Posts Tagged ‘art’

Café Du Luxe provides first art show venue for fledgling 51-year-old photographer

By Marty Sabota

Lightning Bear Productions

Photographer Randy Rancier spent most of his life working at corporate jobs that he hated.

The father of three girls, he knew that having a steady income was the right thing to do.

But when his girls reached their teens, he began exploring his real passion in life: photography.

A fine arts major at Sam Houston State in his early years, he decided at age 50 to throw caution to the wind and pursue his lifelong goal of photography.

“It’s what I really want to do,” Rancier said simply.

The Corinth resident said his main influence of art was modernism, mainly from the turn of the century through the early 70s.

“A lot of the influence is abstract themes,” he said. “I think you can see it in a lot of my work. What I always focus on is that the image has to have impact. The impact may be beauty and form or it might be something strong and graphic. But is has to have impact.”

David Carles, owner of Café Du Luxe, a wine and coffee bistro in Denton that features art and music, is showcasing Rancier’s works throughout the month of February.

While some coffee cafés may feature a local artist from time to time or dedicate only a limited amount of space for the artist to display his or her talent, Café Du Luxe goes the extra mile. An entire wall of the café has been designated solely for the purpose of featuring some of the greater Dallas-Fort Worth area’s brightest and most exciting artists on a monthly basis.

Five others have had monthly showings, J. Lynn Kelly, Scott Focke, Joan Hart and Emily Penn and Keith Clementson.

Café Du Luxe offers private label coffees, some of the world’s finest wines and a menu featuring breakfast pastries, sandwiches, salads, soups, evening appetizers and decadent desserts.

Rancier said the road to Café Du Luxe was a long one. After graduating from college with a major in fine arts 1981, with a penchant for photography, he realized “I didn’t really know how to make a living as an artist.”

He enlisted in the Air Force, thinking that “flying planes would be fun,” but the would-be pilot failed to finish the flight program.

He worked in sales a few years before going back to school to pursue a degree in civil engineering.

Although Rancier still loved photography, he decided instead of using the right side of his brain, the creative and artistic side, to switch to the potentially more lucrative left side.

“Unlike many people, I am adept at using both sides,” Rancier said. “I’ve always had an artistic inclination, but I’ve always been real good at math and numbers.”

“I worked in the field of engineering for roughly 20 years, but I really wasn’t happy,” the artist said.

But he was married with a family to support, so he put his dreams of photography aside.

In later years, now divorced and his children older, he began to revisit the dream.

“A few years ago, I started back to photography,” he said, adding that the years off had left his skills a little rusty, especially now that photography had entered the digital age.

He began building his photography portfolio, with a goal of opening a gallery and frame shop. To hone his business skills, he took a part-time position at a frame shop in Flower Mound.

In addition to wanting to own a gallery, he planned on going to art festivals on the side to sell his works.

“I just saw while working at the frame shop for experience that if I opened a retail shop, I was going to get bogged down with the business,” Rancier said. “I just really wanted to do my photography. And the more I looked into festivals, the more I realized you can make a good living at it. It’s a whole industry.”

So rather than dabble in an occasional festival, he opted to make photography his only source of income.

“I realized about six months ago that if I’m going to do art festivals, at least to start, I’ve got to, for a period of time, totally immerse myself and devote myself to that,” the photographer said. “Because I realized if I didn’t, I wasn’t going to get a good start.”

He’s been accepted to show at four art festivals this spring, with a goal of 20 this year. They include the Arts in the Square festival in Frisco, Artscape at the Dallas Arboretum and Art in the Square in Southlake.

“It’s very competitive,” Rancier said of getting accepted for the lineup at art festivals, especially major national venues.

“This is my first major exhibit,” Rancier said of his showing at Café Du Luxe.

“They’ve got a really unique concept there,” he said, referring to the fact that an entire wall provides a wealth of space to showcase his works. “They have a nice exhibit area. I can put a good scope of work up there.”

He’s put up more than 20 images, some of them fairly large.

A popular one is the watch tower at Alcatraz. One of his favorites is called “Patio and Clouds,” a photograph he took from his back porch.

“You see the house and a shadow going across it at an angle,” the photographer said.

Café Du Luxe owner Carles is excited about giving Rancier a local venue to display his talent.

 “I think it’s great that artists welcome the chance to be showcased and realize that they can be a part of something unique,” Carles said.

In addition to having his shown all month long, Rancier will have the opportunity to meet his old and new fans at a “meet the artist” event there from 5-7 p.m. Feb. 21.

To view some of Rancier’s works, go to www.randyrancier.com.

