Saturday, December 15, 2012

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   “Just in the physical act, the decision making process, applying paint upon a previously worked surface and I'm immediately lost in the practice, the search and personal discovery which takes place. I think like most artists I like to push at any parameters from time to time, to explore some new territory and surprise myself. Each new painting seems to me to offer always-new possibilities.” To propose any sort of a concrete idea this early would serve no purpose for me at this point in time. The idea of approaching making a piece of art with a clear cut idea has no concern to me as of now, instead I have been embracing the act of art making. This focus has lead to a growth of my areas of interest as far as what I’m concerning myself with in my work. The concept of narrative is slowly leeching its way into my paintings; I can feel it trying to make itself known.  I’ve been teasing with her lately, allowing her to show her face in some places, but in others using a decoy that can sometimes be mistaken for her.  Whether the narrative is a personal attachment or a fake construct, it still is providing the sense of attachment to my work, and in a weird way enticing me to show it. Recently  I‘ve noticed almost all of my paintings are done vertically, as if I’ve been subconsciously treating it as a being all along.  I've been painting on a lot of other people’s paintings and using others identities in my paintings to question the authorship of the piece.When have enough changes been made to a painting that makes it belongs to someone else?











   This question interests me, the answer is different with every person you ask; some like the idea and the play you can have with it, while others question or skeptical of it’s authenticity. Any sort of figure in my paintings is laid upon a formalist abstraction, painterly in it’s nature. Even spray paint, which is used in almost every single painting, although it is an industrial medium made for convenience not quality, is still intrinsically gestural. Any slight change in the position of the spray, or slight lingering in the path of the arc of the spray is recorded upon the canvas. My paintings have the feeling of quickness to them, but that is more out of necessity than artistic choice. If the growth and development is slowed by my own deliberation, a stalling and souring of the painting is inevitable. But this is not the end point of the painting, it’s more of a temper tantrum, and simply needs to be scolded and put in a corner to think about what it’s done. When it has matured enough to admit its own wrong, then it can continue to be worked on. The most important thing about my work personally right now is the actual enjoyment of creating it.  










   To be painting with clear intention right now would not help, if only having the chance to impede my work. I’m at a point where I am steadily producing work while simultaneously enjoying it, and I do not want to fuck that up. The idea of a hidden narrative figure trying to make itself known is interesting to me, partly because it’s an aspect of my art that I have no grasp on, and am only receiving confusion when trying to deal with it.  On recommendation I looked into Philip   Guston talking about the use of golems in painting and found this, “I should like the image in my painting to be as puzzling and mysterious to me as if a figure walked into this room and we stopped talking and wondered: Who is he? What is this appearance? We can't fathom why he's here, who he is, what he does, and why he should look the way he looks - as in a story by Kafka, if my memory is correct, when the protagonist comes home, unlocks the door, and there are some beings on the stove. He doesn't know who they are, what they are doing there; they're pulp, they're make-up. He doesn't know what is really going on ... A Golem fascinates me.” Can I include myself in a way that puzzles even myself? I’ve been interested in parts of objects you can’t see, but what about narratives that are unknowingly being presented? 


















   Currently I have my studio cleared out with all my paintings on the wall, and a singular sculpture in the middle of the room. The colors of the sculpture can be found in every single painting on the walls, creating a totem like structure whose reach extends beyond it’s physical limits. The paintings, although varying in construct and style, all share common ground with this tower. Through this connection I’m trying to establish a defined space that these objects inhabit and interact in.  The totem is constructed out of spent canvas rolls and a pizza box top, with one of the poles having a small ceramic slab attached to the bottom with paper and matte medium. The structure itself barely stands,and is very temperamental when trying to place it. Is this an attempt to create a sense of myself within painting, or a sense of oneself within my paintings?












