Join us Saturday, December 11, 2010 from 2 pm to 9 pm for Art Party 3! It will be a three-ring circus of art, entertainment and fun. Features 14 talented artists, and live, paint-slinging demonstrations by Dan Dunn of Paint Jam! Location: 14135 Stagecoach Rd., Magnolia, TX 77355, five miles north of Tomball. More info here.
Tuesday, December 7, 2010
It's an Art Show! It's a Party! It's Two-Two-Two Events in One!
Join us Saturday, December 11, 2010 from 2 pm to 9 pm for Art Party 3! It will be a three-ring circus of art, entertainment and fun. Features 14 talented artists, and live, paint-slinging demonstrations by Dan Dunn of Paint Jam! Location: 14135 Stagecoach Rd., Magnolia, TX 77355, five miles north of Tomball. More info here.
Sunday, November 28, 2010
What could be better than art on a Sunday afternoon?
I would like to invite you to a special showing of my large abstract works in a beautiful setting. The Museum of Cultural Arts Houston (MOCAH) has invited me to exhibit these works as part of their ongoing Art of Culture series. The facility is located at 908 Wood Street, in the warehouse district on the north side of downtown Houston. This area, which was ground zero for the recent Art Crawl, has become one of the most vital art districts in town.
In contrast with the Art Crawl, however, MOCAH prefers to host artistic events that will be of interest to serious art patrons. I enjoy the party atmosphere of the Art Crawl, but I am so looking forward to showing these works to those of you who, by habit, will view the works with contemplation and a well-trained eye. The paintings will be offered for sale, and will remain on display for the month of December.
The reception will be held this Sunday, December 5, 2010, from 2:00 pm to 4:00 pm. The following works will be on display:
"Faith, Hope, Love" triptych, 44" x 13 feet, oils on canvas
"Wheatfield, Gachet" 72" x 60", acrylics on canvas
"Malaysia" 60" x 24", acrylics, oils and copper flake on canvas
"Here Come the Pain Birds", 60" x 24" acrylics, oil pastels and charcoal on canvas
"Via Chicago", 40" x 24", acrylics on canvas
"Maelstrom Perfected", 30" x 24" acrylics on canvas
"Sanguinova" 30"x30", oils on canvas
"Mermaids Play at Night" 30"x24", oils on canvas
In its 15 years of existence, MOCAH, the brainchild of Reginald and Rhonda Adams, has become recognized as a foundational resource for the development of art in Houston. It is not necessary to RSVP for this event, and you are welcome to bring guests. MOCAH has introduced me to some amazing artists (and I support their public art installations and projects for youth involvement), so I am excited for you to become better acquainted with this organization.
What: Art of Culture Reception
When: Sunday, December 5, 2010, 2:00 pm to 4:00 pm
Where: Museum of Cultural Arts Houston, 908 Wood Street, Houston, TX
I hope to see you there!
Tuesday, October 26, 2010
Cirque de MOCAH Masquerade Ball, Sat. Oct. 30
The Cirque de MOCAH Masquerade Ball is this weekend! The event celebrates 11 years of youth development by the Museum of Cultural Arts Houston, and Houston's young trendsetters will be spotlighted at the ball.
I have donated this painting, "Me, Myself, and I" to the silent auction. 30"x36" acrylics on gallery-wrapped canvas.
Because my work is more an exploration of the internal world than the external, my visual art juxtaposes the passions, spirituality, cultural icons, and rationalizations that define the self. In 'Me, Myself and I' a chaotic, disconnected 'self' is structured as the physical, the emotional, and the spiritual. The life voyage provides a backdrop against which they are made whole through divine intervention.
My art, with its many indulgences and ironies, represents both 'fallen man' as well as the best fruits of a loving brotherhood of man. Non-subjective abstraction provides the opportunity to slash and drip paint using methods that have impact in a physical as well as emotional sense. The kinetic application of paint forces a direct communication upon the viewer that registers on first glance, only to be followed by circumspection and rational interpretation.
