Showing posts with label David Berkowitz Chicago. Show all posts
Showing posts with label David Berkowitz Chicago. Show all posts

Monday, November 16, 2020

Simultaneism

Simultaneism is a technique that was born from the artistic movement called "Orphism".

Here, talented painter, David Berkowitz Chicago explains more about this technique.

As the painter points out, the simultaneism technique consists of using contrasting colors in small juxtaposed areas (placed one next to the other). So, when we observe the the whole picture in a glance, this generates an effect of shapes, luminosity, space, movement.


Tuesday, May 26, 2020

Tips You Should Take Into Account Before Buying a Work of Art


When buying an artwork, there are many variables to take into account that will help you select a timeless piece.

Many times the amount of works that surround us, make the choice complicated; other times it is the ignorance of the artist or the peculiarities of the work itself that makes us doubt. At other times it is the price that can put us back, since an investment in a work of art does not really have a price limit and it must be set by ourselves.

It is for all this, that naïve painter David Berkowitz Chicago has decided to help you by creating a series of valuable tips that you should take into account before buying a work of art.

As a contemporary artist, David Berkowitz Chicago is best known for his naive and simple visions of village festivals, episodes of folklore, painted with a refined color and contrasting harmonies, never based on observation of reality.  He often adds his power to invoke myths and fables of poetic charm that reflect a world that comes to his memory by ancestral means. Berkowitz 's technique is of a rare thoroughness in representing scenes with sharp images of decorative effects. His paintings are based on the narration of an anecdote. This artist has contributed with his work to enrich the panorama of popular painting that still has in him one of the most representative American artists.

Friday, February 14, 2020

David Berkowitz Chicago is a successful visual artist, painter and educator


For twenty years of active pursuit of fine arts, David Berkowitz Chicago finds his inspiration in everyday life, using all the techniques and technological aids at hand. In addition to classical fine arts techniques, he also uses the camera and digital technology (and digital print). This multimedia artist dreams of his open-eye art world as Corto the Maltese from the Pratt saga, because he himself dreams of a better world through the comic book medium, pointing out with his short work "The Curse of War" all the perversity and meaninglessness of warfare. This artist, with a very refined sense of truth and justice, is always ready to point out the false brilliance of the so-called. star and star, ”to all social deviance, to false morals, double arches, nepotism, political thievery and crime, which we, unfortunately, witnessed in all countries in the region in transition.


David Berkowitz Chicago, said that visual art would be his lifelong and professional commitment, he said, back in elementary school, when a drawing of a car, which he did with a shower pen, delighted everyone at school.

How many exhibitions have you had so far?
- So far I have had 11 solo exhibitions that have been held in different cities. I have also had over 200 collective exhibitions that have been held in, Germany, Austria, Japan, Brazil, Argentina, Romania, Turkey, Greece, Romania, Bulgaria, China, USA, and Croatia.

How long have you been in the visual arts and where do you find your inspiration?
-I have been a fine artist for 20 years and I find inspiration everywhere in newspapers, TV, internet, Facebook, there is daily communication, street…

What techniques do you use?
- I use all available art techniques and materials to get the artwork I want.
David Berkowitz Chicago points out that he made his first graphic in 1998, and has since done more than a hundred manual and digital graphics, each with its own message.

- I was drawn to this specific visual expression in graphics. I want to present with my graphics a man who is, unfortunately, more and more consumer and less social being. I take portraits of celebrities and, on the other hand, completely anonymous people for motives,” David Berkowitz Chicago said.

Graphics are a very demanding process and graphic colors and materials are very expensive!
- It takes at least ten days to produce one graphic. In order to produce one manual graphic, a suitable tool, a sketch, a board on which the desired motif, a color, a press, a paper, etc. are made, are required. For letterpress I mostly use linoleum plates, for deep galvanized plates, and for flat printing quality printers - said this artist.

In addition to graphics, David Berkowitz Chicago has been involved in painting, installation and photography for years. He is a member of several artistic associations and has won numerous awards home and abroad for his works.
What kinds of fine arts do you do?
-I am engaged in photography, painting, graphics, installation, video art, performance, comics…

Monday, November 18, 2019

The Colorful World of Naive Art


“The world of naive art is a colorful world filled with fabulous details. In this world everything seems peacefully flying and takes a person back to his childhood, evoking coziest memories,” says David Berkowitz Chicago, a naïve art painter.

The term naïve allude to something natural and unaffected, innocent, something that lacks experience, judgment or wisdom.

This term doesn’t change its meaning in art. Naive art includes almost all of these characteristics.

As David Berkowitz Chicago explains, naive artists have no relevant education. They paint without any awareness of anatomy, technique or perspective. The paintings of the naïve artists are simple, vivid, childlike – innocent.









Any form of visual art created by individuals who lack or reject conventional education and guidance that professional artists receive is considered to be naïve art.

Naïve art disagrees with dominant trends in art of their time.

