2 Paintings: At the Stake, 2010, and Stranger, 2010

August 31st, 2010

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?”

House Spirit, 2010

August 22nd, 2010

I’m happy to announce that this sculpture (featured below as “A small, as yet untitled, sculpture”) has a name! The house I’m living in now has walls in the kitchen and master bath that have room on top for display of knick-knacks, plants, art. All of the recent sculptures that I’ve featured on this site now have a home up there in our domestic troposphere. Those in the kitchen look okay; in their case, I’m just happy that they are out of boxes and on display. The runt of the litter (pictured above), however, looks effing great perched in its new home atop the partial wall that separates the master bedroom from the bath. Angled and centered above the door, it feels like a little ancestor spirit, like some kind of sprite that you would see in a Miyazaki film. Before this perfect union of artwork and location occurred, I liked this sculpture enough to keep around for a while; but, now it feels like it lives with me and my family, like it’s a beneficent presence that guards us at our most intimate and vulnerable.

House Spirit is by no means supernatural. Let me make clear that I’m not getting squishy and spiritual about painted wood. What I am is very excited about how this sculpture feels, how I react to it. It’s great! I was thinking of calling it Ancestor Spirit, but I like using House instead, because the effect of this little artwork may not travel to its next home; it may be the kind of spirit that lives with and protects the house and whomever inhabits it, instead of the kind that follows a family from home to home. I’m so pleased to live with this sculpture right now, and I can only hope that it’s next home provides it a chance to reassume its current solicitous role.

Narcissist, 2010

August 18th, 2010

This painting and the others that I’ve been working on lately are probably a product of thinking about color and light, as I’ve been doing in some of the recent posts and as I go about my business the rest of the time. You know, like light is what we see at the most basic level, and color is the visible manifestation of light, so, for me, color is one of the sexiest things in the world, and definitely one of the best things about art.

Regardless of what we do with it, color is what it is. A blue car is blue just like a blue pen cap is blue just like… and so on. Hues, tints, shades will vary, but color is color. This means at one level that it doesn’t matter what the painter paints, because the artist must use color, and if you like looking at color–red, for example–who cares if it’s a firetruck or cherub’s butt cheek. But, we do care. Just as a terrible film can be shot with breathtaking cinematography, awful art can be made with fantastic color. In either case, when I see this it’s very upsetting. Sometimes the explicit terribleness of the thing obliterates any consideration of the color (dropping the film analogy henceforth). Sometimes the good color seems a farce and an outrage in the context of the bad use to which it’s been put, like when your charming and lovely childhood friend turns up married to a simple jackass, all that potential publicly squandered. Color is the charming and lovely childhood friend to us all, and we hate to see it misused.

Which is to say, that my studio practice lately has centered on a return to abstract painting as a way to eschew the complex dimensional concerns of sculpture and focus on using color in a more blunt way.

Another great thing about color is the way (infinite) combinations of it can suggest light and space. Narcissist is an attempt to render this effect abstractly, so that you can enjoy the tiny interplays of color while feeling the tug of the brain trying to render the colors into an image, into light and space. Like when you stand too close to a George Seurat, who, along with his fellow Impressionists, singled out light and color as the roots of visual experience. That is part of the art tradition that my paintings are coming from.

Patrick, 2010

August 6th, 2010

Patrick is a companion piece to Le Baron; I made them at about the same time, used similar methods of distributing the colors across the triangular units, organized the colors into stripes, etc. The softer, friendlier effect of the colors reminds me of the big-hearted, dumb, squishy and pentagonal cartoon sidekick for whom this sculpture is named.

One of my goals with a sculpture like this is to give a specific shape to something that hasn’t existed before. This sounds redundant, since this is basically the definition of creation, which occurs everywhere all the time, art being just one small venue of the process. But, the obvious bears restatement sometimes, especially when the artist is poking around for what’s really going on in his or her artwork.

So, Patrick is a sculpture that is unique in the world; it doesn’t try to represent something to be seen around us. It is what it is, and we recognize what it is because it has pattern and geometric form and color. The first two of these, pattern and geometry, are ideas that we’ve derived from nature but that really don’t exist on their own; they are ways to describe to world. Color, on the other hand, is closer to the world. Visually speaking, it is the world, because color is light, and light is what our eyes gather and send to our brain, which, incredibly, becomes what we see. So, in this way, Patrick is a combination of ideas about the world with, as I see it, the world itself.