Friday, December 14, 2012

Much Needed

Taken from Irene Geller's blog- aBsTracTionIsm. Tequila. Hot sauce. Kangaroos. Neon. Wood grain. Beer. Drunken brawls. Hooliganism. These are the manly things of a manly man person. Oh and Charline von Heyl… y’know, if you like that kind of thing. But what do those mundane things have to do with abstraction? (You might not believe me but this is the first time I connected this new abstraction bachelorhood with the machismo of 40′s-50′s Abstraction Expressionist culture… woah. dumbest but still important revelation ever.) I guess they have to do with an attitude of sort of brusque poetic flailings. Unfortunately, while this blog shows some of Nick’s work, and shots of a show he and Rory Rosenberg did together, it’s still the standard I’m-just-posting-for-Thesis-class-length. When this guy does begin to talk about the poetics of pure abstraction… well, I’d just like to hear more. I liked here little commentary on my work, and hopefully and can provide you with more to hear soon

Fuuuuuck

So I've been more than lazy about posting on this blog.. I'm thinking about switching over to a tumblr as it's easy for me to use on my hip iphone 4. These are a couple of my newer paintings that I haven't posted yet. Right now my studio is all cleaned out with my work from this semester hanging on all the walls, I need to take photos of that as well
I've been working on articulating my thoughts on my work and will post some sort of statement in the next few days

Thursday, November 1, 2012

Showing Work

So I had the project space from October 22nd to the 29th which was nice because I got to clear out my studio for a while and have some space. But I was also excited to have my paintings shown, it makes me feel like I'm doing something.
I've been trying to be less serious and have more fun in my art making. The relief of stress allows me to experiment more freely and fluidly. I am excited to continue.

Tuesday, October 9, 2012

Need Semi Nude Models - With or without PUBES

Me and Rory this week, took it upon ourselves to set up a little show in the undergrad project space, since no one had it reserved and nothing has been put up yet.
We didn't settle upon a single theme to base the show around, but there's a coherence between all the pieces thats hard to put a label on. THe show will be up until October 14th.

Thursday, September 20, 2012

Charline von Heyl at Kunsthalle Nürnberg

Press Release: A painter known for her vibrant, insistent, enigmatic paintings and works on paper, Charline von Heyl demonstrates that abstraction is intensely relevant in contemporary art. Von Heyl’s paintings are not abstractions of real things in the world; rather, her work begins and ends with purely abstract forms. With their intentional confusion of foreground and background, their dynamic energy and their contradictions and reversals, these paintings require (and desire) careful looking. Nonetheless they refuse to yield to the impulse to name, identify, and define. Powerfully imbued with emotion, von Heyl has called her work “melodramatic abstraction.” In addition to her large paintings, the exhibition will present von Heyl’s collage-based works on paper. Largely black and white, they combine woodcut, silkscreen, and lithography, and are defined by a wild overflow of energy. They are sometimes more conventionally legible than the paintings, their source images—whether Magritte drawings, found photographs, or comic books—less transformed. They reveal an artist deeply engaged in altering and manipulating forms until they become something utterly new. The unusually wide heterogeneity of her work has been seen by some as a political gesture aimed at an art world that values and rewards signature products, but it may just as well be the result of an artistic sensibility that values questions over answers. As von Heyl says, “It is about the feeling that a painting, or any work of art, can give—when you can’t stop looking because there is something that you want to find out, that you want to understand…. Good paintings have this tantalizing quality. And once you turn around, you absolutely cannot recapture them. They leave a hole in the mind, a longing.”

Wednesday, September 19, 2012

Studio Update


This is an old canvas of my roommate's that I'm in the process of covering to give it a new life.


He already had a nice layer of texture on it, so rather than scrape it off, I left it on and am trying to work on a painting where outside influences are apparent, and acting on the new painting. I started off liking where this one going, but now it's frustrating me. I had a feeling my first couple of paintings would have this affect on me since I'm getting back into my studio practice after not painting for the whole summer. The texture on the ground, and the semi-transparent paint is interesting me, but the composition is stale and lack-luster.


Detail of the paint





This guy's giving me some hope, I'm happy with how it's taking shape. Creating shallow, awkward spaces is something that interests me in painting, and I think this one has what it takes. There's only two real layers of paint on it so far, but it's already starting to act in a way that I like. I want to explore the blocking/veiling of spaces, but while still showing each layer of paint. The mixture of gestural and geometric forms creates exciting relationships. 


When I'm trying to create space in my paintings, I try to not be illusionistic about it, but very upfront. The viewer is aware of what's happening in most cases, but I try to find different and interesting ways to describe the different spaces within a painting.