This year’s 14th Annual Melrose Arts Window Art Walk is kicking off of October 9, 2021, and work of 30 some artists will be on display in the windows of local businesses until Oct. 24, 2021. Thanks to Halo Studio, at 467 Main Street Melrose, MA 02176 for hosting 5 works of my art, which are on display to the public 24 hours a day! Thanks to you, the viewer, as well—perhaps you arrived here via the art walk or having scanned the QR code. I hope you enjoy these visual meditations on process and product.
About the Work and the Process:
My work hovers between surface and story. Growing out of life-drawing process, I express presence through color, and a sense of time through the history of accumulated line. My process has been inspired by post–abstract expressionism, using layered culture tokens and personal iconography to isolate a visual wavelength that fluctuates between the surface of material and depth of illusion, and between subjectivity and objectivity.
The work here is representative of two veins of work. I will try to explain a little bit about each here.
All of the 5 works found their departure in thinking about the End, and what happens beyond it. Recently, I exhibited a number of work in a selected body of work titled “END_PAINTINGS.” This idea was rooted in a quote of T. S. Eliot’s, from “Little Gidding,” Four Quartets (Gardners Books; Main edition, April 30, 2001) Originally published 1943. Towards the end of this poem T. S. Eliot wrote, “to make an end is to make a beginning. The end is where we start from.”
2019 felt like the end of a season, and 2021, a new vantage point by which to evaluate, fuse into orbit fragmented pieces of changing season, history, experience, and undulating memory. Quaratine was like the “underscore” in the title, during and out of which this thinking and painting happened. As the paintings in various forms dealt with “the end,” they also explored the space between the end and the beginning. They are in part a product of my quarantine labors to integrate past-present-future—painting as a means to live forward today in light of what is past; living as it were, “Between two waves of the sea.” The works included referenced Greek mythology, the middle near-eastern view through Biblical narrative, consumerist product culture, spirituality and worship. Two of the paintings from that exhibit are included here: Fan, and Coffee Maker (Under Construction).
Out of this larger guiding concept, emerged the two groups—the product paintings, or “Living Room” paintings (supersize household objects on mountaintops), and what i tentatively refere to as the “Metamorphos” paintings. Both groups began to ask two separate questions: “How is a creation created?” and “Where do our creations end?”
The Metamorphoo paintings were really an exploration of a painting methodology, where subsequent layers would always be applied in a certain order bathing 90% of the previous layer. Much of the initial dealing with paint was strictly in terms of color and transparency, while the direction and consistency of brushwork were also important. They began as black paintings, over which was layered red, semi-precious metal leaf (copper or silver), and then other colors—blue, yellow, red, and green in brushstrokes and powdered pigment that created and scattered the main form that emerged—in this case, a floating rock island of sorts. These works explore the physical process as narrative in and of itself, while it secondly deals with the natural content. As the title suggests, change is a process, and transformation is a reality which exists for newness simultaneously within the creature and as that power which is so far beyond the creation.
The Greek word metamorphoo is sometimes translated at “transform.” Which makes the venue–a salon–meaningful; metamorphoo can also be translated as “transfigure” which implies a deeper change that emanates from within.
Again, I hope you enjoy these visual meditations on process and product.