Thursday, June 25, 2009

Glencoe Festival of the Masters


This weekend we will be exhibiting our work in the Glencoe Festival of the Masters in Glencoe, IL (Park Avenue and Green Bay Road).

We're in booth #40 and the show runs from 10am-5pm both June 27-28 (Sat/Sun). Additional show information: Glencoe Festival of the Masters

Hopefully we will get to see you this weekend!!
It should be a great show!!

Take care,
Craig and Jane

Wednesday, June 17, 2009

The Show Season Continues

With three shows complete, our season is now off to a good start. In this image, Jane is sharing some of her artistic insights with some of our patrons from the Hinsdale show. With no show this coming weekend, we are back in "production mode" again completing orders and preparing for the next round of shows.

Will we see you in Glencoe on June 27-28?

Tuesday, May 26, 2009

Pioneer Press Article


May 21, 2009

By STEPHANIE FOSNIGHT Contributor

Although Jane Love is happy in Arlington Heights, a piece of her heart will always belong to Italy, where she lived in her 20s. Now she goes back every year, taking her husband Craig and a set of cameras, and the Loves delight in getting off the beaten track to explore villages and rural scenes.

The pair's Italian trips provide a bounteous feast of images for their FotoAmore photography business, and, thanks to the Promenade of Art Arlington Heights, the first people the Loves get to share the photographs with are their own neighbors.

The annual Promenade of Art Arlington Heights, running May 30-31, is the first showing in a long summer of art festivals for the Loves -- and it's their favorite.

"It's a nice way to ease back into this crazy world," Jane Love said. For most festivals, the couple rise at 3 a.m., drive a few hours to the site and then pitch their tent in the dawn, but for the Promenade they get to set up in practically their own back yard.

"It helps us build up our stamina and get used to the art festival circuit," she said.

Craig Love agrees.

"It's nice to do something local," he said. "The festival has the real feeling of a hometown, community event."

Such a community event was what art festival producer Amy Amdur had in mind when she created the Promenade seven years ago, in partnership with Northwest Community Hospital.

"The hospital wanted to do a community outreach," Amdur said. "When I looked at the demographics of Arlington Heights, it looked really promising. There are great restaurants, it's a charming town, there's plenty of parking, the site is right next to the train. It easily and quickly came together."

In fact, it's taken less than a decade for the Promenade of Art Arlington Heights to be ranked among the Top 100 art festivals in the United States by a festival trade publication, out of more than 10,000 annual shows.

The Promenade not only features 150 juried artists from around the country, but also has four separate live music areas, plenty of food and a variety of family activities. A yearly favorite is Art Festival Bingo, and this year there's a free stall where children can create their own books. Then there are other craft booths where, for a fee, children can tie-dye T-shirts and paint tiles, with a portion of the proceeds going to the hospital.

One big benefit for the adults, Amdur said, is that festival rules require the artists to be present at their own booths.

"The public has the opportunity to meet the artist and ask questions," she said.

That's part of the fun for the Loves, who chat at length with visitors to their FotoAmore booth. Sometimes native Italians even stop by.

"They look at our photographs and say we photograph the way they do, not like an outsider," Jane Love said. "To me, that's such a high compliment."

What strikes Craig Love is the way so many festival-goers tell him they can see themselves in the pictures on display.

"Our photographs bring back memories people have of their own travels or their family history," he said. "Looking at the photographs together is an interesting way to connect with people."

Promenade of Art favorite of artists, visitors
(http://www.pioneerlocal.com/barrington/entertainment/1579669,entertainment-nwlake-promenade-052109-s1.article)

Sunday, May 17, 2009

Art Show Mania

T-Minus 13!!

Only 13 more days until our first art show of the season, The Promenade of Art, in Arlington Heights, IL. The intensity is beginning to build as it usually does this time of year.

Our HP z3100 wide format digital printer has been running non-stop lately. We've also been busy matting prints of our newer images and preparing many new canvas prints. They are all stacked up and ready to spray and mount onto stretcher bars at this point. Oh the joy!

