I dabbled in a variety of creative pursuits before settling
into oil painting. In my late thirties, I left the corporate life behind, moved
from Vancouver, Canada
to Denver and
married an artist (Wes Hyde). Suddenly I
had access to an in-house studio, a constant source of art supplies and
encouragement. So I began. My first painting ended up in a gallery in Santa Fe. The flood gates
were blown open and I haven't looked back since.
Showing posts with label interviews. Show all posts
Showing posts with label interviews. Show all posts
Weekly Interview #12 - Jake Wood Evans
Tell us about yourself and
your work.
I’m a painter based in
Brighton, I’m all about the Aesthetic. I guess I want to learn the craft of
painting, learn how to paint like the old masters, ability gives you freedom to
express yourself more poetically. take realism turn it upside down, throw in a handful
of expressionism and mix in some minimalism for good measure. Who knows what
the day will bring?
Weekly Interview #11 - Daniel Ciprian
I
was born in Santa Coloma de Gramenet (Barcelona) in 1978. I´ve quit my
studies of mechanical engineering and started studyingphotograph, as I
realized mathematics were not for me. I graduated in photography and
digital creation on 2005 an I haven´t stopped photographing ever since.
I
started as an assistant for fashion and advertisement photographers,
and I´ve been very lucky, as I have had the chance to work with spain´s
finest photographers. Over a year ago, I´ve started a fashion and
advertisement digital retouching company together with fellow
photographer Xavi Bou.
Weekly Interview #10 - Jen Ray
I
create large-scale paper works featuring Amazonian women in dystopian
landscapes. That's the short version. I also create performances based
on the drawings and occasionally make sculptural works and video which
is shown in conjunction with the performances.
The works are focused on women who exhibit "bad
behavior". They are rebels and revolutionaries making their own world on
top of the ruins of other worlds. There is always a building up and a
pulling down. And always wreckage of some sort, representing a smashing
of the old order.
Weekly interview #9 - Scott Mitchell
I
was born in Derby, England and graduated with a BA Hons in
Illustration from Lincoln University in 2010. Since graduating I have
been focusing on selling portraits both of celebrities and people’s
family members along side my illustration paintings.
I
work almost exclusively with acrylic paint, either on canvas for the
portraits, or wood for the illustrations.
Weekly Interview #8 - Andrew Tong
Tell us about yourself and your work.
Let's start at the beginning, with the things that really influenced my artistic side. I was born in
1966, the only child to Doreen and Ronald Tong in Croydon, South London, England. Both my
parents served during WW2, my dad as an anti-aircraft gunner in the navy in Burma and my mum
was a worker in a munitions factory during the Blitz in South London. I grew up around WW2
veterans, heard their stories and that always had a large influence on my work. I developed a big
interest in history quite early and how it repeats itself.
In my mid-teens I discovered the joys of alcohol and getting into trouble with the police. I
developed alcoholism, also later drug addiction and I was working with some very shady
characters indeed, ending up in a place that could only be described as pure hell for many years.
On the upside, surviving this time in my life very much influenced who I am as an artist. Coming
out of it somewhat healthy has made me a stronger person.
My work always has a certain amount of an autobiographic touch to it. There is a sense of
nostalgia to it no matter how small. Then there are the parts of my life I have struggled to
overcome but as time goes on and that life gets further away, so does the subject matter. I don't
paint so many guns anymore. I have mellowed and that is a nice feeling. There was nothing
glorious about that lifestyle.
Let's start at the beginning, with the things that really influenced my artistic side. I was born in
1966, the only child to Doreen and Ronald Tong in Croydon, South London, England. Both my
parents served during WW2, my dad as an anti-aircraft gunner in the navy in Burma and my mum
was a worker in a munitions factory during the Blitz in South London. I grew up around WW2
veterans, heard their stories and that always had a large influence on my work. I developed a big
interest in history quite early and how it repeats itself.
In my mid-teens I discovered the joys of alcohol and getting into trouble with the police. I
developed alcoholism, also later drug addiction and I was working with some very shady
characters indeed, ending up in a place that could only be described as pure hell for many years.
