Saturday, January 26, 2013
VisualAIDS, Postcards From the Edge
Last night, my dear friend Susanne and I took a bus trip to New York in the middle of the snowy tundra to attend the Artist Preview of the 15th Annual Postcards From the Edge exhibition and auction.
It was a really amazing experience, seeing the incredible turnout on such a cold night and knowing that over 1300 artists donated their time and talent to help the cause!
It is a really great concept, artists donate anonymously and you can purchase any of the cards for $85. This gives everyone a reasonable price to donate to VisualAIDS and also gives you the opportunity to end up with a card from one of the amazing, big name artists that donated work including Dana Schutz. Kikki Smith, Ed Rusha, Katherine Bernhardt, Catherine Opie, Jim Hodges, Jeff Koons, Bill Viola and John Waters. I am really proud to have had the opportunity to be among all of these amazing people.
Visual AIDS is the only contemporary arts organization fully committed to HIV prevention and AIDS awareness through producing and presenting visual art projects, while assisting artists living with HIV/AIDS. We are committed to preserving and honoring the work of artists with HIV/AIDS and the artistic contributions of the AIDS movement. We embrace diversity and difference in our staff, leadership, artists, and audiences.
It was lovely seeing all of the great responses from everyone that submitted, I am glad we had the opportunity to go before they were all sold and see all of the cards together, and it was great looking around for cards that must be made by our friends. An amazing evening, followed by a visit to Billy's Bakery down the street.
And VisualAIDS was amazing enough to send us these great email blasts with our name in the same paragraph as the big deals! :)
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Wednesday, January 23, 2013
New Portrait: The Soprano
Here is a new portrait I just finished. I have been trying to branch out into different forms and figures and this is the first female pose I have worked on in quite a while that has not been a self portrait. What do you think?
Liana sat for me for a couple hours in New York and we celebrated afterwards with Jacques Torres hot chocolates. It was a lovely afternoon.
Have you ever wanted to be in one of my drawings? Now is your chance. I am looking for new people to pose for me as character types that I can use in my larger narrative images. So if you would't mind sitting still for an hour or two and think you have a classical appearance send me an email!
Best part, I will make you a print of your portrait!
DariaSouvorova@gmail.com
Tuesday, January 15, 2013
New Work and Exhibition at Art Essex Gallery
Thank you everyone for your continued support, I am so proud to have been invited to participate in the Invitational Exhibition at Art Essex Gallery in Essex, Connecticut and would love to share the dates with you in case anyone is in the area, I would love to see you there.
Also, please allow me to share my newly updated and redesigned website.
www.DariaSouvorovaArt.com
Tuesday, January 1, 2013
New Year's Eve with Tom
I have not updated in a really long time, but I wanted to share my New Year's Eve dinner with Tom, our first dinner party. Both of us are really interested in French culture and history and favor a quiet evening at home to a large party or an evening out. We decided on an Evening in Paris theme which gave us an opportunity to cook some of our favorite dishes and to decorate with some of the lovely glassware around.
I was really excited about the table setup, and wanted to give a light and springy feeling to a cold winter evening. The centerpiece is a terrarium I built (more of which can be found on my website) surrounded by a variety of Tom's precious glassware, repurposed to hold some fresh plants, and various tapers and tea lights. A collage of doilies nestled the collection of objects on the large black surface. I kept a black and white theme with bits of blushy pink and green in the plants. The terrarium holds moss and air plants while the glasses hold bunches of tea roses and fresh rosemary and lavender.
Here's Tom christening the etched champagne flutes I got him for Christmas as we wait for our guests. As the expert on all things wine and French, Tom is the sommelier for the evening.
We have planned on making a boef bourgignon since we first cooked together over the summer, and tonight was the perfect chance. Tom found an amazing, complex recipe from one of his favorite chef's, Eric Ripert. The recipe calls for two bottles of wine and the meat needs to soak in wine overnight, so plan ahead. Click here for the recipe.
And now, for some Scribbles from the Sommelier:
We sliced carrots and quickly sautéed them with butter. To serve 8, peel and slice 8 carrots, place in a sauce pan and add just enough water to cover the carrots. Add salt and pepper to taste and sautée for about 10 minutes with one stick of butter. Garnish with parsley and serve immediately. I am particularly fond of this image, for some reason.
One of the most popular street dishes in Paris is a thinly sliced potato. We sliced up two pound bags of those baby yellow potatoes, seasoned generously with salt and pepper, tossed with 6 or so tablespoons of fresh rosemary (leftovers from our centerpieces) and baked with about a third of a cup of olive oil. Bake at 375 for about 30 minutes for a golden crisp.
For dessert I made a caramelized pear custard tart which we served warm with some french vanilla ice cream. Find the recipe below.
We had a wonderful evening and started Midnight in Paris, right at the stroke of midnight. I really enjoyed meeting some of Tom's closest friends, to whom I apologize for not taking any photographs. We were a bit too excited about eating.
Daria's Caramelized Pear Custard Tart
crust
2 cups flour
1 teaspoon salt
8 tablespoons chilled butter
4 tablespoons vegetable shortening
3-4 tablespoons ice cold water
2 tablespoons heavy cream
filling
7 pears, peeled and thinly sliced
1 cup sugar
1/2 teaspoon salt
3 tablespoons water
2 tablespoons vanilla
about a tablespoon of nutmeg
about a tablespoon of cinnamon
8 ounces of heavy cream
4 egg yolks (beaten)
crust
Mix flour and salt in a large bowl. Add chopped up butter and shortening. Mix in with your hands (do not use a fork or a mixer, you will over mix). Once the flour begins to fold into little chunks and doesn't stick too much to your fingers, add 3 tablespoons of water and continue to fold with your hands. Add the heavy cream. Do not over mix, the dough should be barely able to hold together as a ball, you want it to be very flaky.
Ball the dough, cover in plastic and throw in the fridge for an hour.
Preheat oven to 400. Take out dough and lay a piece of wax paper on the surface (you will want to roll the dough out on this because the crust should be so flaky it is hard to lift off in one piece. Roll out the dough to a bit over a quarter of an inch thick, fit into your baking surface. Bake for 20 minutes until the edges begin to look crispy.
filling
Adjust oven temperature to 375. Add sugar, water, vanilla and spices to a saucepan and heat until it caramelizes. Add pears and salt and cook for about 5-10 minutes until the fruit turns soft and begins to lose its juices. Take the fruit out and remove from heat. Mix heavy cream and egg yolks into the juice and sugar mixture, add any of the extra juices from the fruit.
Arrange the pears into your crust and cover with the custard filling, not all of it may fit in, its ok.
Bake for about 30-40 minutes until the custard sets and some of the exposed pears blacken at the edge.
Enjoy alone or warm with ice cream.
Happy New Year!
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