Berkowitz points out that these artists shouldn’t be confused with artists who paint for fun, or so-called “Sunday artists”.

It is also wrong to take naive artists for those who don’t know what they’re doing. Naïve artists paint with the same passion as educated and well-trained artists. The difference is that naïve artists lack formal knowledge of methods.

Naive Artists


“Undoubtedly, the most influential naive artist is Jean-Jacques Rousseau,” says Berkowitz in an recent interview for Thrive Global, “but there are other artists of this genre who are worth mentioning”.

The Italian painter, Antonio Ligabue, was one of the most important naive artists of the 20th century. During the 1940s, Ligabue gained recognition for his work.

Nikifor, a Russian painter, created over 40 000 paintings.

The Australian painter Sidney Nolan, created landscapes that aimed to celebrate Australian history.

Grandma Moses started her artistic career at the age of 78. She was known for her take on American realism.

Serbian painters from Kovačica created great panoramic paintings. The most famous of these painters is Zuzana Halupova.

The uneducated Serbian farmer, Ilija Bašičević Bosilj, started painting as a middle-aged man. Despite that had solo exhibitions even in New York.

Connection to other art genres


Naive art is often connected to primitivism, primitive (tribal) art. Also, it is confused with folk and outsider art.

According to an academic publication made by Berkowitz, primitive art refers to tribal art from Africa, the South Pacific and Indonesia, prehistoric and very early European art. any art that imitates or is characterized by primitive art is described by primitivism.

Folk art is utilitarian and decorative art. This type of art expresses national identity. Generally, folk artists are uneducated, as well as naive artists. This is why folk and naive art easily confused.

Any work of art that is created by socially and culturally marginal people (undereducated, mentally ill, prisoners) unconnected to the conventional art world is considered to be outsider art

“Over the years, appreciation of naive art has increased,” claims the naïve art painter, David Berkowitz Chicago. Nowadays, it is completely recognized art genre that is spread and represented in galleries all over the world.

Monday, July 29, 2019

The Visionary Narrative of David Berkowitz Chicago


Paintings of the superb author, visual artist, painter and illustrator David Berkowitz have so far been exhibited at several world locations, and know his home city of Chicago will get the chance to see his exquisite work. This mini-retrospective will encompass his entire opus of creativity, starting from his earliest beginnings, all the way to his most recent works of art. Visitors will also get the chance to see some of his never before exhibited works.

Monday, June 24, 2019

The Sculpting Skills of The Naive Art Painter David Berkowitz Chicago


The naive art painter, David Berkowitz Chicago has exhibited his art in almost every big art center, including Vienna, Paris, Rome, London New York, Shanghai, Miami, and many others. He decided to become an artist at a young age. He listened to himself and, fortunately, had support from his close ones. He assumed that the quality of work and dedication must yield some results, so he searched for interesting competitions and participated in them.

Today, David Berkowitz Chicago, who is a School of Art Institute of Chicago graduate, is equally known for his sculpting and painting skills. At the same time, he is equally impressed with drawing and sculpting, which are constantly interwoven. When he satisfies his hunger for painting he moves to sculpt and vice versa. Both painting and sculpting are basin media and visual expression media, only drawing is defined by two coordinates, while the sculpture is drawn in a three-dimensional space.

Tuesday, February 12, 2019

David Berkowitz Chicago on the Art of Painting

Naive art painter David Berkowitz Chicago
David Berkowitz Chicago
The contemporary painter David Berkowitz Chicago is a widely acknowledged naïve artist, with his own recognizable naive style, painting the memories of his childhood in primary colors. During the last 20 years in which he painted in a naive style, David Berkowitz Chicago exhibited his paintings in several galleries and public buildings in the US, and abroad. His work is in possession of private persons, naive art collectors, and institutions. Here, the artist shares his view on the art of painting.

When art takes a look within itself, then it is possible to call such an approach introverted. A great deal of the 20th-century art production emerged in direct dialogue with art, in interaction with its language and history. It can, therefore, appear to some, that many contemporary works of art primarily comment on the historical development of art, its indirect and immediate precursor. It's as if they are in some lasting controversy and resistance with them, or they admire and worship them. Many artists are looking for new ways within the well-known media. David Berkowitz Chicago mostly does oil and acrylic paintings.

In the desire to liberate the term art of painting from the burden of the past, we don’t rely on any specific artistic style, historical epoch or recent artistic trends. In a way, the name of this collection is desidologized. David Berkowitz Chicago shares in an interview for Patch, that he wants to avoid labeling art as an advanced self-conservative, which implies the terms good or bad art. This enables us to have a more unobtrusive view on modernism, neomodernism, and postmodernism - the most commonly classified works of this category.


The difference between old and new art, realism and modernism, which was expressed clearly by the most prominent advocates of modernism, American critic Clement Greenberg - While realistic art conceals the media by using art to hide art, modern art uses art to draw attention to art itself - can easily be applied to most part of modern and contemporary art today. The dictate of autoreferences, the insistence on the particularities of particular media, and ultimately the articulation of the work of art into the idea of the work, are all results of the same search and looking into their own innermost - the art media itself, which have been defining modern and contemporary art over the decades.

