Cartoon Cake Guggenheim, Guggenheim Painting 17 of 20

Cartoon Cake Guggenheim Painting by Borbay

For Year Seventeen in my 20-Year-Guggenheim series, I returned to 89th Street and 5th Avenue to paint on-location. Once again, the vibes, energy, conversations and weather dictated the canvas… my reason for creating on-site.

Cartoon Cake Guggenheim Painting Process 1 by Borbay

Twas’ a day, devoid of sun, wet and dreary. I set-up my easel, no sense of weary. I began with a black ground on the canvas, figuring I’d channel the energy of my recent Masters painting. Mother Nature had other ideas.

Cartoon Cake Guggenheim Painting Process 2 by Borbay

As every second on Fifth Avenue is precious, particularly when based in Idaho, I decided to paint through the rain on day one. Through wet and cold conditions, I decided to work with a palette knife… paradoxically easier to control… and thick paint withstood the dampness.

Cartoon Cake Guggenheim Painting Process 3 by Borbay

This is one of those moments I realize, in retrospect, this would have been a lovely painting as-is. Of course, solving the puzzle this early would not make for a great Wheel of Fortune episode… so I pressed onward.

Cartoon Cake Guggenheim Painting Process 4 by Borbay

I spent several sessions painting indoors, as the rain became far too intense. The first move? A re-paint of the Gugg itself, followed by deep read outlines. Mostly palette knife, and this was the last time the brush would be involved. For this session, the wind was so intense, I had to hold the easel with one hand.

Cartoon Cake Guggenheim Painting Process 5 by Borbay

The tree above was intriguing, so I painted it… the first time that tree has been part of this series. Strangely, this is the first time I included the street signs in front of the Guggenheim. You can find the street-side traffic light on Guggenheim #1, but that’s it. Curious, I didn’t realize that until I just reviewed the gallery… as they say on every golf broadcast — moments ago.

Cartoon Cake Guggenheim Painting Process 6 by Borbay

Another session indoors at the rooftop lounge in Dan and Kathleen’s building. Here, I was still unsure of how things would finish, but the idea was slowly solidifying. One of the great assistants in creating is space and time… between rain, golf and painting… I had time to look each night. Much work is done away from the easel.

Cartoon Cake Guggenheim Painting Process 7 by Borbay

The final session, while windy, was far more beautiful. I was inspired to finish with a palette knife, and, in fact, purchased a smaller one for detail work at the Art Student’s League on Central Park South.

Cartoon Cake Guggenheim Painting Process 8 by Borbay

It’s ironic, the painting felt very gritty, and with each layer, the grit became more pronounced. But, it was here, that I added the hand-mixed, near black outlines that would inspire the work’s title.

Cartoon Cake Guggenheim Painting by Borbay

And year 17, in the books. But, why “Cartoon Cake Guggenheim”? Well, a group of friends came by, and my friend Mary said, “I love the effect, it reminds me of a cartoon cake.”

When she showed me what they looked like — I realized, the painting found it’s title. And now, for some action from the streets and beyond.

Chris Pace Borbay

My friend from high school, artist Chris Pace, stopped by to keep me company. As you can see, some men showcase crisply trimmed haircuts and well maintained beards. Others are me.

Borbay Oringer Guggenheim

My Mentor, Robert, spent nearly the entire final day with me on the streets. He supplied a ridiculously large lunch, which we enjoyed, along with great conversation and many fabulous interactions.

Borbay and Friends

We even ran into a group of Robert’s friends from college… and Mary, center, was the one who ended up creating the title for the painting.

Borbay Dog Pound

Now that we have a puppy, dogs are cool with me. We’ll call this Borbay’s Dog Pound.

Borbay and Michael Cogan

While in town, I participated in the “Studz Cup” golf tournament. When we arrived at Montammy Golf Club, our host Barry rolled out the red carpet… we even had personalized lockers. I loved the course and company so much, I swung the sticks 101 times, to extend the day.

Brothers Cogan

Well, Michael and Joe threw the party, and they tied for first, with exceptional rounds at Fresh Meadow… both shooting personal bests. It will be tough to unseat the Cogan Contingency for next year.

Stix on 86

Bet my sticks never figured they’d find their way to 86. After my 101, I thought about 86ing the sticks.

Borbay and Jim DAmato

While gallery hopping in Chelsea for the first time in a decade, I ran into artist Jim D’Amato… tremendous guy, fantastic artist. We ended up at the Whitney for a members event, many great conversations.

Borbay Nelson Scarlett

Also got to see my very good friend Nelson, here we are, at Scarlett, enjoying some smokey cocktails.

Borbay Brody Heather Rich

I also got to catch up with these beauties, Brody and Heather, in from Chicago. We hit up the Blind Tiger for cocktails with their pal Rich, then went out for a magnificent French dinner.

Birthday Dinner Dan

Kathleen, Tim and I got to celebrate Dan’s birthday with him. We had some serious Margs and Guac baby! Thank you for hosting me Kathleen and Dan.

Dan and Garrick

We even ran into Dan’s best friend from yester-year, Garrick. He was taking clients to the Knicks game, and purchased that shirt minutes before we met up. Hard core fan.

Borbay Rothko

Here’s yours truly, slightly out of focus, in front of Rothko.

Picasso No Focus

Interaction with art isn’t what it used to be. And yet, the MOMA remains wondrous – thank you for the hook-up Ray.

Borbay Rashid Johnson

And, finally, a tour of Rashid Johnson’s fabulous exhibition at The Guggenheim. My goal remains… all 20 Guggenheims, in The Guggenheim.

Borbay Landstrom Member Guest

Oh yes, before I hit up Manhattan, the family took a trip to Vegas, and I joined my man Landstrom at Red Rock for Member Guest. NGL, we won our flight, and it was absolutely sensational.

Always a pleasure NYC, love it, love you all.

Become a Borbay V.I.P.

 
You'll be first to hear about new works, pre-sale's, market updates and much, much more.

You've done it!

2 comments

  1. Tom Hessel says:

    Another Gugg masterpiece. I love the look of freedom on this one. Cartoon Cake helps to describe it. The strokes and outlines look so rapid and loose, you could never guess the process that went into its creation. Also, glad to see that after the rain departed, you were able to enjoy another historic Borbay-takes-New York sort of day with friends. Be there, my friend. You rock!

  2. New York City never leaves you.
    As an artist, NYC is a source of energy and inspiration.
    Congratulations on your latest Gugg, Borbay. I feel the cake energy, man.
    Can’t wait to see a little red sticker dot next to the painting in your gallery. SOLD!
    In artship,
    Brendan Ben Feeney
    Street Photographer
    Educator
    Artist
    F.O.B*
    *Friend/Fan……Of…..Borbay…..

Comments are closed.