On the upside, surviving this time in my life very much influenced who I am as an artist. Coming
out of it somewhat healthy has made me a stronger person.
My work always has a certain amount of an autobiographic touch to it. There is a sense of
nostalgia to it no matter how small. Then there are the parts of my life I have struggled to
overcome but as time goes on and that life gets further away, so does the subject matter. I don't
paint so many guns anymore. I have mellowed and that is a nice feeling. There was nothing
glorious about that lifestyle.
Weekly Interview #7 - David Agenjo
Today's interview will be a little bit different from the standard one. I managed to find an exceptional artist and ask him not about his inspirations or plans - something that everyone want to share, but, rather about his technique, a thing that many artists hold so dear that they will take their secret to the grave.
David Agenjo is a self-taught artist. Perhaps that's why every part of his painting is mastered on its own - well-chosen colors with vibrant shadows and contrasts, perfect composition and layered textures that add depth to a meaning.
His webpage: http://davidagenjo.com/
David Agenjo is a self-taught artist. Perhaps that's why every part of his painting is mastered on its own - well-chosen colors with vibrant shadows and contrasts, perfect composition and layered textures that add depth to a meaning.
The
unpredictable range of colours and textures left on the palette, have always
kept my attention. I was intrigued by this accidental way
of making a textural colourfield, so I started incorporating and combining
these palette works into my actual paintings.
When I paint, I use a secondary canvas as a palette, this second canvas/palette becomes the new surface on which to overlay and merge the next figurative composition.
I like the idea of creating paintings that in a sense are all interlinked by the previous one (Like the way genetic coding is passed through generations of all living things).
I also like the contrast between the unpredictable range colours given by chance as an abstraction, and my conscious figurative work processes, both coexisting and interacting on the same painting.
Some paintings also contain other textural elements such as "fiberglass, grid tape" or plastic bags. I incorporate these elements in the pallet stage of the canvas building up a rich starting point for the next work.
When I paint, I use a secondary canvas as a palette, this second canvas/palette becomes the new surface on which to overlay and merge the next figurative composition.
I like the idea of creating paintings that in a sense are all interlinked by the previous one (Like the way genetic coding is passed through generations of all living things).
I also like the contrast between the unpredictable range colours given by chance as an abstraction, and my conscious figurative work processes, both coexisting and interacting on the same painting.
Some paintings also contain other textural elements such as "fiberglass, grid tape" or plastic bags. I incorporate these elements in the pallet stage of the canvas building up a rich starting point for the next work.
His webpage: http://davidagenjo.com/
Weekly Interview #6 - Kimberly Brooks
Tell us about yourself and your work.
I am a painter who blends figuration and abstraction to convey certain ideas. I keep a studio in Venice, California.
I don't
remember a time when I didn't identify with being an artist, but as a
child I worked in pencil and pen. I would make fantastical drawings and
as a child I would make everyone sit for me so I could draw there
portrait. My journal was a sketch pad and it was filled with pictures
and words in equal parts. Then when I was eighteen, I started buying
tubes of paint. I just wanted to hold a tube of cadmium red or cerulean
blue. It took me a few years to actually use the paint. It was like I
was harboring a secret. Once I started, I couldn't stop and I never
will.
What/who inspires you? In what way?
What got you started? What keeps you in?
What/who inspires you? In what way?
I
am inspired by people who are fearless. I am inspired by so many other
things -- religious art, Indian Miniatures, great literature and
fashion. But in the end, it's always people.
Real art is art that inspires me, moves me or tilts my view of the world in a different way.
The most powerful/your favourite medium: picture, words, sounds? Anything else?
For receiving, I have no favorite medium. For giving, I favor painting and occasionally words.
Plans for future (of your work)?
I'm unspooling
like a long thread from figuration and leaning towards abstraction. I'm
interested in that middle place where it's neither here nor there and
both at once.
Anything you'd like to add? Maybe a song, a picture, hello to friends and family?
Thank you, Simon, for helping me share my work. In the end, art is all about sharing.
Weekly Interview #5 - Christina Barrera
Tell us about yourself and your work.
