for Art-A-Whirl 2017.  This will be our 4th in the Solar Arts building (Above Indeed Brewery). We are in a new location over by the stair. The space is a little narrower than the last and houses Marcy, Leo, and I.
Friday, May 19th – 5:00-10:00 p.m.
Saturday, May 20th – Noon-8:00 p.m.
Sunday, May 21st – Noon-5:00 p.m.
711 15th avenue NE, MPLS
2nd Floor Studio 216 (by the stairs)
Please come and see us.  We have repainted the place, gotten art matted, framed, and even have progress pieces on the wall.  I will also have the recent collaboration with a high school student through MN Make a Wish Foundation on display.
This year we have worked to original art for all budgets:
-$5 dollar linoleum cut prints
- Over 90 shrink-wrapped matted pieces from $40 - $140
- Small framed pieces from $20
- Larger framed pieces from $200 - $1600
- Non-matted smaller originals from $10 - $90
- Non-matted larger originals from $90 - $200
- Smaller signed prints framed and unframed from $10 - $40
- Marcy has prints of her Geisha and Kids looking at a Polaroid
- Or just come to visit and see what is new and the amazing artist on the second floor.
Northrup King is the amazing Mother Ship for Art-A-Whirl, but if you want a more digestible amount of art and a more manageable crowd come to the Solar Arts first. 2nd floor has about 20 working studios with fine art, jewelry, and fantastic pottery in our “old studio”.  3rd floor has Chowgirls Lounge with craft cocktails, Chowgirls Killer Catering local-and-organic twist on the retro TV dinner, and the MN Sculptors Society.
Indeed will have a huge line up of outdoor music and food.

More information here about the artist in the building and also on Indeed Breweries website will give you the music lineup:
http://solarartsbuilding.com/artawhirl2017/

You can’t make it to Art-A-Whirl or the crowds aren’t your thing, we are always open on First Thursday or we can meet most evenings with a little planning.

Just look for the giant TRex! by the door.

James, Marcy, and Leo
www.nuttdraws@hotmail.com


Westminster Presbyterian Church

This is a piece I have been working on all week in walnut ink and watercolor.

We have lost someone special and this Westminster Presbyterian Church has embraced the family. I worked on this as I thought through what community means.

Very loose interpretation based off of an old photo.  I took some liberties. Some of the higher windows are stone but I wish they were glass so I made them so.

Anyway, hope you enjoy my little therapy session.



This is  11x17



The Clevelander view from the beachside seats

I was an invited artist to the Clevelander in South Beach on a dream trip twice a few years ago.  I was invited to come and sketch as much as I could for 4 days.  

I see that I never posted this process image, drawn and painted at night and onsite while enjoying the atmosphere.  The next day with actual sunlight I pushed and pulled a few things.

This is pretty typical of my process and also shows my paint kit.

This was such an amazing trip. If you ever visit the Clevelander they also own the Essex House on the same block. It is beautiful, the courtyard is amazing, and Zen Sai is fantastic as well.



a panarama from my vantage point



Laying out the big shapes and getting the proportions right



The inking starts. This is not a tracing, this is drawing a second time and often times I am making changes on my second pass.



More progress


Starting to clean up


Now for color


I use a limited pallete and then only three colors from that. Especially when I paint in the dark with colored lights.


Blocking out more color.


In the daylight. Working while eating.

More or less finished.

This was a fun trip.  I have a second round of drawings that I have never posted but the first round can be found here:

https://www.behance.net/gallery/14205969/Miami-Beach-At-the-Clevelander

Hope you enjoyed a peek at my process!










IS SKETCHING RELEVANT TO DESIGN THINKING IN ARCHITECTURE...I SAY YES

Some time ago submitted these 11 X 17 boards to a sketch competition for d3. 2013 submission call.  These boards, along with a1,500 others were hung the Fordham University in NYC.

Since then I have used these boards over and over when the subject of sketching in architecture comes up.

This is a pretty good summary of my work when it comes to design thinking and how it relates to drawing.

I hope you enjoy these.


