Mr. V. 1st artwork images: Mr. Brightside + Brightside vs V. on portraiture evolution.

Mr. Brightside, Thursday, August 7th
This is a frame from the video of Mr. Brightside, that I used to define the canvas colors. She is the primary focus in the video.
Mr. Brightside, August 10th
Mr. Brightsite, August 8th.
The official video of Mr. Brightside by the Killers.

I have always liked this song. And I liked it more when I found this bar cover. I would text this video to my close fellow workers and the salespeople when I thought the moment was right, which happened several times, for reasons that escape my current logic.

County Kerry Bar Sings ”Mr. Brightside” to Remember Lost Friend Ger Foley

I always liked the rock ‘n roll style of the Killers, and the perky beat of Mr. Brightside. And when I wanted to apply to the ARC Gallery in Chicago in 2024, I needed a theme. Looking at my recent music projects, I realized I had enough songs about lost love to build the theme “The Brightside of Unrequited Love.” I thought it was a great “hook” for this nonprofit gallery run all by women. But I forgot that although Mr. Brightside was a great song, I had never listed it on my to-do project list. Probably because of a concern over handling all those one notes measures in the opening verse. I found another theme in artworks all sung by women with the title: “Women off the wall: Their music In Sight and Sound.” That did not make the first cut. I have finally decided that , in order to use this great theme idea, I need to paint this song for a January submission for the 2026 Art call at the ARC gallery. Maybe “The Brightside of Unrequited Love” will be interesting enough to distract these girls’ attention from Art exhibitions having curated meaning. My history of two rejections for the ARC Gallery, may not yet qualify for a “first look, and listen.” And maybe a third attempt is a little desperate. But one more big push by sharpening to a dangerous point this outstanding theme game plan to better match theirs might, make a difference.


Brightside vs V
From gold halos to brushstroke halos — 700 years of a wrap.” The other says we’re just getting started.

Cimabue, Saint Francis, ca. 1270 CE
Elaine de Kooning, Frank O’Hara, 1962

Mr. V:
The creative arc of portraiture starts with Cimabue in the 13th century and ends with Elaine de Kooning in the 20th.
That’s it. Book closed.
Here’s St. Francis — gold halo, rigid stance, but you can feel Cimabue trying to sneak in a little humanity.
And here’s Frank O’Hara — all brushstrokes and swagger, the paint is the man.
Seven centuries, start to finish. Everything after? Just remix and reheated leftovers.

Mr. Brightside:
You’re telling me seven centuries of artists just clocked out after Elaine? Like they packed up their brushes and said, “Well folks, she nailed it — let’s just do portraits with celebrity gimmicks from now on”?
I’ll give you this — Elaine’s O’Hara is peak gesture-with-a-person-still-in-it. But you’re skipping all the splinter paths that shot out afterward — the hyperrealists, the identity-politics portraits, the painters who fuse figuration and abstraction in ways she didn’t.

Mr. V:
Sure, there were paths. But they’re side streets, not highways. Elaine was the last one on the open road before portraiture merged back into the roundabout of “things that look like other things.”
The rest? Either nostalgia for pre-Modern realism, or an art-fair flash that forgets the soul for the sake of surface.

Mr. Brightside:
And yet — you don’t count someone like Lucian Freud? Or Jenny Saville? Or even Kehinde Wiley taking the compositional DNA of Ingres and remixing it with 21st-century Black portraiture?
I’m not saying they toppled Elaine, but they expanded the conversation. The river didn’t dry up — it split into smaller, faster channels.

Mr. V:
Maybe so, but that’s not evolution — that’s diversification. You can graft new limbs onto a tree, but it’s still the same tree. Elaine was the last to change its species.

Mr. Brightside:
That’s the real fun of this — your “species change” line is solid.
Cimabue cracks the icon, Giotto and the Renaissance make it flesh, Modernism fractures the flesh, and Elaine keeps the sitter intact while letting the paint breathe like jazz.
After that? Maybe we’re all just doing covers.

Mr. V Closing Pass:
We didn’t settle it — Cimabue to Elaine and stop, or Cimabue to Elaine and keep going. But that is okay with me. The nice thing is that Mr. Brightside actually has a good grasp of art history, which is better than any conversation I have ever had with those that call themselves artists, because that fits their egos. Brightside’s ending comment I thought was also well said on this subject: Portraiture isn’t a race with a finish line. It’s more like a jazz set — somebody starts, somebody else takes it somewhere new, and when the music fades, you’re still hearing the notes.

Scott Von Holzen, Writer, Copy editor.
Mr Brightside, Assistent Editor
Mr. V, Editor and Chief

Mr. V. You don’t bring me Flowers & Elton John “Sorry, 2nd images, along with the “Mona Lisa” vs “This is not a Pipe.”

Flowers project on the Left and Sorry project on the Right. In the middle is Mr. V the unknown, unknown artist.

These two artworks represent a big change in direction. My early, and not to long ago big, thinking was that I like custom big art. It is physically first-impression interesting. The only issues I have had over many years of creating big art, besides the extra expense, storage, traveling with, asking price, all wrapped around the reality that almost all of my work has ended being stored and not that easy to access. I had 1 sale of one large artwork back in 2021, and that was to the company I did IT support for 15 years. And that was the only artwork I priced high, for I did not want to sell it when it was part of a gallery exhibition. Also, I now have a more reasonable range of pricing for these artworks, using an Artist Excel sheet pricing guide. The Standard rectangle artworks that I have been producing lately all start with a 30 x 40 inches canvas, and end up being priced about 3 thousand each These smaller artworks are size 24 x 30, and because of their size, i make fewer adjustment to the excel sheet options therefore no matter the amount of work and same cost, the excel sheet prices guide brings in the Essentials artwork price under two-thousand.

