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    CHICAGO One marker in hand and one in his mouth, Lou Chukman glances up and down from a sketchpad to a reputed Chicago mobster across the courtroom drawing feverishly to capture the drama of the judges verdict before the moment passes.

    Sketch artists have been the publics eyes at high-profile trials for decades a remnant of an age when drawings in broadsheet papers, school books or travel chronicles were how people glimpsed the world beyond their own.

    Today, their ranks are thinning swiftly as states move to lift longstanding bans on cameras in courtrooms. As of a year ago, 14 states still had them but at least three, including Illinois this month, have taken steps since then to end the prohibitions.

    When people say to me, `Wow, you are a courtroom artist I always say, `One day, you can tell your grandchildren you met a Stegosaurus, Chukman, 56, explained outside court. Were an anachronism now, like blacksmiths.

    Cutbacks in news budgets and shifts in aesthetic sensibilities toward digitized graphics have all contributed to the forms decline, said Maryland-based sketch artist Art Lien.

    While the erosion of the job may not be much noticed by people reading and watching the news, Lien says something significant is being lost. Video or photos cant do what sketch artists can, he said, such as compressing hours of court action onto a single drawing that crystallizes the events.

    The best courtroom drawings hang in museums or sell to collectors for thousands of dollars.

    I think people should lament the passing of this art form, Lien said.

    But while courtroom drawing has a long history artists did illustrations of the Salem witch trials in 1692 the artistry can sometimes be sketchy. A bald lawyer ends up with a full head of hair. A defendant has two left hands. A portly judge is drawn rail-thin.

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    Raptors-NuggetsGame Review

    Denver, CO (Sports Network) – Rudy Fernandez poured in 23 points to lead four teammates in double-figures as the Denver Nuggets topped the Toronto Raptors, 96-81 at Pepsi Center.

    Danilo Gallinari dropped in 21 points and pulled down seven rebounds, while Nene finished with 20 points and 10 rebounds for the Nuggets, who extended their winning streak to six games. Andre Miller finished with 13 points and matched a season-high with 12 assists to go with six rebounds.

    Im feeling good, Fernandez said. I needed this game for my confidence. Im very happy about the game.

    The Nuggets were also without point guard Ty Lawson, who sat out with a sprained ankle.

    Leandro Barbosa paced the Raptors with 19 points, while Jerryd Bayless had 18 and James Johnson donated 16 points. Aaron Gray had a big night on the glass, grabbing 11 rebounds for the Raptors, who have lost nine of their last 11.

    Toronto also played its first game without forward Andrea Bargnani, who will be out indefinitely after aggravating a calf strain in a double-overtime win over the Utah Jazz on Wednesday.

    Denver came out on fire in the first quarter, ripping off a 16-2 run to start the game before a running jumper by Johnson finally stopped the run with 3:08 left in the opening 12 minutes.

    The Nuggets continued to make shots, shooting 55 percent in the frame. Gallinari led the offensive outburst with three treys and nine points.

    Miller capped the quarter by nailing a 60-foot three-pointer at the buzzer to put Denver ahead 28-12.

    The Nuggets continued to hammer Toronto in the second quarter, shooting 57 percent from the floor and outscoring the Raptors, 26-20.

    Fernandez finished with 10 points in the frame and the Nuggets took a 54-32 lead into the locker room.

    Trailing, 67-47, with 5:47 to go in the third quarter, the Raptors stepped up their game, using an impressive 27-13 run that bridged the third and fourth quarters to get the deficit all the way down to 80-74 with 9:37 to play in regulation.

    Gallinari stopped the run with a jumper and Fernandez nailed a trey on the Nuggets next touch to push the lead back to 85-74 with 6:10 left in regulation and they cruised the rest of the way.

    You have to believe you can win right from the jump ball, Raptors head coach Dwayne Casey said. Thats the challenge I issued our guys after the game tonight. I didnt see the belief in their eyes.

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    CHICAGO, Jan. 27 (Xinhua) — The Kansas City Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art celebrated Chinese New Year on Friday with the grand opening of two renovated Chinese art galleries.