Art 11 in The Woodlands, Nov. 5
Saturday, October 2, 2010
Turn, Turn, Turn
To everything turn, turn, turn
Every purpose under heaven
Is one for which I blindly yearn
For peace, for a time to unlearn
A time to be born, then again
To die on the hour eleven
A time to reap the wild wind
I can't, never could, pretend
Didn't I swear I was coming?
Do you hear my footsteps running?
In the destiny I'm confronting,
I'm prepared to outgun the cunning
Shown: "Axis" 48"x24" oils on canvas. Available for $1290.
Friday, October 1, 2010
Morning Comes
Tuesday, September 21, 2010
Not Subtle in the Making
I go at my canvas in bold strokes
An emphatic opening movement
A symbol crash of pigment
Not subtle in the making
The room seems to darken
The canvas is full of thunder
I see lights
I feel rain
Warm waves carry me
A great distance from where I started.
I do love painting,
Richly. Intensely.
Immediately.
24"x12" acrylic inks and paint on canvas. Available for $290.
Wednesday, September 15, 2010
...And Ever Still
Right here in this familiar room
In the pale glowing absence of light
I wonder what you're thinking now
Across the distance of twilight
Right here in this four walled haven
I'm marking time, I'm waiting
I'm sinking in, I'm digging out
I'm not communicating
Memory casts a thousand lights
They glimmer expectantly
Casting beams of bluest blue,
And soon I will sweetly see
And sliently the exchange is made,
A knowledge again renewed
My quickening will be subtly paid
Upon all who sense my mood
Smile, this day is ours to keep,
A gift, a ladder's rung
Climbing into the Milky Way
To sing melodies yet unsung
Sing, this life is an earthly gift,
A beginning stage in time
Forever, ever, and ever still,
I'm yours...
And you will be mine.
Pictured: "Blood Simple" acrylics on panel. Sold.
Seismic Soul
I fancy I hear your soul breathe,
I fancy that only I really know you.
So surely folly, I hardly know you,
Yet for some reason I'm falling madly...
Everything is based on my own need,
I hunger for something true blue;
A thirst-driven search for a taboo stew.
I keep ending up here, oddly...
Yellow, the red-riven skies seeth
Down through the layers I bleed through,
Ask me; I know that you want to,
You must for this thing to end badly.
And I fancy that too...
So surely, I fancy that too.
Pictured: "Seismic Soul" 24"x20" oils and acrylics on canvas. SOLD (after only one day in the new Woodlands Art League Gallery!)
Monday, September 13, 2010
Art 11, an End-of-Year Show in The Woodlands
Studio in the Woods is located at 26002 Budde Rd., The Woodlands, TX 77380.
Tuesday, August 31, 2010
Survival, and Consequences
The things we each survive in our lives is truly amazing. We survive by drawing back, healing, regrouping, changing, and striking out on a new path.
After five days I just got home from the hospital. My stay was inaugurated by an emergency appendectomy which lasted about three hours (compared to the usual 30 minutes). The surgeon was extremely gifted, in my opinion. He did the procedure with a laparoscope, and I sensed it was an accomplishment for him, considering the mess my appendix left behind. (By the appearance of the tissue he could tell it had ruptured previously... more than once, in fact. I'm not sure how I missed that, much less survived it!)
The support by my daughters, my friends and my family was amazing. Love was just blooming everywhere I looked. Sure, maybe part of that was the pain medication... but seriously, it was just amazing. The God of Abraham and Moses, the Lord Jesus, the One who makes anything possible for someone as undeserving as me, was all over it. Today as I heal, I am once again the grateful beneficiary of His mercy and grace.
Could a casual observer see God's presence in operating room 7? Or in hospital room 340?
Would someone who didn't ask for divine help in Jesus' name have a statistically equal outcome from the surgery? A longer or shorter hospital stay?