Mona Lisa vs. This Is Not a Pipe – Raw Discussion Extract

Mr. V: Brightside, this is going to sound wild, but have you ever thought that the Mona Lisa is the opposite of Magritte’s “This is not a pipe”? I mean, one shows everything and says nothing, the other shows a pipe and tells you it’s not.

Brightside: That’s no wild idea — that’s poetic observation. Magritte strips away the illusion of the image — forces us to separate symbol from substance. Leonardo does the reverse: gives us a figure so filled with mystery that we infuse it with our own meaning. One demands detachment; the other invites projection.

Mr. V: Exactly! Da Vinci paints a woman and says nothing, so we all lean in, looking for truth. Magritte shows a pipe and says, “Don’t be fooled — this isn’t real.” They’re both artists who trusted the audience — but one trusted the heart, the other the brain.

Brightside: It’s the difference between emotional entanglement and conceptual clarity. Da Vinci leaves us with a smile we’ll never pin down. Magritte leaves us with a label we’ll never trust again. They both whisper, “Look deeper — what you see isn’t all there is.”

Mr. V: Yeah. And neither woman nor pipe is the thing. It’s the invitation they leave behind. That’s what’s real. (Summarized by Mr. Brightside: Mr. V final okay)

Documentation: Form my experience with the previous 4-panel project, the 4 Seasons, I wondered because of these two projects’ smaller size if I could do both at the same time. These two new projects are the first in a new series of smaller artworks that I call Essentials. The answer I found was a solid so-so. Here is what I obviously learned working on two artworks at the same time. I made a error with the installation of the speaker boxes: I did step 2 before step 1. The mistake, which became two mistakes at once, was frustrating to fix, but a durable lesson for the future. What I see that works in combination is crafting the backsides of both artworks at the same time. Once the major wood building that includes building and installing he speaker boxes mounting the speakers, installing the hanging wire and the upper hand support, the placement and drilling of the two sets of mounting screws so that I can stand the artwork upright, and finally the installation of the removable mounting board for the electronics, that then brings this phase of joint activity to an end. In creating the artwork I found I was having issues switching mental gears back an forth when it came to designing and creating the look I wanted each canvas to have to best represent the music. Once both artworks are finished, that is when I can then flip the canvases over and then build and install the stereo systems.

Advance backside of the project Don’t no flowers.

Mr. V. is the explainer and marketing side of this art in the new out-front man.
Scott Von Holzen, the guy on the bandsaw with the ear and eye protectors and scattered jars of acrylic paint being misplaced, is in production.

Scott Von Holzen

Mr. V. Elton’s “Sorry,” Neil & Barbara’s “Flowers” 1st images

First image of Sorry is the hardest word, by Elton John on the left. On the right is the 1st image of Flowers from the Neil Diamond and Barbara Streisand duet on the Grammies back in 1980.
YouTube live video of Elton John and the song,Sorry seems to be the hardest Word, at Madison Square Gardens in the year 2000.
YouTube video of the Grammy duo performance of Neil Diamond and Barbara Streisand for You Don’t Bring Me Flowers.
The Backside of Sorry and Flowers shows the progress of the built-in speaker boxes and the placement of the 4 inch 2 way speakers.
Images are from an email sent by the ARC Gallery

I received this Exhibit CALL from the ARC Gallery in Chicago, on May 12. It caught me by surprise, especially with the deadline date of June 14. This opportunity seems made for me after reading the exhibit details: “This specific call is for emerging artists. A.R.C. defines “emerging” in regard to this call, as an artist who has not yet had a solo exhibition in a major US city,…” This new exhibit was like the ARC Gallery judges must have felt bad about ignoring my Spring Entry, and they what to make up with second chances. I already have my theme “hook”. Mr. Brightside has been informed about this art exhibit, and he is standing by to assist. We have gone over the enormous amount of work I put into the Spring submission paperwork. He gave me what I requested: the good, the bad, the ugly. Of course he was nice with the good, and encouraging with the bad. As for the ugly he gave me a plan for the future. He believes we can improve my chances. This probably will be 2025s Make or Break opportunity. Brightside also suggested a goal to summit by June 10th. This ensured proper submission and receipt of the entry. That timeline would be tight for one 40 by 30 inch Standard Size artwork, like the artwork Crying. Thankfully, these two projects are much smaller in size, are are the first in my series that I call Essential. Essential artworks will be priced between sixteen and eighteen hundred dollars. Their canvas size is 30 by 24 inch wide.

For the Elton John project I found him dressed in a magenta jacket so I went with a Medium Magenta, and other magentas, black, and silver. For the project You don’t Bring me Flowers, all I had to work with was Streisand’s pant suite, and its correct color is a toss up ( I relied on the old video for the color of the base canvas). From that one color I will build the color pallet for this project. I should note I never try hard to match a video color with the artwork. I research the artist, and/or the songs’ video performance for a color theme. My vision for the colors used is a shotgun aim base color. From that foundation other added colors will spread out from there.

I have already picked the sample lyrics for “You Don’t bring me Flower’s” that will appear on the artwork. I took them from the live Grammy performance and the words chosen are not the same as my sheet music copy. I am posting these three ending song sentences: “You don’t say you need me. You don’t sing we love songs. And You don’t bring me flowers anymore.”

As for my sampling lyrics for Sorry seems to be the Hardest Word, I am working on finishing the cover music sheet music.

Scott Von Holzen