I am a little lost as to how to proceed with the piece I started working on in studio today. The current state of the piece is good. I am very pleased with where it has ended up. I chose to work through the suspicion that what I had in mind was an incomplete thought (painting.).
Author: mightylark
Feeling
The amount with which I have felt this week is substantial. I began the week waking in my best friends house. She and her husband are my son’s godparents. I haven’t laughed and smiled that hard in ages. I then taught a workshop on Sunday night to a mixture of adults and children, feeling as accomplished as ever. The next morning I was featured on WKAN The Bill and Allison Morning show, achieving a certain level of “rock star” that I had always dreamed of. I then had dinner with a good friend of mine on the way home from Boston, and got turned around on the T because I forgot to read the station that we entered at. I then drove home and walked through my front door expectant of two of my greatest friends greeting me, but only one did and the other never will again. It has been a tumultuous turn to say the least.
The show in Kankekee seems like a great example of a small community within a tiny city rallying around the visual arts. The citizens seem open and eager to talk to new people with new ideas. It was quite refreshing working within the space. It also seemed rather fitting to be on the radio in reference to a show in which I had hung a large installation piece depicting stereos and radios. Here is a link to the interview in full.
Ultimately, when I arrived home, I found my beloved feline friend, Cedric curled in his spot on the couch, dead. I am so immensely saddened by this as the two of us have been through so much together. I wish him the best in the kitty heaven that was awaiting him.
It’s back to studio as normal tomorrow. I’m hoping getting in the swing again will help.
Peace
-Mike
It is my fourth morning in the Midwest. A wet snow has started to cover the ground. Word from home is that there is a larger snowy blanket awaiting my arrival. But yesterday was a cold rainy day, which found me in Feed Cultural Center’s window, sporting headphones and finally installing Coal Trane: Gotta Git it in Your Soul.
Overall, I am pleased with the way the installation worked out. Tonight I am doing a small totem workshop and there is an opening for Transmissions a show which includes six people who went to grad school with in Maine.
Dig
I am not the Bohemian I once was. I have changed immensely. My social demands have grown slack. I seldom hang out with people in the evening, seldom meet for beers, and have a more regular schedule than I’ve ever had before. I am matured, married, settling into a profession. I don’t really understand how all of this has happened all at once. I do know that I have little desire to return to the party or to the sporadic schedule.
The fall semester is drawing to a close. This last semester I taught two sections of 2D Foundations in Design. It seems as though life has come full circle when you end up teaching the class that you had the biggest struggle with in undergrad. I’ve also begun to settle into my teaching. This semester I assigned a 3000 word essay on the formal aspects of one classic and one contemporary artist. The process of grading these papers was intriguing. There were some students who really gave me a window into a new world of artist while others rehashed ideas that I have heard for ages about the heavy hitters, like Van Gogh, Monet, and especially Keith Haring.
Teaching has helped me in my own art making. I am reminded on a daily basis of ways to improve my images. It is like developing a sense of zen with my work. I am more present with the work than I have been in the past. I am making more conscious decisions, whereas before I had been falling into a set of visual tropes that I had had success with and settling for compositions as they popped into my head. I was much more concerned with getting to the paint and not so concerned with drawing. While teaching has made me more present with my visual decision making, it has played a much heavier influence in helping me establish changes within my work. I have begun to experiment as I have not done in the past. I have attempted watercolor, worked in micron pen, worked on paper, played with scale in a more fulfilling way, and relied on my conscious decision making, not style, to make it all work within my overall body of work.
I have also spent this last year, truthfully since I was married a year ago August, feverishly reading. I have been reading non-fiction about art, mushrooms, music, history, and physics. I’ve also read a fair share of fiction. My favorites have been by Saul Bellow and Haruki Murakami. Reading has granted me more empathy. I feel less exasperated when people don’t understand my work. Also, I feel like I have been making more work that fulfills a universal feel. A friend of mine, Shirah Neumann, told me that one of her old professors spent a good portion of his career painting the interior of his studio. Stuart Davis spent nearly a year working on Egg Beater paintings. I’ve been developing empathy for the objects around me, the ideas that I have in my head, and the icons that I have utilized over the past decade to communicate my point. I have simplified a good deal of my work. Rather than showing a complicated setting of cloud constructors, or a world of audiophilic birds, or robots conducting human acts, I have been focusing on stereos, trains, city skylines, and tape cassettes. I have been drawing and painting these objects and scenes and learning how to paint, how to express myself via the application of paint rather than worry about the big plot to pull people in. It feels more natural. It feels like my drawing and painting skills are improving again. It feels like the challenges that I am presenting myself with are no longer based on production levels but more on experimental and quality levels.