Hi! My name is Christina Barrera, I’m twenty three years old, I’m
from South Florida and I live and work in Baltimore, Maryland. I earned
my BFA from the Maryland Institute College of Art where I majored in
Interdisciplinary Fine Arts and minored in Art History. My work deals
with, examines, and visualizes the idea of a universal consciousness or
energy that connects all beings and entities in the universe, and the
idea that everything is essentially made up of the same “stuff” weaving
in and out of and melding into one another. I like to make spaces that
sometimes have figures or surrogates for figures that dissolve into or
are interrupted by the spaces that they are integrally a part of. We
are discrete objects, alienated by our solid form and yet fluid bodies
constantly in a state of flux, giving and receiving information in the
form of energy. The work seeks to dissolve the boundaries that we
perceive between ourselves and our universe and literally interconnect
energy, environment, figures and all things; giving the work a sense of
existing in a timeless space and communicating that within the reality
of the created space all things are the same in their material and
immaterial existences despite our seeming separateness. My work
incorporates painting, drawing, printmaking, collage, sculpture,
photography and textile, among other things.
My mother is an elementary school art teacher so I was always
encouraged to make art work, but predictably enough having an art
teacher as a mother made me reject art making for a while when I was
young. I had a lot of dream careers before I considered being an artist,
one of those for a long time in primary school was to be a lawyer
because I was good at arguing and I enjoyed winning those arguments,
which should tell you something (probably terrible) about me in the
third grade! Then I attended The Middle School of the Arts in West Palm
Beach, Florida and I consciously chose to become an artist in the eighth
grade almost certainly because of the emphasis that was placed on the
importance of art-making, exploration, and experimentation there. I also
attended the Alexander W. Dreyfoos jr. High School of the Arts* (always
a mouthful!) and the environment there is both very rigorous and very
diverse and open in regards to making work, so it just cemented my
practice as a part of my life that wove everything else together. That
level of making and consideration made me view my practice as a way for
me to create a space and a system that allowed me to think or work
through instead of simply do things, and that ultimately is what I think
made me an artist and is how and why I stay in it.
What/who inspires you? In what way?
There are a trillion things maybe. Tons of things that don’t directly
correlate to my practice inspire me, like anime, bike riding, all sorts
of television, fashion, textiles, cooking, the internet, music,
stickers that I can never figure out where to put, museum education
practice, outer space, painting my nails, zines, Harry Potter, theory
and ideology surrounding museums, institutions, and monuments, I mean,
I’m just pulling stuff from everywhere and nowhere and I could go on for
a long time and come up with a really stupid list!
The list of things that I can directly pinpoint as influential to me in
the realm of my current practice is actually quite short, I think. Just
to get some obvious pre-requisites out of the way, I’m obviously
influenced and inspired by my past professors and mentors, my very
talented friends (links at the bottom!), the vast image bank that is art
history, any contemporary work that I experience first hand, and really
all the images that I see everyday, meaning I owe a lot of my
influencing images and probably a lot of my image bank to the internet.
As far as imagery is concerned I can’t really say what is really
going to influence me in the studio versus simply catch my eye. I can
say that there are certainly recurring images, for example the lush
tropical plant life that I know from my Florida home, since the recent
death of my first cat she has cropped up in a lot of my images, I seem
to be drawn to images of fire, night imagery, and probably a lot of
other things I’m forgetting right now. My imagery used to be heavily
influenced by magical realism and the kind of atmosphere and vivid
off-kilter imagery in magical realist Hispanic literature. I’ve read a
lot of Isabel Allende and Gabriel Garcia Marquez and although they don’t
fit into the magical realist movement, I’ve read a lot of Federico
Garcia Lorca and Jorge Luis Borjes. This influence has waned over the
past few years but I feel that I owe a lot to their literary imagery.