This first board is about digital sketching. For me it isn't either or.  It is just a different medium. You approach a charcoal drawing differently than an ink wash. It is the same with digital versus traditional media.  Craft is craft.

I do A LOT of travel sketching. As an architect to me it is similar to a musician practicing their favorite artist melody lines. To learn to see (or hear), try to figure out what they were saying and why it worked (or didn't), and especially to remember.

At this point I can walk while drawing and painting.  I can also draw upside down almost as well as right side up.  Somehow my handwriting is so much better than the normal way but it is much slower.



Often times I am in conversations about how to put complex assemblies together.  I have found these types of drawings to really help that conversation along and get past the basics and on to the good ideas from the folks in the field.



As architects, we do a ton of 3d modeling. I set up the basic bones of a building faster in 3d which gives me something accurate to sketch options over. Pick and option, model that, print and sketch over to the next level of detail and options, model and test that, sketch over it....you get the picture but I almost have construction documents when I am done.

This is also a good way to have conversations with multiple trades. The construction folk look at it toward constructability, sequencing, and cost. The owner or developer wants to see the image and the feel along with cost. There are lots of players with different centers of their universe and this lets me communicate in a way to talks to all of them.

Plus.... I just love drawing and use any excuse I can.

Hope you enjoyed this.
Samples of my other work can be found by searching James Nutt and Behance.



Swiss German Trip...All the Sketches

Last Year we took an amazing vacation to Germany and Switzerland.  Each of these could be a blog post in itself, but for now here is the whole group. Most of these are fairly small 3"x5" to 1"x14", done onsite and took between 4 minutes to an hour.


I think I will break these out at a later date, but for now, enjoy!



































My Family also sketches and paints.  These are from many of the same vantage points done by my wife who I share the studio with.







A PERSPECTIVE ON COLLECTING ART!

I was asked to post about art collecting from the vantage of an artist . I am happy to do so and will describe what I have learned from my three years of renting a studio in the arts district of NE Minneapolis.




A little back ground so you know where I am coming from. I am an architect by day and an artist by night. Each has a lot to do with creating and drawing in ways that hopefully affect people.  I love both of my jobs, yet they are two jobs so I run a double life and that double life goes well into the evenings!  I also teach art once a week at White Bear Center for the arts.



My advice on collecting and obtaining art is going to have less to do with galleries but more with artist working studio, open studio events and commissions.  Most of my work is primarily shown in my studio and in local restaurants and not galleries primarily because my art life is in the evening and it is hard to network galleries outside of business hours.  As I get closer to retirement I will go this route but for now I paint or draw every day and have my studio open at every opportunity.

There are online galleries such as Invaluable :http://www.invaluable.com/fine-art/pc-SG2BIX3JPJ/, Etsy, Blue Canvas (before they closed),  and my gallery on Behance. Behance is more of a portfolio site and not as much for selling.  I simply need to put more effort into galleries and online, but with my limited time frame if new work is flowing I am going to give precedence to creating and then marketing during any creative ebb.

Open studios are a great place to see how the art is made, meet the artist, and visit repeatedly.  I will often get 3 or 4 visits before someone makes a purchase, but even on these non-purchase visits an artist will thrive on the conversation and encouragement.  It is also interesting to see which pieces get attention!  It certainly changes.



When visiting this is your chance to ask questions and by all means negotiate. When an artist has work in a gallery they have to add the galleries 25%-50% (and higher) commission.  So many people are afraid to throw out a number because they might offend. This not the case and can be fun.  I tend to be firmer on art that is framed because of the work I have in it, my options of where to market it, and your ease of just driving nail and hanging it. 




HOWEVER, at least in my studio, make me an offer on what I haven’t yet framed. I believe that is where the deals are. You will need to go and get it framed and there is expense there, but I love it. The art is my take and the frame makes it fit your house. I am in a constant struggle of what to get framed, and what to just plastic bag.  My wall has a portion of simple clipboards for this work. My happy medium is to matte frame and hinge a piece. It’s affordable to me and allows you to by a stock frame that matches your house.