Something about the deadline tends to motivates us to work at a feverish pace so we can be ready in time. Hopefully we will have great weather over May 30-31. The weather can really make an outdoor event special if it cooperates.

The Promenade of Art, an excellent show, is managed by Amdur Productions. Amy Amdur always attracts high quality artists to the event and Northwest Community Hospital is a sponser. It is a community event in the true sense of the word. We hope you will be able to stop by and see our newest works. We always enjoy seeing our collectors in person and learning what's new in their lives.

Well, back to the "salt mines." No rest for the weary, unfortunately. See you soon!!

Tra la,

Monday, May 4, 2009

2009 Show Postcard!!!

We finished the layout for our show postcard, which will be mailed to everyone on our mailing list in the next couple of weeks. This year's card features nine separate but complimentary images of Italy and France that have come together beautifully.

Our newest French sunflower image, prominently set in the center, has already begun to generate significant interest from our collectors. This stunning French sunflower will compliment our Italian poppies beautifully.

If you're not already on our mailing list, drop us an email with your 'snail mail' address and we will get one out to you right away. The back of the card features convenient reminders of the shows we are participating in this summer. It's hard to believe that the season is actually here! I hope we get to see you at one of the shows this summer!

Sunday, May 3, 2009

Springtime has arrived!!!!!

Papillon en Lavende

In this image, the gentle white butterfly renews its sustenance from the lavender pollen. Taken in Aix-en-Provence last year, it sings springtime! It has been such a rainy April here in Chicago and we are finally experiencing the most beautiful weekend we've had all year. Soaking in the sun's vitamin D, we feel like the butterfly today, dancing among the Royal's purple below. We are refreshed. Springtime has arrived!!!!!

Coming back into our studio, we're filled with anticipation and a slight sense of anxiety for the summer season. It's getting very close to our first art show of the year. On May 30 and 31, we will be participating in The Promenade of Art in Arlington Heights, our hometown's fine art festival. We are beginning to work feverishly in preparation for all of our upcoming shows for this summer.

We'll be featuring the photographs from our most recent photo shoot last July in Provence, France, but we haven't forsaken our Italian roots. We will have photographs from both our French and Italian collections at the art shows. Provence, being a former Roman province, compliments Italy quite nicely. We're certain even the most devout Italophile
will fall in love with the images from Provence as we did.

We're introducing new smaller modular image formats at our shows this summer. These new 20"x20" square images printed on canvas can be mixed up and hung in different groupings suitable for any home or office decor.

We hope you will have an opportunity to stop by to see our newest works this summer. We are currently participating in 11 shows in the Chicago area between late May and mid-September.

Sunday, April 26, 2009

A Brief History of Springtime Travels to Italy

Under My Umbrella Ravello, Campania

People always ask for our advice when planning a trip to Italy. We love answering their questions except for the dreaded "when is the best time to travel there?", which translates to "when is the weather perfect?" Back in the 1970's when I lived in Vicenza, April and May or September and October, were the ideal months to spend in bell'italia. But as you've probably noticed, nothing has stayed the same in Italy except for it's ruins and art!

Maybe it's because of the stormy weekend we're having here in Chicago, but this particular foto, "Under My Umbrella", really spoke to me today. I know the saying goes "April showers bring May flowers" but this foto exemplifies the fact that I can't even choose the "perfect" time for Craig and I to travel to Italy. This foto was taken in the Villa Rufolo in Ravello in the beginning of May, 2007. Almost our entire 2 weeks on the Amalfi Coast were spent under black storm clouds and downpours. I thought I'd chosen the ideal time to capture the coast at it's loveliest.... full of spring flowers and excusite vistas overlooking the gulf of Salerno. But no, we spent our days dashing from wherever we could take refuge from the storms back to the villas Rufolo and Cimbrone the minute the skies would clear.

That wasn't the first spring trip we spent under a cloud...Sicily in April of 2004, a hiking trip through the vineyards of the Langhe in the Piemonte in May of 2001 we found ourselves up to our knees in mud, a Grand Tour with my parents in May of 2000 and Venice in 1999....
We'd be happy to answer any question you might have to help you plan your Italian trip...just don't ask about the weather!!!