Additionally, I have not been using this blog space as my sound board. Most nights I sit across from my wife and we chat. Often we chat about things that I am not wholly present for as I am still trying to find the calm after finishing painting work, reworking pieces in my mind, questioning where to go next. I have not had that time to remain possessed by my work. I have had to compromise with my wife and find a more inclusive manner of working out those post studio energies. Perhaps I just need to refigure what my goal is for this space and that will help me determine how to proceed with it. I have started to use instagram in the same manner as I used to use this space. I never did cull many comments on this platform and I get a whole lot more feedback with just the image. Maybe I ramble too much.
I had intended to share a couple images of current projects that I have been putting together. I will attempt to post some more work from each soon, detailing the process behind each series.
These two images detail a recent series of miniature city scapes that I have been putting together of Portland, Me. I thought that perhaps by looking in spots which were not quite so obvious I could find a certain kind of beauty in my surroundings that I cannot find by paying attention to the everyday things that I find in front of me while walking around the city. I began the series with watercolor on wooden blocks and have since switched to acrylic paints for archival purposes.
This second pairing is from a series of works for a “soul train.” I have been listening to nothing by John Coltrane while I’ve been working on the piece, not because he did soul music, he obviously didn’t, but merely for the tenuous connection between his nickname, “train,” the “soul train,” and regular trains. The work is about music and repetition, about defying the left to right structure in music and letting the form of the instruments create the direction of the printed page. The work is for a show in Illinois.
The last work pictured is from my small series of deconstructed boomboxes. The work is spontaneous in the drawing so it made a lot of sense to color the work with watercolors rather than the more meditative acrylic paints. The drawings are based in the roots of Malevich and Kandinsky but picture an archaic but more modern device. I thought that by giving myself the rule that I was only allowed to draw the stereo, I would take my work to the level of abstraction which Braqcue and Picasso achieved with their violins and pitchers. It has been a good experiment thus far. I have even lined up a small show of the work with The Studio in Laconia, NH.
My life is different. I have had difficulties accepting this in every facet. We hope, at times, that one thing or another will stay the same so that we may have something to depend on. The fact of the matter is that as soon I was married the expectations of my time became different. There were suddenly two people determining what I was going to be doing with my time. It is a good thing, but it is very difficult, even a year and a half later, to get used to.
Peace
-Mike
The Remains of the Day
I don’t read with any great speed. I am prone to filling my schedule with art projects and leaving myself exhausted, trying to muster a little bit more effort to keep working. Tonight, after nearly a week of dragging my feet, I finished Ishiguro’s The Remains of the Day. The story follows a high class butler reflecting back on his years in service of a dignified British Lord who fell from favor amongst British subjects due to his ties to German aristocrats.
It seemed like an important book to read. I have been left with the impression that I am not unlike this butler. The man was constantly at work. So much so, that when it came to the end of the day his head was filled with reflection and not with a sense of relaxation. I often suffer from this same affliction. As I was chatting about this with my wife, she suggested that my work is really a source of meditation for me. I am more relaxed when working than I sometimes am sitting still or attempting to pay attention to a movie. All I have wanted to be in the past 15 years is a painter. I have made myself that. Now that I am teaching instead of working in a restaurant, I feel like there is very little about my life that isn’t devoted to the goal of being a successful painter. While I do lose focus at times, I do think that that has more to do with a lack of understanding of what kind of painter I want to be, where I want to show, how I want to show. My head runs too many different ways at once. Perhaps it doesn’t though. I really don’t know anymore.
I have spent the last three hours trying to let the remains of the day settle. It is Saturday. Today is a day for relaxation and enjoyment, but these things are sometimes confusing to me. I am fortunate to have a very understanding wife who helps me work through some of the weirdest doldrums. Painting in miniature has been a great source of comfort for me and I think provides something unique that I have not yet seen from many people.
I’ve been asked to show in a group exhibition at Waterfall Arts in December. I realized that I was going to have to come up with a lot more pieces than I had started. The beauty of the miniature is that I can view the same spot from a slightly different vantage point and completely change the subject of the work. I had my studio assistant walk around town with me the other day taking just shy of three hundred photos which I will be working from in the near future. The city is bigger than I give it credit for.
Here are a few of the drawings which I started using those photos.
This second image is from the back window of the Time and Temperature building. I took maybe five photographs from the same vantage point focusing on different areas of the neighboring rooftops. I’m feeling much better about my ability to find different sorts of shapes.
Grid and Raining House Assemblage
The Holiday Season always carries with it the pressures to create small, hand held, handmade, locally inspired merchandise to sell at various local craft fairs and art walks. Coupled with that desire is the desire to do my own holiday shopping and gifting to family members. Inevitably I feel trapped by this process. As a reader of this blog you will recall the cycle. In response I started working a large piece with seemingly less commercial value.