Conceptually I’m incredibly influenced by Joseph Campbell (and
therefore by Carl Jung, although I’ve never read any of his work) and by
the ideologies of the collective consciousness (collective
unconscious) and simultaneous time/time lines that surround many
meditative practices. This idea is in turn very present (in a number of
different iterations) in quantum physics, and of particular interest to
me at the moment, multiverse theory. I try to get into the more complex
science but it sometimes just complicates my understanding of the base
concepts. My favorites at the moment are Stephen Hawking and Carl Sagan.
I’ve watched a lot of Cosmos, and I’ve just started reading A Brief History of Time after getting through The Grand Design, I also think about The Field by Lynne McTaggart, Einstein’s Dreams by Alan Lightman, and Invisible Cities by Italo Calvino a lot in the studio. When I do listen to music in the studio it’s likely to be William Basinki’s Disintegration Loops,
or recently something like Bob Dylan or the Tallest Man on Earth, but
WNYC’s Radio Lab is what’s usually playing in my studio (oh! and
TEDtalks!). The amount of visual artists that I look at and are inspired
by is endless and I couldn’t begin to formulate a comprehensive list
here.
What is art for you? Examples of "real art"?
I think that art is mostly just things labeled “art”. I’m absolutely
okay with this and have no qualms with what is or isn’t called art,
however it essentially means that the label of art lies in the intention
to make art. I do think that this means that something has do be done
to make art. By this definition an untouched thing you found on the
street and left there isn’t art, but a thing you found on the street and
picked up and did something with (even if then you left it in the
street again) can be if you intend it to be. This goes both ways, in
that a functional but beautifully decorated object that is not
considered art in its indigenous culture shouldn’t be considered art in
our culture either, but rather and artifact with respect to their
labeling of their own creations. That really gets me hot and bothered
sometimes. Ultimately I think that art is whatever the maker wants it to
be, and different kinds and levels of art have different venues and
purposes which is why people mistakenly take them to be different, when
they’re not. They’re all art.
“real art”? “real art” is art that exists in some plane of reality? things that are real are real, right?
The most powerful/your favourite medium: picture, words, sounds? Anything else?
Let me start by saying that I don’t think that any medium can be
inherently more powerful than any other medium. One piece of art work
can be more subjectively powerful than another, and that may be due in
part to the medium and how appropriate it is to the work or how well
it’s handled but it wont be solely because of the medium.
My favorite mediums, if we’re talking materials, are charcoal and
pastel, photocopies, paper (cut and woven), photography, etching, and
oils probably, at least these are my most commonly used. I’m recently
getting really into porcelain molding, flip books, and getting back into
sculpture but I haven’t acted on any of this very much yet, I’m a slow
mover sometimes. I’m starting to think about gifs in a way I’ve never
thought of them as well, let’s say I’m considering them. In the past
I’ve been drawn to textiles, hand sewing, transparencies, light boxes,
and sometimes hand built ceramics.
As for the second part of the question, I use text on the rare occasion
but I’m almost strictly and proudly an image maker, whether it be in
two or three dimensions.
Plans for future (of your work)?
For the immediate future, in the studio I’m planning on getting into
porcelain molds and getting back into sculpture, I have two on-going
collaborative projects going with my studio mate Ricardo Contreras, one
of which we’re getting ready to get into in earnest, and I’m starting a
new body of large works that I’m really excited about (you can check my
website and tumblr for updates through-out the summer!) I’m also working
on a curatorial proposal and I’ll be putting out a zine and related
submission-based blog called Letters to Ghosts later this summer.
I just de-installed two shows, and am opening another group show in a
week but after that I’ll be working on more calls for entry, and
residency applications for next year. I really want to go to this year
long residency just outside of Paris!
My longer term goals include grad school within two or three years,
hopefully in New York but not necessarily, and eventually teaching on
the university level along side my studio practice. I could definitely
work in the gallery or museum circuit somewhere in between! I’ve worked
in a couple museums and I like how museums can impact a community if
they’re run the right way and have an invigorated staff and fresh
approach to education programs.
Anything you'd like to add? Maybe a song, a picture, hello to friends and family?
