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The life of a single artist, Ellie Shine, who lives in a New York City, where she has enjoyed with her good friends, stable teaching job, and her loyal dog, Bing, have been changed as she wants to assess a respectful place in the art, so she turns the barn into her new work place, where she creates a good place to watch the classic movies. Incidents come to inspire her when she invites three men, two gardeners, and a lawyer, to join her, who finally fall in love with her.
Short, sour-sweet and content to leave ideas and characters trailing in the summer breeze, "My Art" has evidently been made strictly on Simmons' terms, however wafty those may be.
It's fairly watchable, especially since Simmons' character Ellie has no time for single older woman clichés and is likably easygoing about everything but her unwell dog and questionable work.
The film is pleasant without being ebullient, sad without being devastating, cruising along on life's rhythms sans thematic or aesthetic grandstanding.
It's a quiet, eccentric comedy-drama about artistic inspiration that won't knock your socks off, but it has its own awkward charms about how artists forge their identity while wrestling with professional boundaries.