    The new galleries showcase the museums prized collection of jade disks, ancient vessels, bronzes, sculptures, and traditional Chinese paintings.

    Museum guests had the opportunity Friday night to be the first to view the special Ancestors, Ritual, and the Tomb: the Ancient Chinese Art Galleries exhibit, which includes artifacts as old as 4,000 years and dating from the Xia to the Zhou dynasties.

    Displays include a recreated Han Dynasty tomb featuring a door emblazoned with dragons and interior lined with ceramic tiles, while the launch featured special performances, such as a dance by the Shaolin Lohan Pai Lion Dance Troupe.

    The lively gallery opening also featured activities from traditional Chinese music performances, and competitions in Chinese chess and the board game, wei qi.

    Children particularly delighted in a 1950s Hong Kong rickshaw that served as a backdrop while parents took photos of them dressed in traditional Chinese robes and costumes.

    With about 8,000 different works of Chinese art, the Nelson-Atkins Museum has one of the most extensive and richest Chinese art collections in the world.

    Nelson-Atkins Senior Curator of Chinese Art Colin Mackenzie told Xinhua that, since he took up the post in July 2009, he has seen increasing interest in the Chinese galleries.

    The residents of Kansas City have always understood that we have a great collection, but definitely more recently its amazing how many Chinese have come to see the collection, Mackenzie said in an interview, adding that both visitors from China and local Chinese bringing their families had frequented the gallery.

    The majority of the Nelson-Atkins Chinese purchases were made in the early 1930s, around the time of the Warlord Era in Chinese history. Mackenzie said, in those times of economic duress and relative chaos, many in China were forced to sell artwork for money, and that some pieces were destroyed entirely.

    For this reason, Mackenzie said he was especially happy to share the Nelson-Atkins Chinese collection with people of Chinese descent. They could see a rich part of their cultural past that has been professionally preserved at the museum for almost 80 years.

    We really believe that this collection is first and foremost for the Chinese community that we have here in Kansas City, Mackenzie told Xinhua.

    When a Chinese delegation comes here, people kindly bring them to show those pieces to them, and we make a special effort to be hospitable to them and say that we really honor and respect these objects and want to preserve them for eternity, Mackenzie said.

    Among the Nelson-Atkins most prized Chinese artworks are landscape paintings by Li Cheng and Xu Daoning, an intricately carved jade disc from the Jincun site, a wall sculpture from the Longmen grottos and the Guanyin of the Southern Seas bodhisattva sculpture, possibly the most famous and well-preserved Chinese Buddhist sculpture outside China.

    The Guanyin sculpture is housed inside the Nelson-Atkins Chinese Temple Gallery, a structure which features the actual ceiling from the Zhihua Temple in Beijing and a 23-foot high by 48-foot wide mural painting, Paradise of Tejraprabha Buddha, from the Yuan Dynasty.

    Although the Chinese Temple Gallery was not one of the galleries launched Friday, both it and another permanent Chinese art gallery had also recently been renovated, as the Nelson-Atkins continues to promote the collection and encourage peoples interest in China.

    Mackenzie says the collection is a valuable asset not only for Chinese nationals but also for Americans, as the deepening relationship between the United States and China inspires more cultural learning opportunities.

    We feel that (the collection is) very much a useful thing for China to have overseas, and that it really promotes understanding of Chinese culture, he said.

    We see the Chinese collections here, their role, as presenting Chinese civilization not just as a relic of the past, but as something that explains the modern world, he said.

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    Players still have something to prove in Senior Bowl game

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    Mathias Kiwanuka was forced to sit out the Giants’ previous appearance in the Super Bowl because of a broken leg, but missing this year’s championship game would have hit him even closer to home.

    The Giants will travel to Indianapolis on Monday in preparation for Super Bowl XLVI, bringing their starting linebacker back to his hometown with a chance to be on the field this time against Tom Brady and the Patriots.