Thanks for the interview and the opportunity to talk about my work!
you can find me elsewhere on the internet:
prints of my work are for sale on artflakes.com
and here are some excellent peers that I’m inspired by:
I just want to shout out to magnet programs here; Both my former middle
and high school are public magnet arts programs, and they are
absolutely amazing. To everyone who says that magnet programs create
elitist privileged students or are a brain drain on the schools in the
area, I say this: the United States public school system is there
supposedly to provide quality elite education to all its citizens which
means that high caliber programs in the arts, academics, and vocational
schools are something to strive for rather than reject. It is impossible
to claim that other schools do not do well because there is a better
program in the area, the state of those other schools rests in the hands
of government funding for good teachers, and since teachers are paid in
unicorn tears and fairy wishes, very few highly educated top tier
students decide to specialize in education or become teachers meaning
that the system is only working for some students and not others. This
is not the fault of the program that is working, those programs are
progressive, innovative and invigorated so they attract progressive,
innovative, and invigorated teachers.
These schools are the reason I am where I am. They are the reason I
had the courage and the tools to pursue my work, they are the reason I
went to a private art university for free, and they are responsible for
shaping and honing hundreds if not thousands of amazingly talented
individuals who are more well rounded and have a fuller sense of
themselves and their abilities thanks to their arts education. There are
many programs like this around the country, although not enough, and
they are under constant attack and threat of being shut down when they
should be emulated.
all images Christina Barrera, all rights reserved 2012

Weekly Interview #4 - Hannah Ward
Tell us about yourself and your work.
My artwork explores the fragility of the physical body and the ease with which it can be transformed. I am interested in the fusion of the grotesque and the beautiful. I work with a large range of media and my imagery is, in one way or another, derived from local woodland animals. I was raised in the country with a great appreciation of nature. My works reference childhood memories, dream imagery, taxidermy practices and their parallels to human conditions and relationships
What got you started? What keeps you in?
I’ve always been involved with both the visual and performing arts and struggled with trying to formulate a career in them. I was interested in pursuing scientific and medical illustration for a long time, which still has a great impact on my imagery and source materials. Eventually, producing art no longer consisted of tasks or projects and became a very natural drive. Art has become a ritual for me, a way to sort out my fixations. It is how I manage to process everything I experience outside of the studio.
What/who inspires you? In what way?
I am inspired by my surroundings, conversations, the people I care for, film, words, anxieties, and
moments that I find confusing or overwhelming. I have a need to reconfigure and process why these
things are meaningful. I am also interested in the need to salvage the sensations I experience…in the need to literally create something new from what has been broken.
What is art for you? Examples of "real art"?
Art is my vocabulary, my relief, and my obsession. I think art is a documentation of the visceral.
The most powerful/your favourite medium: picture, words, sounds? Anything else?
Visual arts play the most important role in my life, but they are fueled greatly by music, language, and all of my senses. I think it’s important to allow these things to overlap.
Plans for future (of your work)?
Right now, I just want to push myself past my limits. I want to refine and expand upon my visual
language. I’m also working towards further expanding my range of media and experimenting with more sculptural forms.
Website: www. Hannahwardstudio.com
Tumblr: Hannahwardart.tumblr.com
My artwork explores the fragility of the physical body and the ease with which it can be transformed. I am interested in the fusion of the grotesque and the beautiful. I work with a large range of media and my imagery is, in one way or another, derived from local woodland animals. I was raised in the country with a great appreciation of nature. My works reference childhood memories, dream imagery, taxidermy practices and their parallels to human conditions and relationships
What got you started? What keeps you in?
I’ve always been involved with both the visual and performing arts and struggled with trying to formulate a career in them. I was interested in pursuing scientific and medical illustration for a long time, which still has a great impact on my imagery and source materials. Eventually, producing art no longer consisted of tasks or projects and became a very natural drive. Art has become a ritual for me, a way to sort out my fixations. It is how I manage to process everything I experience outside of the studio.
What/who inspires you? In what way?
I am inspired by my surroundings, conversations, the people I care for, film, words, anxieties, and
moments that I find confusing or overwhelming. I have a need to reconfigure and process why these
things are meaningful. I am also interested in the need to salvage the sensations I experience…in the need to literally create something new from what has been broken.