Did "religion" cloud my understanding of the first-rate technology, pharmacology, and management that went into motion to send me home quickly and well-healed?
Aren't I just looking to credit God for things that just come from the hard work of well-educated men and women?
Well, yeah, I guess I'll credit him with all of it. He created it, orchestrated it, set it into motion, and knew from before the world was made that I would show up there on August 25, 2010, three days after any sensible person would have shown up, and that I would need Him.
The truth is, the outcome of the story is irrelevant. I'm grateful to be feeling well, but I put the whole matter in His hands, telling Him what my desired outcome was, but knowing it would be done in His time, and according to His plan. That, I'm pretty sure, was His desired outcome.
When you know Him, that doesn't really sound so crazy. To me, "crazy" is thinking that I really have any power or resources at all that are not specifically granted to me by Him. I've seen, starkly, the difference between what I can do with Him, and without Him, in my life.
Once again I find myself searching for the right words. If you've read this far, I appreciate it. This is the most important thing I have to say, whenever and wherever. It's the however I wish to improve on.
Shown above: "Consequences" 30"x18" oils on canvas. Available for $490.
Thursday, August 12, 2010
Blues & Art Weekend in Navasota!
I have been invited as one of two featured artists in "A Special Art Appreciation of the Blues," sponsored by Compass Bank and hosted by Tokoly Fine Furniture in downtown Navasota, home of historic blues pioneer Mance Lipscomb. The exhibit will be open this Saturday only, from 2:00-6:00 pm.
The Navasota Blues Festival was founded in honor of Mance Lipscomb, and it has grown to become an important music event showcasing top blues musicians from all over the country. I will be showing portraits of both Lipscomb and Albert Collins, an intense, unique blues guitarist who made a name for himself right here in Houston back in the 1950s.
Artist Leon Collins will show "Chronicles of the Blues," and other exhibiting artists will include Sharon Catchings, Russell Cushman, Patricia del Rio, Stephanie Detar, Lil' Jean, Ruth Kowis, Jeanette Powell, and Boots "Calillouette" Tyner.
Saturday, August 14, 2010 - 2:00 pm-6:00 pm
"A Special Art Appreciation of the Blues" presented by Compass Bank
Hosted by Tokoly Fine Furniture, 110 Washington Ave., Navasota, TX
Pictured: "Mance Lipscomb", 18"x24" acrylics and inks on watercolor paper. Available for $290.
Monday, July 26, 2010
Seduction
Mars (not the Roman god of war)
Fall of the Pain Birds
Sunday, July 18, 2010
What Does a Blues Painting Sound Like?
The music we call the blues has many forms, and was fed by many influences. For my taste, the genre reached its peak in the 1960s when some of the old guard, who had been playing for decades by that time, were revitalized by a new audience of young white kids. Albert King, BB King, Freddie King, John Lee Hooker, Buddy Guy and my favorite – Albert Collins – became legendary during this time.
Monday, July 12, 2010
Mance Lipscomb and Navasota Blues Festival
Friday, July 9, 2010
Woodlands Select Art Show & Sale
Monday, July 5, 2010
Charcoal, Inks, Tempera, Watercolor, Acrylics, Oils, and Oil Pastels on 1.5" Deep Gallery-Wrapped Canvas
Sunday, July 4, 2010
Save the dates! -- Saturday, July 24th and Friday, July 30th
Monday, June 28, 2010
Arabian Stallion, Elegant and Intense
I love Arabian horses. The stallions exhibit a natural grace and beauty, yet they emphatically exhibit the traits of the alpha male. When you are in the presence of this stallion, you know that he is keeping his eye on you, and that you are in his space.
Saturday, June 26, 2010
A Fountain Troubled
Thursday, June 24, 2010
A New Use for Newspaper...