    “It’s awesome. This is everything that dreams are made of,” Kiwanuka said after practice Thursday at the Meadowlands. “This is America’s game, and it’s the biggest game of the year and I get to do it at home and in front of my family.”

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    Jim Swains latest show will likely be sold out by the end of its run. The Martin Batchelor Gallery is lined with 55 vigorously expressive paintings, identical in size and painted on flattened-out fruit boxes.

    This corrugated cardboard comes die-cut with symmetrical holes and scalloped edges, over which Swain paints figures that look a bit like the late works of Picasso. Each is priced at $50.

    Of course, it is better to sell all of the paintings at a low price than none at a high price. And there is more to his strategy than sales.

    The show is an installation, he told me. It works as one piece of art. At the opening, the room was packed with people of all ages.

    Everybody was discussing visual esthetics, he insisted, and they felt free to because of the low prices. Couples who couldnt afford a babysitter were actively discussing which painting they wanted to buy – and why.

    Usually, at a gallery, people are creeping around like they were at a frigging funeral, whispering and drinking bad red wine. The prices are so over the top and the elitism is so stifling that everybody cant wait to leave.

    Thats why I served beer instead of wine – and not in glasses! Have a bottle and look at this stuff, he continued.

    If anybody talks in hushed tones like theyre at a bloody golf match, Im gonna get pissed off.

    Swain considered other art openings he has attended.

    Im not annoyed at the art – its the culture that has grown around it that annoys me.

    He fumed about the trays of canapÃs, waiters wearing tuxedoes, somebody sitting at a grand piano playing mind-bogglingly boring elevator music. You couldnt get near the art for all the offensiveness they have built around it to justify the $5,000 price tag.

    Swain feels that painting on cardboard boxes eliminates the idea that one of his paintings should be purchased as an investment.

    It might last 50 or 100 years before it absolutely falls apart, he laughs. These are paintings to be enjoyed now, not purchased for the benefit of your grandchildren or the art historians.

    Its art imitating death, he adds. These paintings are going to die. But then, every friend youve ever had is going to die. Thats the dilemma of human existence.

    And that dilemma is Swains theme in this show. He quotes Leonard Cohen: Its about the inevitable catastrophic defeat we all face. Whenever you discuss the inevitable catastrophic defeat, do it with elegance and beauty.

    I asked him how he aims to achieve this, and he reminded me of Picassos dictum: The painter and the viewer do not communicate.

    The painter presents the painting and thats it, he stated. He is not responsible for what the viewer brings to it or how the viewer looks at it.

    So, for his part, how does Swain the artist approach the project of painting?

    I sketch it out, and then I begin the painting process. And, in the process, the painting speaks back to me: back and forth, back and forth, till finally it stops talking.

    As he creates his images he avoids the conventional tools, those hackneyed tropes of the language of representation. His characters have club feet and shocked profiles.

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    NEW ORLEANS (AP)Dwight Howard sat calmly in his locker and spoke softly,
    but with cutting tone as he ripped into his team for what he saw as a lack of
    effort.

    I look at guys and they dont look like they want to play, Howard said
    following Orlandos surprisingly lopsided 93-67 loss to a New Orleans Hornets
    team that came into Friday nights meeting on a nine-game skid.

    I told them at halftime, `If you dont want to play, just stay in the
    locker room, because it dont make sense for a team who we should beat to just
    demolish us.

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    Thompson Valley High School senior Faith Ford, 18, poses for a photo as classmates hold some of the photographs in her portfolio Friday at the school in Loveland. Her portfolio won a Scholastic Art Award. Many art students at the school won awards for individual pieces as well. (Photo by Jenny Sparks)

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    Hawks-PistonsGame Review

    Auburn Hills, MI (Sports Network) – Joe Johnson scored 30 points, including a game-tying three-pointer in the closing seconds of the fourth quarter, to lead the Atlanta Hawks to a 107-101 overtime victory over the Detroit Pistons.

    Marvin Williams added 22 points and eight rebounds, while Josh Smith had 19 points, 11 rebounds, eight assists and three blocks in the Hawks third win in four games.