What is art for you? Examples of "real art"?
Art is my vocabulary, my relief, and my obsession. I think art is a documentation of the visceral.
The most powerful/your favourite medium: picture, words, sounds? Anything else?
Visual arts play the most important role in my life, but they are fueled greatly by music, language, and all of my senses. I think it’s important to allow these things to overlap.
Plans for future (of your work)?
Right now, I just want to push myself past my limits. I want to refine and expand upon my visual
language. I’m also working towards further expanding my range of media and experimenting with more sculptural forms.
Website: www. Hannahwardstudio.com
Tumblr: Hannahwardart.tumblr.com
Weekly Interview #3 - Jake Kelley
Soul-Crusher
(2012)
Tell
us about yourself and your work.
I
was born in Chattanooga, Tennessee, where I teach high school art and
am currently raising two kids with my wife. I have been making art as
a serious Endeavour (I have always dabbled) for around 10 years.
My
work is an ever-evolving beast that in many ways has become a form of
self-portraiture or, in the very least, has changed from formal
studies in organic and geometric abstraction to some strange form of
self-expression. I like to think of my most current body of work
(which can be viewed in its entirety here) as
a spewing forth of partially digested cultural influences or
post-modern visual vomit.
Piss-Business
(2012)
What
got you started?
My
grandmother, Mary Ferris Kelly, is an amazing artist. I grew up
watching her paint the most amazing impressionistic pictures filled
with swirling colors and figures. I must admit that my paintings are
much darker and ironic than hers, but she was, and still is, my most
important inspiration. In her early years, she made some of the best
geometric and Abstract-Expressionist paintings I have ever seen to
this day. Those really got me going!
Cross-Section
(2012)
What
keeps you in?
I
enjoy being able to call myself a painter. I take part in a tradition
and I am adding to the narrative. I would be lying if I said I didn’t
care about receiving recognition (which is always nice) but for some
reason I continue to make these strange and, for all intents and
purposes, useless objects called paintings. It may be an existential
thing.
In
the Womb of the Desert Sun (2012)
What/who inspires you? In what way?
Inspired
may be the wrong word. I am inspired by other artists, yes. But I
also become secretly jealous and competitive. After I see really
great art, I usually return to my studio with higher expectations for
myself. The art-world is tough and nobody pays attention to mediocre,
safe art.
That
said, some of those artists that helped me push myself further are:
David Reed (you can see some of his brushstrokes in my painting
“Cross-section”), Glenn Brown, and Michael David, who is my
genius-mentor in Atlanta and to whom I owe a lot.
Juggernaut
(2012)
What is art for you? Examples of "real art"?
I
tend to believe that “art” can be anything at all, as long as
someone (creator(s) or audience) dubs it to be art. If someone gives
it the name “art” then it magically becomes that person’s
personal expression of whatever he/she believes art to be. It becomes
an instant symbol for that person’s (who is now an artist)
aesthetic. The line between “good” art and “bad” art,
however, is a little more complicated. The best examples I can think
of are the cave paintings from Lascaux, France. They are raw, pure,
expressions made from what was available (charcoal, berries, chalk,)
about what the artists knew: survival.
Origin
of the World (After Courbet) (2012)
The
most powerful/your favorite medium: picture, words, sounds? Anything
else?
My
paintings are made on thin aluminum panels (which I like because they
are light and can be projected off the wall by hidden cradles and
become these floating squares and rectangles, and hopefully in the
future, circles). I use acrylic and latex paints, which I manipulate
in various ways (secret) and cover in multiple layers of epoxy resin
(liquid glass). I then use a variety of inks to draw upon the raised
epoxy. For all you theorists out there, I am deconstructing the
traditional hierarchy between painting and drawing. In many ways, my
paint is an “under-drawing” and my drawing is the finishing
touch.
My
River Runs to Thee (2012)
Plans for future (of your work)?
Anything you’d like to add? Maybe a song, a picture, hello to friends and family?