This analysis doesn’t make the sculpture good art, but it does state something about where this object comes from and how we might decide if it’s any good or not. The bluntness of color as a basic element of the world is what turns me on both as an artist and a fan of art. The more theoretical elements of art, like pattern and geometry, are indirect, having originated in nature then passed through many human intellects and then made it to us; this indirectness is just less exciting than the gut-punch of color. For me, part of the thrill of making art is the tension between unleashing the primordial power of color and controlling it with intellectual devices. I’d rather just have color on its own, but my job is to give it shape, to manifest it somehow, and there are enough ways to do that to keep artists occupied until the last eye has absorbed its last photon.

Le Baron, 2010

July 13th, 2010

Here is a new sculpture featuring shifting color patterns, rotating geometry, and flat, graphic marks that wriggle across different planes.

I just read that first sentence again. The problem with writing about art is that it gives the impression that those words were part of my plan in making the work, like I started the sculpture with a checklist of three items, and once I accomplished each goal, the piece was finished. In fact, I just made the thing and then later conjured words to describe a completed process. Part of the fun of making artwork is relaxing into the lizard brain, pre-lingual and reactive. But then writing about the artwork kind of de-emphasizes the making and focuses on the thinking, which, while useful (or else I wouldn’t write about artwork), misrepresents the experiences of making and looking at art.

Sometimes it’s awful to read what artists have to say about art, theirs or others’, but sometimes it’s great, and it can make the artwork bigger and richer. At least with visual art, you can stop reading the words and look at the pictures.

Whirligig, 2009

April 14th, 2010

This piece was completed more than a year ago, and I’m just now sharing this image of it, courtesy of Ambient Art Projects, where the sculpture debuted last year in a show called “Pairs.” The form originated from the paper-folding technique that I’ve been using to generate sculptures for the past several years.

At the risk of repeating myself, let me say briefly that this kind of dumb origami that I do in preparation for a finished sculpture suits my approach with these works. I like artwork that makes an impact without resorting to virtuosity. Technical or stylistic flourish too often elicits responses like, “Oooh, look what the artist can do,” when I’d rather hear, “That thing’s cool.” So, folding paper into simple forms is one way to arrive at interesting, distinct, but not flashy, shapes.

Using rules of pattern and repetition also gets the artist out of the way. The logic of color and composition in pieces like this one is evident enough, and my interest in this kind of organization, again, is to let the piece speak for itself without too many visual cues that point back to the artist.

Finally, I want my 3-dimensional sculpture to point back to its 2-dimensional roots. This piece and others like it seem to be paintings that have been folded and assembled into something that is in the round. I want the abstract language I use in my artwork to be relevant to the world around that artwork, and by combining 2- and 3-dimensional elements in works like Whirligig I think I’m getting somewhere.

Our world is what it is and we have infinite means to describe it. The work of an artist is to select from among the limitless ways of describing our world and make something resonant and even new with the few tools in our hands. I’m drawn to the omnipresence of stuff that’s either 2- or 3- dimensional in our world, and (more importantly than my own private interest) I think there are essential qualities of the world that can be described by making things that embody flatness and roundness in different ways.

The second dimension is the realm of ideas; the third dimension, experience. The second is literature, drawing, painting, photography, film, tv, computer; the third is sculpture, architecture, theatre, music, sport. The second is Plato; the third Aristotle. The second is a love letter; the third is sex.

So, I have a lot of material to work with, and I’ll be lucky to do any of it justice.

A small, as yet untitled, sculpture

March 28th, 2010

This small piece is the product of my ongoing efforts to make cool 3-dimensional forms that start from and sometimes bounce back to their 2-dimensional roots. I imagine that the little squares could spin outward forever or re-collect back to some flat starting point. And the paint job at times accentuates the sculpture’s planar quality, at others its spacial quality. It’s kind of molecular, kind of cosmological.

Sculpture-Curse the Morning Sun

February 16th, 2010

This is the latest sculpture in which I manipulate flat material into simple shapes, paint them, and attach them together. In this piece, Curse the Morning Sun, I like that it retains its flat beginnings even as it twirls and wrinkles in space, as if 4 decorative paintings weren’t good enough, so they got together and started a band, making a stronger statement than any of the individual units could have on their own. At least this is how I think about them in the studio.