I believe I make more off of commissions than art off the wall, but that varies through the year.  In NE Minneapolis all of the studios are encouraged to be open on the first Thursday of the month. I believe St Paul does something similar on Fridays.  We have an ever growing ART-A-WHIRL in the spring that will bring 2,000-3,000 people through our studio.  Sales are strange and the crowd is there for the live music and beer as much as art but I typically sell 20-30 small pieces and pick up repeat visitors that turn into commissions through the year.



Also, if you don’t see anything in your price range, tell the artist what your price range is. I promise in a working studio they probably have boxes of studies, or partials that you may dearly love. Some studies are among my favorites but I am not sure others like it enough to give it wall real estate.



Commissions are fun and funny.  It is the difference in seeing something you love and buying it versus paying for something you hope you will love. 
Honest advice on getting the best commission? Give simple direction on what you want and what you love about the artist work but little else. The more freedom you give the artist the easier it is for the artist to do something that sings.  Also even if you see high dollar work on the wall but your budget is $100, be upfront about it. Most artists can work backward on size, or details, etc while still producing something you love.  Your house probably only has so many walls capable of large art anyway.  Even if you can’t come to an agreement, ask away. You have no idea how much the encouragement and interest mean.

BUT, DON’T ask any one to do work for exposure.  Especially here in the cold north you can die of exposure.

Honestly when you buy an artist work, and especially if you buy straight from the artist, you are helping to make this part of persons life possible.

By what you love, and tell the artist you love it. (I also give a discount if I can tell someone is floored by something). If you are going for the working studios route you are more likely to get on the ground floor.

Also I love the quote, “ Please buy from a living artist, the dead ones don’t need the money!”



Links
In my part of North East Minneapolis you can visit a dozen or more great studios but the 3 I am most familiar with are
 My own – Solar Arts Building – http://solarartsbuilding.com/ - about 20 artists and a great community. Indeed Brewery is on the first floor and a great place to start.

Northrup King Building – http://www.northrupkingbuilding.com/ - Huger than Huge and amazing stuff.

Casket Arts building – http://www.casketarts.com/

There are ton more, but one disadvantage of having an open studio is that limits you ability to wander to other peoples studios.


I hope this was helpful.  Love open studios so come and visit and take something home! My door has the big T-Rex on the second floor of the solar arts building. I draw or paint every day so it is always changing.  I am a bit buried in artwork right now and would love get more work out there so don't be afraid to make an offer!

2016 State Fair Sketches

The 
4th year in a row!


A twisted sister sausage is always my warm up sketch.


Liene lodge while the first dried. Experimenting with very non water proof ink and watercolor. 

The butterfly house. 



A nice on the spot commission sparked by a conversation while painting the butterfly house. 


Painted the gate from the Irish pub across the path. Very quick and starting to get dark. 



The Poultry Barn was closing soon so I only had 20-30 minutes so I had to move fast. 


And then finally some people practice before going home. 

Another great year and great group. One of my students participated and that was fun and saw so many artists I know. Lisa and I agreed to make each other submit for the Fine Arts Show next year. 


Water Soluble Carbon Dark Tower

With all of the talk about Stephen Kings Dark Tower series I thought I would share my take.  Or what turned out to be a take.  I did this water soluble carbon piece in a hotel room on a business trip.  After long meetings I often need to paint.  While traveling especially.

I gave this to Todd Beaver for Christmas one year. A fellow Dark Tower fan.


Keep Drawing!

James Nutt

Spoon and Cherry- a favorite sketch

If you know Minneapolis you know about this huge Spoon and Cherry sculpture.  This is an urban sketch done while sketching with the Metro Sketchers.  The original is hanging at the White Bear Center for the arts and I have professional prints on water color paper at my studio for $75.

This is done with my travel inkwash technique of older water pens filled with ink applied with a water pen filled with water. 

The red is Noodlers Cayenne, the blacks are Noodlers Lexington Grey and Black.

11x14


This smaller version is from my daily sketchbook.  I can't remember which came first.


Keep Drawing!