Okay, it's not a new use for newspaper, but it is an alternate use besides lining the bird cage. I enjoyed tinting the newspaper, then sketching a figure and adding color and opacity selectively to complete the painting.
Tuesday, June 22, 2010
Roller Derby, Impression
I used to watch roller derby on television when I was a kid. It seemed kind of like Houston Wrestling to me... a little bit staged, fairly dramatic, and very entertaining in a barbaric way.
A Good Day for Life-Drawing
I overslept Saturday morning... got out of bed slowly, lingered over coffee, and generally procrastinated enough to arrive an hour late to the weekly drawing group I participate in. I missed all the 'short poses,' two- to five-minute warm ups that are supposed to get the brain into proper working order for the longer poses which follow.
Friday, June 18, 2010
Broken Color Journals - 02
Exploiting the Tension Between Reason and Mystery
A friend of mine (and an accomplished artist), Marty Hatcher, and I were recently "conversing" via email about art. She had just read my previous column, and was telling me that in her own work she was exploring a path of "feeling" a painting into existence.
Pictured: "Shadowed" 10"x15" oils on watercolor paper. Available for $240.
Marty is a painter's painter, with old-style academic training and credentials most of us can only envy. She started out doing sketches of classical sculptures and learning in the style of the old Dutch and Russian masters. Her work today would, in my parlance, be described as realist/impressionistic, and in my opinion it also wears its emotional content on its sleeve. So as she spoke of "feeling" the painting, I was thinking, "You're already there!"
She had just gotten off the phone with HongNian Zhang, a classically-trained Chinese immigrant and one of the best contemporary painters in this country. They were discussing a workshop Zhang would soon be instructing at Marty's studio, and he was describing his current line of teaching. He said that honoring the intuitive, emotional side was going to be a prominent concept in the next book he will publish.
Zhang talked of the "innocent artist within," as opposed to the "professional painter" who knows all the rules. In responding after reading my column, Marty said, "I am delighted that this notion of 'letting go and allowing the creative child in me take over' keeps cropping up in my life. To me this definitely means that I am personally going in the right direction."
This is a concept that I have been known to champion. Mention the word "rules" and you hit a hot button with me; I've never been very fond of them. Undoubtedly, the rules of color and light in art are useful. My own work grows and develops in proportion to my learning, understanding, and incorporating them, and my failed canvases are a result of my lack of mastery of the basics... the rules of color and light.
I use the term "rules," loosely, because to me all of it is a pack of lies and half-truths. Marty's opinion diverges – emphatically – from mine on this point, but to me we should use a less authoritarian term... "Suggested guidelines," or perhaps, "concepts." Certainly my use of the word 'lies' is meant to be provocative. Just because it is stated by a master artist as truth should not shield it from the harsh light of examination.
There are many established systems of rules, from the Dutch masters to the impressionists and beyond, and all of them are at least partially – if not mostly – correct. All of them have a specific aesthetic context, and generally that context seeks to incorporate complete, objective realism, and then deviate from it with a stylistic intent.
I have read enough about both the scientific and artistic understanding the perception of light and color to know that even objective realism is on shaky ground, especially when physics becomes involved.
Any attempt to transmute that which is seen by the eye to that which is viewed on canvas is inherently prone to speed wobbles. Even the way in which film and digital cameras capture and record light is the result of a wrestling match between sterile science and a blood, sweat, and tear-stained human existence. We humans have, in our various schools and tribes, agreed that certain methods of painting are aesthetically pleasing, and represent an accurate record of what we see.
I'm guessing that early mankind made the same agreements while viewing cave wall paintings in the dim light of fire. Extrapolate forward into the millennia, if you will, and hear them smugly expressing the same thoughts about the painters of yesterday and today.
I am not an iconoclast. It would be a sadness if my words caused someone's artistic belief system to fall, and a triumph if I cause one to question their beliefs about art... but enough about the rules. Gather them like riches, then break them as it suits you, for art is built on a laissez-faire economy.
