Monday, February 22, 2010
Countdown to Art After Dark 2010...
Only two weeks left! I have been busy gathering up paintings and prints to exhibit and sell at this year's Art After Dark. I'm not only pulling from my private cache of work, but have begun upwards of twelve new paintings just in the last several weeks specifically for this event. I have a pretty limited space in which to exhibit, but I'm hoping to offer about thirty paintings in all. And I'll try to get images of the new ones posted here in advance!
If you enjoy the theater scene, great art, good wine and food, and live music....mark your calendars and plan to attend! Information is available here.
Friday, February 5, 2010
David and Goliath...
I'm working on an enormous canvas right now....six feet wide, six feet tall. It was abandoned by another artist about ten years ago over in another building on Jacksonville University's campus, and a maintenance guy dropped it in the studio just as I was beginning work on my thesis. I figured, why not use it? The price was certainly right...it was free!
As I was painting yesterday afternoon, a friend came by to see my progress and, noticing the gigantic canvas, said "that's ENORMOUS! How are you going to finish that!?" The odd thing is, I immediately thought of David and Goliath. What's more, I'm actually working incredibly fast on this painting because I'm mostly using very large brushes - some are house painting brushes. Maybe the fact that the canvas is so huge frees me from fretting over the little details.
So here comes the philosophical analogy...The doubters told David, "you can't possibly win! He's too big!" David, on the other hand, thought "no, he's too big to miss!" Maybe we should consider painting on larger canvases more often. If we play it safe and stick to the 18" x 24" pre-stretched, pre-gessoed canvases, we may never know what we're capable of accomplishing.
Thursday, February 4, 2010
An Artist's Obsession...
I suspect I am like many artists who obsess about the details....SOMETIMES. This picture is a sneak peak at one of my thesis paintings, depicting a man and a dog, both now homeless, walking through the wreckage after a tornado has swept through.
Just last night, I finally finished the shirt Scott (I named him after a similarly bald friend of mine) is wearing. The original concept was--yes--a red Hawaiian shirt, which would add a Hopper-esque touch of humor, considering the rather sober scene. But various opinions made me doubt myself...so it became a white t-shirt. Then a garrish orange shirt. Back to white. Back to red. And back to white. I think this poor man went through nine "wardrobe changes" before I finally decided I HAD to go with the original concept. An extremely helpful friend shopped at Salvation Army and Goodwill, and then let me photograph her in this pose with not one, not two, but THREE different Hawaiian shirts on. With reference photos in hand, I finished up the shirt last night.
The funny thing is, with other paintings, I'm not nearly as obsessed about the little details. The enormous 6' x 6' canvas I've just started, for instance, is nearly done.....in two days. While good old Scott up there has been on the easel for seven months. I think artists are an odd bunch, who cannot be convinced that their work "is fine! really!" if that little voice in their head tells them otherwise. If we want to obsess about a detail, then God help those that get in the way of THAT.
Maybe life in general is a little like an artist's obsession......if you can just stand back, far enough from the easel, you realize that one little detail may not be worth all that worry. Unless it's the one thing that makes the whole composition sing.
Monday, February 1, 2010
BFA Thesis Work Continues....
I am really happy (really!!) to report that I am on the home stretch with my BFA thesis. I have begun the final painting that will be exhibited beginning April 1, 2010. My thesis involves the investigation of how we (as a modern culture) are psychologically impacted by extreme weather events such as hurricanes, tornadoes, flash floods, and dust storms. Along with a written thesis, I have created a body of work that is narrative in nature, capturing psychologically-taut moments during these storms.
This thesis has taken me close to a year now, and I'm looking forward to the light at the end of the tunnel. At the same time, who wants to be done with something they love doing?? Not I, said the fly.
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