    Greg Monroe paced the Pistons with 22 points and 11 boards in Detroits 13th loss in its last 15 games. Brandon Knight contributed 20 points and a career- high eight assists, and Jason Maxiell scored a season-high 19 points off the bench in defeat.

    We take every loss personally, not just a close loss. I think every loss is a personal loss, Knight said. You just dont favor one over the other, but this one will hurt a little bit more.

    Atlanta trailed 68-63 entering the fourth quarter, but opened the frame with a 7-2 swing to knot the game at 70.

    The Pistons, though, scored the next eight points to jump ahead again.

    Detroit held at least a three-point lead over the next seven minutes until a pair of Austin Daye free throws put the Pistons up 85-76 with 1:47 to play.

    After the teams traded buckets, Williams sank a shot from beyond the arc to cut the deficit to three with 33.5 seconds left on the clock.

    The Pistons Rodney Stuckey then had the ball roll out of bounds off his arm after a scramble on the ground, giving the ball back to the Hawks.

    Johnson took the ball and set up on the top of the key on Atlantas ensuing possession. He then turned his back to the net before throwing up a turnaround jumper that dropped into the net for the game-tying shot with 1.9 seconds left.

    Knights three-pointer at the buzzer bounced wide high off the glass to force overtime.

    The extra period belonged entirely to the Hawks, as Atlanta opened overtime with a 12-2 run capped by back-to-back treys by Williams and Smith to jump out to a 99-89 lead.

    Detroit could not get any closer than six points from there and the Hawks made enough free throws down the stretch to hold off a late push by the Pistons.

    We were relentless. We never gave up, said Johnson. Even when things didnt look so bright for us, we hung in there, stayed with each other, stayed mentally tough, stayed with the game plan and were able to pull a big win out.

    Detroit made just 6-of-23 shots from the floor in the first quarter, but held a 17-15 lead as the Hawks committed nine turnovers in the opening frame.

    The Pistons never trailed in the second quarter and after five consecutive points by Williams tied the game at 29, Detroit closed out the half on a 17-6 run to take a 46-35 lead into the break.

    Atlanta battled back with a 17-6 run to get within one, 56-55, with 4:00 to play in the third, but Detroit scored 12 of the next 20 points and took a 68-63 advantage into the fourth quarter.

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    Vincent Van Gogh is known for his sweeping landscapes such as Starry Night and for his portraits such as Postman Roulin.

    But in the latter years of his short but prolific artistic career (just 10 years) Van Gogh emabraked on a new-found fascination with natures details literally right down to a blade of grass.

    In fact in July 1889 he wrote to his sister, Wilhemina: Ihellip;am always obliged to go and gaze at a blade of grass, a pine-tree branch, an ear of wheat, to calm myself.

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    His facination would lead to his most daring and innovative works that broke with the past and dramatically alteredthe course of modern painting.

    And his passion for nature is the subject of a major exhibition at the Philadelphia Museum of Art (Feb. 1 to May 6). The exhibit, in partnership with the National Gallery of Canada in Ottawa, features the masters artwork created between 1886 and 1890 in Paris, Saint-Remy and Auvers. Aside from artwork depicting close-up garden flowers, meadows, those blades of grass(such as in hisLong Grass with Butterflies, where he really celebrates the little blade of grass, states one curator)and even a mothwith an intricate pattern on its wings, the exhibition includes landscapes and still lifes.

    Van Gogh Up Close is a collection of more than 70 works including 46 paintings by the Dutch-born van Gogh on loan from museums and private collections around the world including from Europe, North America and Japan. The exhibitwill have its only showing in the United States at the Art Museum before it travels later in the spring to the National Gallery of Canada.

    This has been a really extraordinary collaboration, said Marc Mayer, director of the National Gallery of Canada during a press briefing Friday.

    Aside from his own work, the exhibition includes Japanese woodblock prints by Utagwa Hiroshige and Hayashi Roshu. According toone curator, van Gogh collected such woodblock prints as he found inspiration in their vibrant colors and scenes from nature. Continued…

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