Hart Paints from the Heart by Cafe Du Luxe

HART PAINTS FROM THE HEART
Art happens. No hovel is safe from it; no prince may depend on it; the vastest intelligence cannot bring it about. – James Abbott McNeill Whistler (1834-1903)
Denton artist Joan Hart identifies strongly with that artist of long ago.
“Art just happens. That’s the way I feel about it,” Hart said. “It sends me into whimsical worlds where luscious, vivid colors bring fantasies to life. It’s not logical. It’s magical. It just happens.”
Hart’s magical world will be on display from 4-X p.m. Oct. 18 at Café Du Luxe, Denton’s newest and most exciting coffee and wine café.
The café offers private label coffees, some of the world’s finest wines and a menu featuring breakfast pastries, sandwiches, salads, soups, evening appetizers and decadent desserts.
In addition to treating the sense of taste and smell, Café Du Luxe offers a visual treat.
While some coffee cafés may feature a local artist from time to time or dedicate only a limited amount of space for the artist to display his or her talent, Café Du Luxe is going the extra mile. An entire wall of the café has been designated solely for the purpose of featuring some of the greater Dallas-Fort Worth area’s brightest and most exciting artists.
Featured art will be displayed monthly with a “meet the artist” night on the third Sunday evening of the month.
Hart is excited about being chosen to showcase her talent.
Although she was born in Salem, Mass., and graduated from Northeastern University in Boston with a bachelor of arts degree, Hart makes Denton her home.
“It’ll be fun for me and my friends to get together,” she said of the Sunday night gathering.
Her foray into art followed an unusual path. She was a journalist most of her life, writing as a newswoman and columnist for The Tampa Times in Florida. She also wrote for The Los Angeles Times, among many other publications. Her assignments ranged from police reporting to investigative reporting to features.
Always a creative soul, she studied art throughout the years in California and Texas with several well-known artists. Hart continues her study of art as a world traveler. She has been selected in many local and national juried shows over the years.
Her art has been featured in various galleries and institutes all over California and Texas. She is an active member of the Visual Arts Society of Texas and the Southwestern Watercolor Society.
Hart’s paintings, reminiscent of Fauvism, derive from subconscious memories of places like California, Italy, Mexico and New Mexico.
She is unable to describe how she gets her inspiration.
“It’s just magical,” Hart said.
“I don’t plan what I paint. It just happens,” she said. “It just comes to me.”
Her colorful paintings have colorful titles as well, including: Whimsical Days, Pink Sun and Boobies.
Many painters would envy the prolific painter.
She has 27 works of art being showcased at the coffee café and many more at home.
“Sometimes I paint two or three paintings a day,” Hart said.

Art happens. No hovel is safe from it; no prince may depend on it; the vastest intelligence cannot bring it about. – James Abbott McNeill Whistler (1834-1903)

Denton artist Joan Hart identifies strongly with that artist of long ago.

“Art just happens. That’s the way I feel about it,” Hart said. “It sends me into whimsical worlds where luscious, vivid colors bring fantasies to life. It’s not logical. It’s magical. It just happens.”hart2

Hart’s magical world will be on display from 5-7 p.m.Oct. 18 at Café Du Luxe, Denton’s newest and most exciting coffee and wine café.

The café offers private label coffees, some of the world’s finest wines and a menu featuring breakfast pastries, sandwiches, salads, soups, evening appetizers and decadent desserts.

In addition to treating the sense of taste and smell, Café Du Luxe offers a visual treat.

While some coffee cafés may feature a local artist from time to time or dedicate only a limited amount of space for the artist to display his or her talent, Café Du Luxe is going the extra mile. An entire wall of the café has been designated solely for the purpose of featuring some of the greater Dallas-Fort Worth area’s brightest and most exciting artists.

Featured art will be displayed monthly with a “meet the artist” night on the third Sunday evening of the month.

Hart is excited about being chosen to showcase her talent.

Although she was born in Salem, Mass., and graduated from Northeastern University in Boston with a bachelor of arts degree, Hart makes Denton her home.

hart4“It’ll be fun for me and my friends to get together,” she said of the Sunday night gathering.

Her foray into art followed an unusual path. She was a journalist most of her life, writing as a newswoman and columnist for The Tampa Times in Florida. She also wrote for The Los Angeles Times, among many other publications. Her assignments ranged from police reporting to investigative reporting to features.

Always a creative soul, she studied art throughout the years in California and Texas with several well-known artists. Hart continues her study of art as a world traveler. She has been selected in many local and national juried shows over the years.

Her art has been featured in various galleries and institutes all over California and Texas. She is an active member of the Visual Arts Society of Texas and the Southwestern Watercolor Society.

Hart’s paintings, reminiscent of Fauvism, derive from subconscious memories of places like California, Italy, Mexico and New Mexico.

She is unable to describe how she gets her inspiration.

hart6

“It’s just magical,” Hart said.

“I don’t plan what I paint. It just happens,” she said. “It just comes to me.”

Her colorful paintings have colorful titles as well, including: Whimsical Days, Pink Sun and Boobies.

Many painters would envy the prolific painter.

She has 27 works of art being showcased at the coffee café and many more at home.

“Sometimes I paint two or three paintings a day,” Hart said.

Cafe du Luxe Online
Sign up for our Newsletter!




August 2010
M T W T F S S
« Jul    
 1
2345678
9101112131415
16171819202122
23242526272829
3031