I
plan on continuing to make what I think are exciting and interesting
paintings, contributing to the narrative, and helping the “beast to
evolve”. I am currently looking for a gallery to work with. You can
contact me at jacobmkelley@gmail.com,
follow my blog at jakekelley.wordpress.com, and buy prints at
saatchionline.com. Thanks!
Symbiot
(2012)
Weekly Interview #2 - David Finley
Tell us about yourself and your work.
It's always a strange experience talking about myself, but here goes. First, I have a beard and I'm a huge Beatles fan. My beautiful wife tells me those two traits aren't necessarily related, but who can say? Cats are generally more likable than dogs, but I have one of each, and both are pretty awesome. Having a dog is really great for getting me outside, and since we live within walking distance of the ocean, I get to take in some really breathtaking sights.
Most days, I like to write about or draw pictures of things I'm interested in, whether it's a talking orange, an alcoholic donkey, or a tribute piece to John Lennon. I also run a blog geared toward artists and creative people called, The Haven for Scofflaws.
The term 'Scofflaw' was chosen because artists tend to be misunderstood. When I say 'artist', I am referring to visual artists, as well as musicians, writers, dancers, and like minded individuals. We're sort of a peculiar lot, so I wanted to make a blog with articles geared toward the creative personality with some humor thrown in.
If you're a regular reader of my site, I like to affectionately refer to you as one of my Scofflaws, and hope the term creates a sense of belonging and community.
Jokingly, I call myself the Grand Poobah of all Scofflaws because the idea of a Grand Poobah of some secret society seems funny to me. I became fascinated with the Royal Order Water Buffalos in old Flintstone cartoons, and the idea stuck.
Since art school, I have had an inner battle between my fine art and illustration work. Fortunately, I realized I could split my artistic persona in two and market them almost like two separate divisions of the same company. I've even considered trying a slightly different variant on my name for the fine art side.
On the illustration side, I do mostly digital cartoon style illustration to accompany my writing, however, I've also illustrated book covers, done interiors for magazines, and I'm working on a children's book called, ABC, Witch with a friend of mine named, Jonathan. I prefer making simple pieces with strong shapes, and lots of texture. I don't think a work of art needs to be complicated to be strong.
From the fine arts perspective, I like to work with mixed media: mostly charcoal, collage, ink, scraps of paper, wood, and paint here and there. The work tends to be more serious in subject matter, and is often much more personal. It's a bit more cathartic for me than my illustration, but like a parent who refuses to pick a side, I love them both equally. Plus, there's something really cool about having my work hanging in an art gallery, which I still feel a little giddy about.
The first gallery piece I sold was a triptych called, The Constraints of Expectations, which chronicled my frustrations with the communication barriers between my Dad and me as a result of his hearing loss.
What got you started? What keeps you in?
My Dad probably inspired me more toward art than anyone else. I still have memories of him at his desk when I was four as he worked on meticulous illustrations of people with super tight brush line work for a Commercial art course he was taking in college.
I would sit beside him bending my crayons to my will until a crude form of Pac-man could be made out on the page. (it was 1981) We were poor, but I didn't really know it at that age. So, my Dad, who used to work at gas stations, eventually sacrificed his art career for his family, which I completely love him for, but those memories were still strong enough to start a fire of passion for art inside me that I can't seem to quench.
Recently, I made a parody illustration featuring Pac--man and in a way, it was like I was still sitting next to my Dad. Look at me, I'm getting sentimental over an illustration featuring a video game character eating the ku klux klan.
My disposition and personality almost seems to make art my only real career option. I don't think I can be happy in the long term doing anything else. That might sound dramatic to other people, but I've tried doing other things where the paycheck comes a lot easier with more regularity, and even the security of reliable income isn't enough. Most recently, I worked at a ministry doing drama and public speaking, but despite the highest paychecks I had ever earned doing something some would call quite noble, the call to art made me miserable at what I was doing.
What/who inspires you? In what way?
My own experiences and relationships inspire what I do more than anything. I usually have a hard time making a piece if I haven't emotionally connected with it first. My wife inspires me, as she did in the piece above called, Songbird. My cat, Skelly has been a consistent muse, although he passed away last December, which was incredibly difficult for me. There's a part of me that still grieves for him.
