Friday, January 26, 2024

Now and Then

 


"Now and Then" is an older painting of mine, done in about 1995, before many of y'all were born.  It has a very important place in my growth and I thought I'd discuss it here.

In '95, I was still in the Navy and stationed in Maryland.  I was taking a night painting class at the Maryland Institute College of Art in Baltimore.  The teacher gave us a homework assignment of painting a still life.  Since I'd been painting for many years at that point, I didn't think it would be very challenging.  Actually creating the painting wasn't difficult.  I piled a bunch of things onto a table, moved things around, tossed things out, added something every now and then, and kept whittling away until the only things left were my Navy hat and my ancient teddy bear.  The contrast in colors, values, and textures appealed to me: lots of harsh blacks and whites and hard-edge lines in the hat, compared with soft textures and warm colors in the bear.  

At the next class, we set our homework assignments up against the wall and everybody critiqued everybody else's work.  When they got to mine, it got a lot of emotional response.  One of the students said it was about a father who had gone off to war and wasn't coming back and the kid was going to grow up without a father.  I was looking at them thinking "umm ... it's just a still life ...".  I was really taken aback.

However, the big lesson at the time was that I can't control the story the viewers see in my work.  They come to it with their own background, history, mental associations, prejudices, likes, and dislikes, all of which have nothing to do with me.  All I can do is tell my story as best I can.  Maybe suggest a particular line of thought, but that's about it.  They'll see what they're going to see.

There was another lesson quite some time later.  Eventually, I realized that my choice of the hat and teddy bear wasn't random.  Something in me specifically chose those two items.  It's a self-portait done with two of my possessions.

These two lessons have affected every piece of art I look at now, and every piece of art I make.

Wednesday, January 17, 2024

Sema's Shadow

 "Sema's Shadow" is a new figurative artwork that I recently finished.  It's in charcoal and pastel on toned paper, size 25"x19".  I thought I'd share a bit of background on how it developed.



This started as a drawing from one of our life sessions. It was an okay drawing but that's about it. Not much life to it and it was a standard life drawing pose. I wanted to see if I could take it up a few notches, giving it character and more interest. So I began drawing over it, covering things, erasing things, but keeping the same basic pose. I wanted it to be more evocative and less descriptive. After working on it intermittently for several weeks, in between other works, here's how it turned out:


So what do you think? Is it better? Worse? Neither, just different?


#figurativeart #figuredrawing #artistmodel #lifedrawing #charcoaldrawing #pastelfiguredrawing #contemporaryfigurativeart #ashevilleartist #ashevilleart #skiprohde

Monday, January 08, 2024

New Exhibition at Mars Hill University

 One of the things I do besides create artworks is to show artworks.  I manage the art gallery at Mars Hill University.  We just finished installing the first show of the spring semester.  It's a series of prose and poetry printed in letterpress, along with line etchings, all made with exquisite quality.  I'm not exaggerating: it's some of the best I've ever seen.  And the story that the artist is telling is extremely powerful. 


Click on the image to see a larger version.  Then zoom in on it even more.  Take your time - the more you look, the more you're going to see.

Artist koreloy mcwhirter has created this collection of works titled "redhanded: a songe forre the loste". She doesn't capitalize names or titles, and deliberately uses spelling that evokes olde English.  It's essentially a book of prose, poetry, and imagery, each page of which is individually mounted, framed, and presented.  They're arranged such that you enter the gallery and follow the "book" around the wall, one page at a time, in order.

redhanded is based on her own experiences of physical, emotional, and sexual abuse, both as a very young child and continuing into adulthood.  This is not a happy story.  It's not a hopeless story, either, and you'll find humor, love, mourning, forgiveness, anger, and much more.

You'll find it, that is, if you take the time to read the prose and poetry, and to study the prints.  It's not an exhibition that you can pop in, get a quick look, and say you've "seen" it.  But if you take the time, you will be profoundly moved.

Weizenblatt Gallery is in the Moore Fine Art building on the Mars Hill University campus in Mars Hill, North Carolina, about 20 miles north of Asheville.  Hours are 10-4 MWF.  We're having a reception for the artist on Tuesday, Jan 16, from 5-7 pm.  I hear from koreloy that there will be music, singing, and maybe some dancing as well.  

Be there.