Pecha Kucha - Things that inspire my art life


My architecture firm does an annual Pech Kucha presentation and invited me to participate. This is a 20 slide presentation with 20 seconds per slide.  Really fun and went quickly!  I decided to try to describe my current art path and things and people that have encouraged me along the way.

Maybe someday I will type what I spoke, but for not this will have to do.  I am also committing to reengaging with this blog. I have let is sit for a long time.























Hope you enjoyed it!

Keep Drawing

James Nutt
NuttDraws
Solar Arts Building

Balcony Painting in Mittenwald!

This This Painting in Mittenwald - Die Zirbelnuss

This was my window balcony view for a few days at a wonderful air b&b. I spent a lot of time painting out here trying different techniques of the same view. 

This is evening using a warm triad color mix. I was working in a wet on wet style that I am trying to get better at. I learned a lot here and am excited to try a larger format with some of the photos I took. This is 8.5 x 11 on toned paper (I have never water colored on toned paper and this Magnani Annigoni Designo stuff is crazy nice)

I can't decide if this one is done but I realize I haven't signed and dated. 



My slightly expanded kit....as in I am using my real brushes instead of my water pen. I also took a box of assorted 8.5x11 papers to experiment with. 



Same view but a very very different take. I have better pictures but this was the light during the some of the paintings. Really fun. Complete wet in wet painting technique giving up tons of control. This is on 300 pound arches paper which is unfortunately on the back of another painting. This was an accident and I am so lucky I didn't ruin it!

And finally an attempt at the wonderful steeple. I enjoyed this painting and would like to do larger versions. 

Super fun....more to come!

James Nutt


Art-A-Whirl 2015 - Come and See Us


Art-A-Whirl is Here Again! Come and See Us
 
I didn't realize that I hadn't posted this blog entry from Art-A-Whirl 2014!
 
Come and see our new space in the same building.  We are excited to show work from this year and meet tons of people.
 
Our space in the middle of the hall on the 2nd floor of the Solar Arts Building which houses - Indeed Brewery.
 
 
711 NE 15th Ave
711 NE 15th Ave, Minneapolis, MN 55413
 
4 artist share this space. 1 photographers and 3 architect needed an art outlet! Plus Leo has his space and his work on display.
 
A few pictures from prep this week
 




AND A REPOST FROM LAST YEAR simply because it was so much fun.
 
The place was packed all weekend!  Really wonderful to meet so many people and discuss art.  We worked so hard to get this set up and it was worth it.


This image is typical of how many people were in the studio the whole time. Leo really did great with the people and even tried to sell some art.
 
 
My friend Pat Mackey stopped by wearing the required architect black shirt.

 
The T-Rex! got the most attention of everything I had posted. I sold several prints.  T-Rex! is back in Hazels NE for the time being.  I have sold prints to or created new cardboard pieces for several people since the show.


 
Lots of friends who stopped by are in this picture.

 


 
The NewStudio Architecture crew came by!

 
Indeed Brewery and the band outside kept the place packed. There was so much fun stuff going on that it was crazy.





 
Leo had fun.

 
Our hallways are also art galleries. We are at the end of the hall so this gives a good indication of how busy it stayed.



Another shot of the common space.
 
 

 

The space is was only empty before the start and after!
 
Art-A-Whirl was a blast.  We will be open most First Thursdays if anyone wants to visit and see what we are up to. Thanks for all the support of our art. It really helps!
 
James Nutt



 

Sketching On a Plane

 I have been playing with iPad Art again.  

With a new tablet I finally broke down and got a pressure sensitive stylus.  I have been doing research into the children's illustration world and I believe it would be fun to do this with Procreate.

These two pieces were done on a crowded flight with two separate delays that kept me on the tarmac for a long while. The seats were to crowded to do work but with my right hand against the window side.  I am a big guy that the airlines are obviously not designing for so I always pick this arrangement when I can.

This was the first time I had an opportunity to play with the new stylus.  Adonit touch with pixel point 

Image one - playing around with children's book illustration ideas.