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I favor the concept of the "innocent artist" when the state of "innocence" is that which exists before art teachings begin to pollute the mind with the way things "should" be. It's a necessary pollution, like benzene in the water table of an oil field. Who among us feels they can completely do without gasoline? In art our creative engines run on the gasoline of color-and-light teachings, so we have to take care with regard to benzene, which in this case is the "box" of acceptable painting technique.
Yet at the same time, Zhang's term, "innocent artist," amuses me. The innocent artist inside me isn't innocent in any sense of the word. Zhang's concept of coming closer to the child is true, but a child is a slave to the primitive impulses of his id. The "professional painter" in me, the policeman of my psyche, has to keep a close eye on the innocent artist, who is a known seditionist, malcontent, lecher, kitsch junkie, egomaniac, iconoclast, and opportunist of churlish manner and ill repute... and to top it all off, he likes to squeeze my Old Holland paints directly out of their forty-dollar-tubes directly onto the canvas! I have stacks of unfinished work, derailed and in ruin at his primitive hand. I don't want my sinful, caddish "innocent artist" to sully my reasonably good standing in the art community.
Yet, just like the sin of lust, without it there would be no procreation. Our art is born of sin just as we are. As long as we wish to create, the willful, libidinous, innocent artist must be allowed to get his groove on. As to how much fun is too much, that is strictly a matter of your penance to St. Vermeer. You're taught to fear opening Pandora's box, and – depending on what you want from your art – you are right to be cautious. As I stated in the previous column, the best thing you can do as an artist is gather information, then follow your own compass.
Isn't that just what Heironymous Bosch did? And Vincent Van Gogh and Jackson Pollock? They bravely sailed past the known and right off the end of the earth, spilling into a yawning chasm full of wonder and despair. Open that box lid too wide and there could be hell to pay. (Like Picasso said, "Art is dangerous," and I believe he knew Pandora well.)
The voice you hear as you read this column, it could be the voice of art wisdom, or it could be the voice of a fool. Either way, it is an absurd paradox (exclusive to art) that the only way that voice could be wrong is if it were the voice of reason.
We find art in things that exist on the other side of reason, or as it is popularly stated, in the sublime. I would go so far as to define aesthetics as, "the tension between reason and mystery." The sublime is bigger than we are, and it uses color, line and form as its pawns. As Marty described it in the context of her work, "I've actually gone back to the more abstract, even undefinable, way of feeling a painting into existence."
In other words, she is finding ways to selectively undo her learning, which she can always reestablish on the fly if needed. In my own work, I am very much aware, daily, of my shortcomings of knowledge in painting technique. In this column I am a provocateur, and like critics, they are a dime a dozen. But temporarily assuming another's life view and aesthetic philosophies can stimulate new thinking. I want to stir the pot, and nudge artists to look outside the comforts of their self-imposed boxes toward the undefinable – the chasm – as they pick up the brush.
So keep in mind, as you paint, that the only authorities in art are those we have ordained, and we can strip them of their credentials in the blink of an eye if it suits us. Paint with passion, shake loose the chains, and kneel at the altar of art authority as it suits you... Mind you, keep only one knee on the ground, with the other foot poised over authority's neck.
Thursday, June 17, 2010
Broken Color Journals - 01
This is the first installment of a column I wrote a couple of years ago... less a statement than an exploration of what I am as an artist.
--
I might as well admit it right off the bat... I have held a paint brush in my hand for far less years than most of the artists who will read this column. I've been a dad for over two decades, a publisher for even longer, and listing the hobbies that have flowed through my life could easily fill this entire space. So what business does a 46-year old novice painter have writing words about art?
For several years I was deeply involved in writing, playing and recording original music. At the time I was doing it for therapy – it was literally a survival tactic so I could keep my head on straight and be the rock that my family needed... and it was surprisingly effective.