Thursday, February 7, 2019

David Berkowitz Chicago Portrays Strength and Frailty

Chicago based artist David Berkowitz is an established painter with a peculiar style that is easy to recognize, and impossible not to love. This contemporary painter is distinguished by an original and unmistakable stylistic independence. The main motives in David Berkowitz’s work are nature and man. Somehow they complement each other so perfectly, that at times you simply can’t tell where one begins and the other ends. Clarity and precision, great use of light and unique technique, are just some of the things that make David Berkowitz Chicago one of the greatest contemporary painters.



His latest exhibition consists of a series of self-portraits, portraits, and human body display. In his work, David Berkowitz Chicago brings an inherent feeling. The suffering of man and nature is his preoccupation and eternal inspiration. In his compositions, he brings the relationship and contrast, the struggle of human toughness and the agility of nature, in balance. The body, with a lot of power, is often put in an unimaginable position, but it is still null and void compared to something higher. Therefore, his works are calm and serene.

Through the work of David Berkowitz Chicago, you can feel the strength of the muscles and the voice. It is possible to hear the cry and then stand before the silent photograph. And while you’re still hearing it inside your head, you’ll notice water. The artist depicts divine walking on the surface, while the water is intact, like glass. It mirrors the reality that brings balance and symmetry. He becomes one with the water, as he springs from it, and pounds in it. When he breaks the surface, he feels helpless and is reduced to a mirror that blurts the artistic moment. As a contrast to the above, the paintings also show his other side, his perfection that defies the weight of the human body.


The human body is strong but fragile. It's powerful but null and void. It is the place where the contradictions that are perfectly harmonized meet so that they make the ideal state. The body is a fascination and a medium in which artists achieve almost unimaginable things. David Berkowitz Chicago depicts the human body in his paintings, reshaping it to the most basic and most vulnerable form.

Wednesday, January 30, 2019

Interview with the Painter David Berkowitz Chicago

Recently we were lucky enough to get know the paintings of David Berkowitz Chicago, a painter born in Aurora (1943). We were amazed by its real-looking landscapes, its atmospheres, the autumn leaves on the roads and the magnificent reflections in the water. But the most surprising thing for us was the spontaneous strokes with which they were achieved.  Berkowitz’s paintings are fantastic impressionist paintings achieved with brushes and spatulas handled with great skill.

So we had the need to ask the painter some questions, and luckily David Berkowitz Chicago, with great kindness immediately agreed to give us an interview which we are sharing with you and the rest of our blog readers.

We urged you not to look for "step by step" details and tips on how to paint something, but to read the depth of the message that the artist transmits to us.



Interview with the painter David Berkowitz Chicago


How did you find your particular style of painting? Did it take you a long time to develop it?

David Berkowitz Chicago: You acquire the style with the craft, first you have a reference, an artist with whom you identify when working, then you have to take the leap and try to do something that identifies you, but above all, with your taste. The time depends on the "passion" you put.

Have you always painted landscapes or have you ever explored other subjects such as portraits, still life, etc.?

David Berkowitz Chicago: Especially, in the beginning, it is good to "chop" everywhere, in that way you define what you like, in my case I have even tried the abstract painting, it was a time of youth where it was very good to be a modern artist, the truth is that this journey was short, I felt that I was cheating myself and that it was not me. I have experienced different ways of working but more than anything to prove and to improve myself.

How is your process of inspiration and composition of the work in general?

David Berkowitz Chicago: I travel a lot, I look for areas where I know I will find what I like, Pyrenees, Alps, Grand Canyon, Niagara Falls, etc. When I'm in these places, I take long walks and let the landscape seduce me, it can be a bend in a river, a sunset on a hilltop, or a fantastic forest in the fall. I have, my paintings and my camera, it depends on the time and the moment, I can make quick notes, (the best to learn to paint) and with the camera, I capture fleeting moments, which I then capture in the studio. In short, a bit of everything.

What is the most important lesson that has marked your career as a painter?

David Berkowitz Chicago: More than a lesson, after 40 years of painting, I remember the moments of my youth, where abstract art used to be modern, and I was tempted to continue on that path. I decided to do what I really felt, I had arguments, rejections etc. Now I am proud of my decision.

What final advice do you give our readers, who are often beginners or amateurs, to reach a professional level?


David Berkowitz Chicago: I think that with everything I have put above, they will have enough. Anyway, I will encourage them, it is not easy, but it is beautiful. At first, it may seem that nobody understands you, do not pay attention to false sycophants, family members, etc. A good exercise when you mount an exhibition in a place that you do not know is to mix between people as a spectator, listen to honest opinions, it hurts... but with pain, you learn. 

Note: You can read his biography here.

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