At Art in Bars we’re always thinking about the questions of art; the big ideas, the stupid theories, the cheeky rejoinders. Well, that is when we’re not drinking. Since our last ask and artist post, artists who follow us on facebook (and I assume, read the blog) offered to share their opinions with some wonderings of mine. Up first is Jesse Beamesderfer (because he answered the quickest) who, checking my tags, has recently shown at Arcadia boutique. He also holds a BFA in Fine Arts from the Savannah College of Art and Design, and currently works at the Foodery, which means he’s sold me beer many times before and I never knew he was an artist. I’ll introduce myself next time. To the questions! (more…)
Posts Tagged ‘interview’
Ask an Artist – Jesse Beamesderfer
Friday, February 19th, 2010Ask an Artist – Mat Tomezsko
Monday, February 8th, 2010
Mat Tomezsko, Girl
Ask an Artist (and the companion Ask a Bartender) were some of the first concepts for features I came up with for Art in Bars. Naturally, I think we’ve managed to do one of each. But I’m trying to get back on track (as well as out of my own boring head) and today present Ask an Artist with Mat Tomezsko, where Art in Bars asks slightly stupid questions to professionals about what their work is like. There are both my Art in Bars ponderings, as well as the insightful questions of former contributor and bon vivant Mike Smith.
Mat Tomezsko is a recent graduate of Temple / Tyler and since graduation has been showing his artwork in unusual residential locations, such as the Thomas Lofts, the Parkview Condos, and this month at The Cigar Factory, a condominium in Olde City.
Art in Bars: How did you get involved in showing your work in these living spaces?
Mat Tomezsko: The Cigar Factory hosts three artists a year to show in their foyer space for four months each, and an opening reception in which a good portion of the building can be filled with the artist’s work. The art director, Nancy Small, saw two pieces of mine purchased by her friends and contacted me about the gig.
Mike Smith: HOW CAN YOU CALL YOURSELF A SERIOUS PAINTER WHEN YOU HAVE TWO PERFECTLY GOOD EARS?
MT: I have really bad hearing and can barely speak, so painting was really the most practical option. Also, I don’t know how serious I am about anything.

Mat Tomezsko, Dead Deer
AiB: Do you feel your work is influenced more by art historical traditions, your schooling, or something else you discovered?
MT: My paintings are the result of what is consuming my thoughts. I am working these things out visually in order to make sense of them. So a lot is based on personal experience, but it is also me digesting art history and dealing with the process of painting and my reaction to making a handmade image.
MS: HAVE YOU EVER TRIED TO USE YOUR DICK AS A PAINT BRUSH?
MT: No, but I have tried to use my paintbrush as a dick. Nothing but colors and complaints.
AiB: What’s it like being an artist, freshly out into the world? Are you living the dream or facing the cruelty of reality?
MT: I waver between complete rapture and utter despair.

Mat Tomezsko, Girl
MT: Oddly enough, I dream in claymation.
AiB: What is the goal of being an artist, for you personally?
MT: I want to live a full life with an open and awake mind. I don’t know where I’ll end up. I don’t really have a plan or a place to go, so I guess we’ll see.
MS: HAVE YOU EVER GIVEN YOUR ART AS A GIFT, ONLY TO HAVE IT REGIFTED?
MT: Maybe, but I have given a painting to a friend and then he got drunk and kicked it around the kitchen in front of me, so I stole it back when he passed out. Now it’s in my basement. Asshole.
AiB: Do you think art inherently serves a noble purpose? Or is it just something some people are compelled to create and others compelled to justify?
MT: Art is kind of pointless, but it is also something inherent to humanity. It’s like consciousness, we don’t need it to survive, but here it is for us to deal with. I don’t know if that makes it good or bad, but it is beautiful.
MS: ANY SHOUT OUTS?
MT: Carl Sagan.
Mat Tomezsko’s work will be on display at The Cigar Factory: 1147 N. 4th St. There will be an opening reception Friday, February 12th 2010 from 6:30-9:00 P.M. More images of his work are available on his blog tomezsko.blogspot.com.
Ask an Artist – Keith Grieman
Tuesday, May 5th, 2009Ed– Michael Smith visits yet another gastro pup and asks an artist about their work and process.
It’s spring time, the time to shake the dust off your slutty clothes, renew your gym membership and finally get those A.I.D.S test results you should have picked up instead of the hair suit nymph with the pork roll ankles and breast eczema. Spring is a time for growth and celebration which was the case for Memphis Tap Room. The pert gastro-pub in the middle of North Philly’s newest coolest neighborhood, New Port Fishingford threw a one year anniversary hoe down replete with free food and enough extra strong ale on tap you could pee pee out your liver. The popularity of the Memphis Tap Room was easily represented by it’s bloated turn out, there were so many white people crammed in the bar I thought I was at a Wu-Tang Clan concert. The evening took on a deeper significance as The Memphis Tap Room unveiled their newest t-shirt, a kitschy spin on the Budweiser label which haughtily proclaims it’s self the king of beer bars. While the “king of”.. statement is bandied about by everyone from rappers, heavily armed African pre teens, and Lebron James, I’d like to think the Tap Room is more Billy Jean King than Rodney King. Every month Memphis Tap Room devotes the back dining room wall to new local artists of the visual variety. In the middle of party central I was able to sit down and chop it up with Keith Grieman who’s art reminds me of what it’s like to be the sanest inmate in a state ran mental institution. (more…)
New Contributor – Michael Adrion
Tuesday, May 5th, 2009There’s only so many listings per month on art in bars, and although eventually I’ll get to the point of doing reviews as well as repeating columns, there’s still a lot of the blogulous to fill. Enter Michael Adrion, comic, performer, bon vivant. He (along with others, hopefully,) will pop in every now and again with a — shall we say — alternative voice about what’s going on in the bar scene in Philadelphia. Up first is an interview with an artist who’s work has appeared in the Memphis Taproom, Keith Grieman.