Playing with a brush technic outside my comfort zone...Solar Arts Building (my studio and arts community)



I have had the idea of a hand sketch with evolved fingers in my head for a while. I call it "Phalanx +"



I did a few more (there a lot of delay time) but this tells the story pretty well. I will write more about the stylus later, but my studio mate Ted is ringing in my ear..."It is the Indian, not the bow"



Sketching In Lutsen over Thanksgiving


Traveling to Lutsen

Marcy and  I utilized the Thanksgiving holiday to go to Lutsen to unwind.  On these family trips we always squeeze in a little time to sketch and paint.  I expected there to be more snow on the ground, but the lack of it created a color pallete that kept me painting.

These are a few of the sketches and I hope you enjoy them.

 

Coffee cup sketch.

 
 
Duluth Cafe
 
 
If you haven’t been to Duluth Grill you will never find it on your own. It is fantastic and the comfort food has a foody twist to it. They also have a wide range of fantastic local art.  Their coffee mugs are made by a local artist and a good warm up painting to start the trip.

 
Lutsen Totem
Most of the wood columns around the lodge are carved in an abstract Totem theme. During dinner I was able to study this a little. I noticed it other place around the property and I wonder who first came up with it.


 

My Breakfast View

This is the view I spent a lot of time with looking at Lake Superior. I spent a lot of time at this table painting.





Gondola ride
 

Adam in our office suggested that we go to the ski hill and take the Gondola ride up the mountain to a restaurant bar.  The Gondolas are exactly the same as at the state fair but the ride is a lot more extreme.  Straight up this cliff to incredible views.  We had the whole family painting up here. I was able to get several smaller pieces done. The food was just OK but the location was spectacular.


 

 
Lutsen Grass 

I mentioned the colors of the grass without so much snow. This piece is a simple painting trying to catch the essence. I was also trying out my “fan” type watercolor brush.




 
My Favorite Tree
 
Often times I will precolor a page and draw on top of it later. (See below) This is a good example. After a long time of water coloring I had all of this paint on my palette. I just hate sopping it up and throwing it away, so I mixed it all together and the color became this nice brown. I washed the page with it and waited for inspiration. I woke up 2 mornings later with this idea of painting the tree I kept staring at between me and the lake.
 
 
Built Wash
 
I haven't decided if this is a finished piece or if inspiration will hit me to paint over it.

Lake Superior from Lutsen Resort
 
This is the view I woke up to and enjoyed every morning. This image itself is my attempt at the Tea Milk and Honey 3 stage water color approach I recently read about in Marc Taro Holmes wonderful new book The Urban Sketcher: Techniques for Seeing and Drawing on Location.
 
There were more sketches, but these tell the best story, I hope you enjoyed them.
 
James Nutt

Red Door Studio Art-A-Whirl 2014


I didn't realize that I hadn't posted this blog entry from Art-A-Whirl 2014!
 
Thank you to everyone who came out. It has been a dream of mine to be in Art-A-Whirl since we moved to Minneapolis. I always thought someone might let me use a little space on their walls. I never expected to have a full blown studio in one!
 
5 artist share this space. 2 photographers and 3 architect needed an art outlet!
 
The place was packed all weekend!  Really wonderful to meet so many people and discuss art.  We worked so hard to get this set up and it was worth it.


This image is typical of how many people were in the studio the whole time. Leo really did great with the people and even tried to sell some art.
 
 
My friend Pat Mackey stopped by wearing the required architect black shirt.

 
The T-Rex! got the most attention of everything I had posted. I sold several prints.  T-Rex! is back in Hazels NE for the time being.  I have sold prints to or created new cardboard pieces for several people since the show.


 
Lots of friends who stopped by are in this picture.

 


 
The NewStudio Architecture crew came by!

 
Indeed Brewery and the band outside kept the place packed. There was so much fun stuff going on that it was crazy.





 
Leo had fun.

 
Our hallways are also art galleries. We are at the end of the hall so this gives a good indication of how busy it stayed.



Another shot of the common space.
 
 

 

The space is was only empty before the start and after!
 
Art-A-Whirl was a blast.  We will be open most First Thursdays if anyone wants to visit and see what we are up to. Thanks for all the support of our art. It really helps!
 