I learned something very important in the process: practicing art (in this case music) with motivation and intent has more than just aesthetic benefits. It is healing, spiritually invigorating, and for me it was a catalyst in establishing a link with God; it provided a forum for dialogue. It primed the pump when the well seemed otherwise dry.
I was not born with prodigal talent in any field of the arts; certainly not music. My childhood sketches were rather artsy, but otherwise undistinguished. It took a life event of ultimate magnitude for me to make an immediate connection with art – a connection that was beyond the intellectual – and when it happened it was music that was in my life.
Music remains – I still play and occasionally I write – but in November of 2004 I experienced a stunning revelation. I discovered that I could paint! How that happened is a whole other story, but to have it happen relatively late in life is one of the greatest gifts I have ever known. There is no explaining it except to say that I must have finally been ready for it. After more than twenty years doing layout and computer design for print media I discovered that my own visual art could have a spiritual life that goes far beyond line and composition to include endless experimentation with color and form as a way of communicating my passions.
There are many skills I picked up along the way that enabled this to happen. I became proficient in drafting. I wrote a lot of poetry and song lyrics. I sketched in the margins of my textbooks to keep myself awake during school. I worked as a graphic designer (eventually founding, and then selling, my own printing company). In this I worked with composition, color, typography, and photo editing.
But mainly I just lived a full life and matured. I collected battle scars, became aware of patterns in life, and learned to love with my whole heart (parenthood will do that for you). I survived spiritual storms, periods of feast and famine, acts of loyalty and betrayal. I was giving and I was selfish. I learned to be thankful for the day, and for the life. Just as the painter learns how to see, I began to recognize the many hues and contrasts of humanity.
So now I eat, sleep, breathe and dream in paint. Visual art is always at the front of my mind. I have gone on an art book buying binge that defies all reason. I have read dozens of such books, but honestly, I often just look at the pictures.
I should say I pore over the pictures. Many are interested in deciphering the technique of pigment and brush, but to me this is secondary to the mental and emotional technique, because that forms the clouds from which content, composition, and color will rain. That is how I am learning to paint, and it usually tells me what I want to know. I have little interest in reading books about painting techniques. I have found my chemistry is compatible with oils, and I have no interest (at this point) in learning about any other media. I have strong opinions about what is good in art, and what matters most.
But I will be the first to tell you that all art is good. If you practice art in any media, or any form, you are doing a good thing and you can do no wrong. Every opinion I have is food for thought, and perhaps respectful debate, only. The best thing you can do as an artist is gather information, then follow your own compass.
If someone else's opinion doesn't make sense in the realm of your art, disregard it. If their viewpoint challenges you, provokes thought, that is a happy circumstance, and it is what I hope to do. I find that reading the philosophical musings of other artists is provocative. It is like the current that keeps the waters of art from becoming stagnant.
I meet people in art circles who have become stagnant. Perhaps they have been painting for 20 years, yet they are still constantly seeking advice, taking every workshop they can, and entering the student division because they lack the confidence to step up and compete with the best. Those are artists who are crying out for tough love!
They need to stop looking for the silver bullet... stop looking for the magic method or technique and start thinking about what they are trying to say with their art. If they don't have anything to say, then they need to think of something!
I decided that the way I was going to grow as an artist was to read about artists' lives, and about their philosophy on art, and that I was going to paint as much as possible. Also I am not going to limit myself as to subject or motif... basically I am going to paint whatever crazy thing I'm moved to paint.
I will observe, listen, and interact with other artists because that is a path toward knowledge. Even though I don't know what I am doing, I'm not looking for someone to tell me what to do. I'd rather make ten thousand errors and then hit upon something truly unique than learn to replicate what someone else does. It is truly all about the journey...
Having said that, I'd like to acknowledge an artistic debt to Lesley Humphrey, a renowned equine artist who, despite her international reputation and many laurels, is still moving toward something bigger and greater in her art (I can see it happening, but I can't say what it will be). She, with her simple explanations of light and color, and her impassioned discourse about painting with intent, was the lightning that struck the key on my kite. Now I paint, and I will forever be grateful to her for that.
