These two paintings, At the Stake (above) and Stranger (below), were the last pieces of art I finished before the move from Las Vegas to Dallas this summer. Along with Narcissist, I think they embody the kind of shift in using color that I’ve been writing about in these posts. Using different techniques of applying the paint, preferring methods that stay focused on the artwork rather than introducing my presence as the painter, I’m putting colors together so that the finished product is an opportunity to look at and enjoy all the different things the colors do: they blend, contrast, hide, emerge, advance, recede, congeal into groups, break apart into little pieces.
There is a paradox in my way of making these works that I like, which is that no amount of self-removal from the process of making these paintings will actually remove myself as the artist. So I can’t really say that I’m stepping back and giving the colors in these works a chance to be themselves and do all the cool stuff that colors do; no amount of self-delusion can erase my intimate involvement with their making. The world is full of unintended, unplanned chromatic activity, but artwork is obviously in a different category. So, I’ll happily retain my agency as painting-maker, leaving Nature and the inexorable unfolding of physical events as the agents of arbitrary color. Art not being a natural phenomenon but a form of communication, I use it to say, “Look at this. Isn’t it great what color can do?”