James Nutt




A wonderful evening in Excelsior Springs, Mo

From Minneapolis to  Excelsior Springs, Mo

On a trip to drop my son off with his grandparents in Arkansas I had a two day trip back to do as I pleased. I had always thought of stopping by Excelsior Springs to visit Cathy Johnson. Cathy is an artist I greatly admire and helped me with advice and encouragement and a great example of living by art.


These are roughly in the order I sketched them. 90% on site work.  The last 10% was line weight ramp up and some color touchup.  It was getting dark, and I will admit a little creepy being the only one walking around downtown once it got dark.



Cathy and her husband Joseph graciously welcomed me in.  I had no idea if they only had time for a quick visit but it turns out we all went to dinner together at a beautiful hotel downtown.  The restaurant at The Elms is quite beautiful and food was great.  As soon as the food was done the sketchbooks came out!


Neat little building corner.  I think it was the Mill Inn. I need to go back and put the lettering in.


It was starting to get dark and the color got away from me. This building isn't really green, but now that I have some distance on my frustration that it turned green I really like it. Always be careful with mixing yellow at night. You really can't see it so use about 1/3 as much yellow as you think. Or just go for it and have bright interesting colors the next day.  Either works!


This was just a neat building corner.

Such a wonderful evening.  After they left I had about 45 minutes to an hour of daylight and made a quick walking tour grabbing what sketches the light allowed.  I think I may have been one of 5 people out and about downtown.


The night before I loaded up two pages with color for some yet unknown project the next day.  Over breakfast I did these two drawings.  The family in front of me turned out to be an art teacher from Omaha that I wound up showing my sketches and paint kits to.  It is always fun to meet people.



Such a nice morning and beautiful patio to have breakfast at. I should have drawn the biscuits and gravy but they somehow went away to quickly!

James Nutt
www.nuttdraws.blogspot.com



Nuttdraws Gets a New Home! The Solar Arts Building! (Above the Indeed Brewery in NE Minneapolis)

WE HAVE A SPACE IN THE NE ARTS COMMUNITY! STUDIO #207 IN THE SOLAR ARTS BUILDING WILL BE THE NEW HOME OF NUTTDRAWS AND C+N STUDIO ON MAY 1ST 2014!

Our new home away from home - http://solarartsbuilding.com

I am so excited.  For the past 8 years I have had a dream of being a part of the NE Arts community and especially Art-A-Whirl (http://nemaa.org/art-a-whirl). I would go every year and it would be painful because I thought, " I could do this, but I am not."  Last year it was more enjoyable because I was producing and I thought, "how great would it be a part of this scene and have a space."

Almost a year ago at my St Paul Almanac showing a few friends started talking about getting a space together. Stephanie started looking and over time found the Solar Arts building.  Marcy got on board and quickly this whole dream became real. We lost our first space to a group of poets.  (You don't get to say that everyday) but another space opened up and we jumped on it!

So, believe it or not, we now have a space AND will be in Art a Whirl.  And in true James and Marcy Fashion the show is 2 weeks after we get the space! We have a lot of work to do.

Marcy and I will share a space together.  Our small upstairs in our house will be almost empty because it still has the C+N furniture plus my 4'x5' motorized drawing desk and all that goes with my art. So we also get another room in our house!  

Our studio mates are the talented Stephanie Dunn  (http://www.stephaniedunndesign.com) and Holly Scholl  (http://www.hollyschollphotography.com/) in the other spaces. We are in negotiations with a 5th person to make it affordable. We also plan to make the space available to rent as a temporary photo studio.

The building has open house nights on First Thursdays and features the artist on the site (http://solarartsbuilding.com/the-artists/).  

My hope is to have a place to create art, meet other artist, and hopefully sell and take commissions. I am really looking forward to meeting the community.  

Being above a taproom doesn't hurt either.....

I also hear chocolate and sandwiches are on their way too!



The building!


The "not yet ours" space.


Our front door! (We will work on that)

 I am excited enough it has been hard to sleep!  Visit if you can!

James Nutt, AIA
www.nuttdraws@hotmail.com