BAL's own Frank Gerriets is another artist I respect. His speaks his unvarnished, plainly stated thoughts about art in a language I can understand. His use of color (particularly in his spectacular Night Music Series) resonates with the artistic truths I am seeking.
My teachers are Monet, Cabanel, Bosch, Manet, Van Gogh, and all of the wonderful people I have met at art shows, meetings and events.
So, what business do I have writing these words? Hopefully I will occasionally stimulate a new line of artistic thought. Whether you agree with all or none of it, please know it is offered by a humble artist who has none of the "right" answers. I do hope to pose more than a few of the right questions. With art as my journey, that is my intent.
(PIctured above: "Rhythm and Blue" Oils, SOLD.)
Wednesday, June 9, 2010
"Game Changer"
A game changer is something which impacts all who play the game, whatever it may be. The game changer alters expectations for the game through innovation and strategy. Whether it is in personal relationships, corporate ladder-climbing, consumer products or a technology sector, the game changer introduces something new that, through human interaction, becomes a new paradigm by mutual assent.
The game changer kills the killer app. It wins the heart. It steals the future from the past, and rides the crest of the breaking wave.
"Game Changer" 24"X18" oils with topsoil. Available for $290.
Tuesday, June 8, 2010
Sin and Redemption: A Johnny Cash Story
"Sin and Redemption" (20"x16" oils, 2004)
A lot of different artists are credited with inventing the "outlaw country" genre, but inarguably, it was Johnny Cash. Incredibly, it was well over fifty years ago when Johnny Cash's words were first laid down on vinyl: "I hear that train a comin', it's rollin' around the bend..."
I first connected with Johnny Cash when he released American Recordings in 1994. I'm not into country music, so it seemed an unlikely choice for me, but I better understood this connection when I read his autobiography, Cash, three years later. I felt a kinship with him on a spiritual level... he was a broken, rebellious man, but strived to do good, and he leaned on Jesus as his savior. And he loved his second wife June passionately until the day he died.
Johnny Cash had a remarkable, complex face with a formidable nose. If you look at the two sides of his face you can detect character traits in the asymmetry (something true of all of us). As you view him, the left shows the earthly, sinful side, and the right, the chaste, obedient aspect of his character.
When I painted it in November of 2004, it was intended as a tribute (Cash died in September of 2003). It was my first real work using oils, and the first portrait I ever painted.
I remember well working on it at around 3:00 am during an all-night painting bender (something I still do from time to time). Tired to the point of exhaustion, I had been singing along to one of Cash's last CDs... and calling on him to visit me -- to breathe life into this work -- as I labored on the canvas. Little did I know... his eyes came suddenly -- and startlingly -- to life with a few strokes of the brush. The hairs on the back of my neck stood straight up as I sensed his presence. I guess I wasn't too well prepared for his arrival.
(This has only happened once again since that time, while painting "Chef Theo", another post-mortem portrait.)
This painting is still one of my favorites.
"Sin and Redemption" 20"x16" Oils, available for $1490.
Friday, May 28, 2010
Anything But Shallow...
A field of vision relates to the subject. To the situation. To one's passions. Only then, in my world, do optics come into play. Does that make sense?
Thursday, May 27, 2010
Trust But Verify
The Russian proverb Доверяй, но проверяй, ""doveryai, no proveryai"... or as Ronald Reagan said to Mikhail Gorbachev, "trust but verify."
Tuesday, May 25, 2010
Looking for a Warm Place... "Via Chicago"
Five weeks is an eternity. Three more weeks is a cold, black hole. Oh how I wish, sometimes, I was brain dead, or complete on the inside, or something else. Anything else.