Yet, even in his death he has inspired me to explore new territory. For instance, in the piece below, I was trying to sort out my feelings about death, spirituality, afterlife, and what I hoped it would be, so I included him.
I've also been inspired by a whole slew of fine artists and illustrators, although I wish we could just refer to them all as artists and drop the distinctions.
On the illustration side, I'd say my strongest influences are Bill Waterson, Mary Blair, Jeff Smith, Charles Schultz, Dr. Seuss, Maurice Sendak, Shane Glines, Kazu Kibuishi, Tadahiro Uesugi, and the Walt Disney studio. There are a lot more artists, I study and follow, but these have had a profound impact on me, particularly Mary Blair. Her work is equal parts simple and deceptively complex.
On the fine arts side there is Kara Walker, Francis Bacon, Banksy, Shepard Fairey, Barry McGee, William Kentridge, Claude Monet, Sally Mann, Alberto Giacometti, Marc Rothko, Marc Chagall, Vincent VanGogh, Pablo Picasso... well, the list goes on. But most of my influences are post mid-nineteenth century artists. Picasso is probably my favorite despite some of the flack he takes. When I saw Guernica for the first time, it blew me away.
What is art for you? Examples of "real art"?
Art is truth. Art is observing and communicating.
It becomes most "real" in relation to the person it is impacting. For some, it is a painting like the Mona Lisa because that painting represents what art should be to them. It's a powerful emotional experience. To be honest, I much prefer DaVinci's Last Supper to the Mona Lisa. In essence, it's the audience that is responsible for defining a piece of art because their interaction is necessary to complete the equation. What would visual art be with no one to see it?
Real art for me is John Lennon's song, Watching the Wheels which became an anthem for me as I dreamt about when I would be free of a job that was hurting me emotionally. Real art is Bill Waterson's Calvin and Hobbes strips, with their beautiful ink work and intelligent writing, reminding me to keep looking at the world through a more innocent view. Kara Walker's whole room installations put me in the old south, and remind me we can't always sweep our darkest moments under the rug. Those works resonate with me, and I in turn see myself in those works.
That is art.
The most powerful/your favourite medium: picture, words, sounds? Anything else?
Art in all it's forms is interconnected, and while each type has a beauty and strength of its own, it is at its most powerful when the various types of art work together.
I attended a dance performance with my wife that combined projections of cubist paintings with dance choreography and music. Each was beautiful on its own, but the three types of art combined moved me considerably more than one alone might have. I would love to do something similar someday.
Plans for future (of your work)?
For now, I'd like to keep growing as a visual artist and writer, but I'm always up for a new challenge.
My goals for the rest of this year involve working on producing more work for galleries. I hang in two right now, but I'd like to expand. Finishing my children's book, putting together material for an ebook, and publishing some art related articles for a few magazines I enjoy reading are all on my to do list. Of course, I also want to keep working on my websites, building an audience and reaching out to people. It's a lot of work, but I'm happy to be doing what I love.
In the more distant future, I want to do more directing and writing for comedy based short films and sketches, and wouldn't be opposed to a longer project of some sort. I cowrote a song called, "Weiner in your Face" that I still need to shoot the video for. It's exactly what it sounds like. We are going to shoot a montage of a zany picnic where everyone is eating hotdogs. There's also a real niche to fill producing more entertaining podcasts geared toward artists.
Anything you'd like to add? Maybe a song, a picture, hello to friends and family?
A picture huh? Here's one I feel really represents me. :)
In all seriousness, if you're a young artist just starting out, understand that a lot of hard work is ahead of you. There's going to be a lot of rejection. Don't compare yourself to others, and don't make deadlines for your success. Listen to advice and improve where you can, but keep working. The best thing to do is just make the work and try to get it in front of people. You will improve more in the process of doing than in planning.
I just want to thank everyone who has ever encouraged and supported me in doing what I love. A special thanks to my wife, Nicole for the daily support she gives me. And, if I could, I'd like to ask everyone to check out my website, Haven for Scofflaws. (www.havenforscofflaws.com)
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