Wednesday, May 19, 2010
My First Art and Music Video
Wednesday, May 12, 2010
Just Another Word For Nothing Left to Lose
Freedom (in words, lines, and color):
Dulcet dischord patterns
Like waves of colored sound
Orgasmic, fantastic,
Rapture-bound
Blissful, bittersweet...
Like the people you meet,
They billow around you aimlessly
Like tomcats in heat
Free to do this, do that...
Do what? Why?
Why not is the question.
Ask not why.
Freedom is just another word
For nothing left to lose
"Freedom", 12"x9" liquid acrylics and pencil on watercolor paper. Unframed. Available for $140.
Tuesday, May 4, 2010
My First Ebay Listing: Reclining Nude
This painting is on a masonite panel that was primed with gesso.
05/09/10 Update: SOLD - The painting sold for $41.00... an acceptable place to start.
Monday, May 3, 2010
Hush, a Poetic Interlude
Some paintings feel like music, others like energy. This one, as I painted it, felt like a poem.
Sunday, May 2, 2010
Abstraction and the Human Figure
What I love about abstraction is that it tells the story that only visual art can tell. Abstraction creates the basis, in my mind, for the difference between that which is "art" and that which documents the appearance of a particular time and place. This applies equally well to photography as to sketching and painting.
Friday, April 23, 2010
The Secret Language of Fish
I am working on a series of paintings... have been for a couple of months now. The canvases depict the full range of human emotions, as represented by fish.
Sunday, April 18, 2010
The Swallows Return to Capistrano
A little over a week ago I did something that occurs with about the same frequency as the swallows returning to Capistrano: a public demonstration. The venue was the Woodlands Waterway Fine Art Festival. Thus far my public demos have been pure abstract, as it would be awkward if no outright illegal to paint the nude figure in a public setting.
It is always fun to do these demonstrations because it forces me to actually think about what I am doing, so that I can comment on it as I work. My macro-approach to art is to learn the "rules" of color and composition, then to undertake an intuitive and intense attack on the canvas. I try to set up conditions where "happy accidents" can happen. I break the rules as I fancy. I destroy and rebuild, repeatedly. Each mistake, each breach of color, and each scar upon the paint creates the detritus that pleases the eye, fulfilling the brain's desire for subtle, organic truths.
There is a word, palimpsest, that means "a parchment manuscript that has been written on more than once, with the earlier writing incompletely erased and often legible." A second definition reflects figurative use of the term, "an object, place, or area that reflects its history." Both of these speak directly to my abstract painting method.
Anyway, my demo was a relative success, judging by crowd retention and reaction. My goal, always, is just to give artists something to think about, as I believe my approach to art is unconventional. It wouldn't be fair to call it unique, as each artist has a valid art pathway that is theirs only... But part of my method is to intentionally steer the car into the ditch occasionally, then see what happens. In the context of a demo, I call this "thinking outside the box."
I had come to last Saturday's demo with a 50 inch by 24 inch toned canvas. I also had a reference photo, an underwater photo I pulled off the web that reminded me of how it felt to swim in a freshwater lake. I endeavored to paint the feeling of a specific childhood memory, swimming toward the bottom of a lake and looking up through turbid, bright chartreuse water... feeling warmth with my upper body, and a cold thermocline with my feet.
The demonstration was scheduled for two hours, but after an hour and 40 minutes I wrapped it up, as I didn't feel I had anything constructive to add to the painting without a little time away from it. I took the large canvas home and removed it from my sight for a day or so. As sometimes happens, when I viewed the canvas again, I was not particularly pleased with what I saw, so I wiped and scrubbed the oils and sand off the canvas face for service on another day.
Three days prior to the demonstration, at the Blossom Street/Woodlands show, someone reminded me that one of my canvases had been started at the previous year's Woodlands Waterway Art Festival. Shown here is the canvas.
It is titled, "Reach Up", acrylics and sand, 40"x18". It is currently available for $390.
Update 05/01/10 - SOLD