A couple years ago I became obsessed with a vast quantity of six by six panels which a friend had gifted me. I worked myself through a variety of ideas which had been nagging at me, matriculating, and operating in their own unique spheres. I took all of the ideas that I was working with, pipes, a crude house, power lines, and drips, working the motifs into mishmash of random, semi-surreal pieces.
During this time period it occurred to me that I wanted to make a few larger pieces with this imagery worked into it. The first piece of this nature was made on boards collected from a neighbors dilapidated deck. They ripped the deck off the side of the house and left the wood stacked out front, so naturally a good portion of that wood came home with me. As I started to think about this level of ruin that resulted in my new found wood, the logical imagery to apply to these boards was the falling house imagery. The falling houses have always been a kind of response to the American Dream. They are a sort of desperate cry for a normal life (in the sense of what is sold as normal,) one free of huge student loan debt, the fight to obtain healthcare, and trying to find enough time to work on my own career while negotiating a number of odd jobs required to pay back the massive student debt that my career has incurred.
Here are a few of the first images using that imagery.
The found wood is obviously much rougher than some of these panels. That seems to affect their feel of falling and how they occupy their space. I’ve added some atmospheric color around the new houses in the big piece in order to control the environment that the subject is in a little better.
This last juxtaposition seems the most successful to me, however, I would need to at least change up the scale of the different grids a bit more than what I have thus far. I’m still working with it. It’s in that good frustration stage right now. At any rate, hope you dig the work. Keep up.
Peace
-Mike
Saturdays, since I quit working in the restaurant industry and found myself married with child, have become family day. I often find myself reluctantly leaving the house to go do something social when really I want to hole up reading or head to studio, but all in all I am a fan of family day. Today we ventured out for a walk. After leaving the house and taking a left turn, we walked all the way up the hill and down the Eastern Prom to the water. We then turned left again and walked along a bit of the Back Bay Trail. The Back Bay Trail features a free wall where folks are legally allowed to paint graffiti. There was a fellow working as we passed today. As we walked past I started thinking about how I’ve always wanted to do work in public. The problem is that I’ve never wanted to leave that lasting mark on a space.
I have often wondered, however, if the act of subtraction within a landscape might work the same as addition in a landscape. Both Leave a lasting mark. No matter how we look at it, the environment that we see is the environment that is. What I mean is this, we cannot exclude the detritus of society in favor of a bucolic sense of the pristine landscape. Our landscape is just as much our trash as it is our carefully tended shrubberies, raised beds, and lawns. If we are to remove that detritus with the cognitive desire for visual change cannot that act make just as much of a mark as adding ink or paint?
I was very much pleased with this piece and surprisingly felt fine creating something that only really exists on this blog and on my instagram page. I feel like this fleeting level of connection is more appropriate than the attachment that I usually endow these objects with. The act was more about that space than a gallery space or an art store. It was that object AND place AND moment that I was attracted to. Rather than attempting to render that level of excitement in a setting by making a bang up piece, maybe it is better to create and leave that piece?
Also, I wonder, as this act settled with me throughout the day. I was able to show my discovery by creating this work and leaving it where I found it. The tiny cityscapes project that I have begun is much the same. I am excited about my discoveries. I feel like not many people are concerned with looking up as they walk or drive about a city. Things can be hidden in plain sight just by placing them above our field of vision. I have been obsessed with looking up at these splices of Portland. The pieces that I’ve been creating have just been the equivalent of a view finder showing others how and where to look to see these segments of society which are right in front of us.
Experimentation
When I was in graduate school there were whole classes devoted to experimentation. Over the past 11 years, however, I have sometimes viewed experimentation as a waste of time, preferring a model of production over a model of improvement. To be sure, I’ve spent a good deal of time attempting to get better with my medium, but I think that over the course of the years I found my self rather pigeon holed. My website name is Lewis Acrylics and while I still use acrylics almost every day, not all of the artwork that I make is acrylic. In fact, even the pieces that make use of acrylic paint often bear Bic pen marks as well, making my work not acrylic in nature but mixed media.
I have also not been a fan of moleskine sketchbooks for some time. The paper is so thin and the hype so oppressive, but a few people whose images I’ve seen online make me a little bit more excited about them. One of these artists is Mattias Adolfsson. He makes me want to draw all of the time. With some of his work in mind I started putting together some sketches of boomboxes and cassettes and later some abstractions of the two.
These were four contour drawings of cassettes which I put together while my class was drawing cross contours of their hands. I drew them over top of some other random sketches so I’m not sure how well the information is translated.
These boomboxes were more as research than anything else. I wasn’t that pleased with the quality of the drawings from the get go. However as I was sketching boomboxes it occurred to me that I was interested in the shapes within the boombox and how they might break down, which led to this series of drawings.
I felt very much influenced by Wassily Kandinsky later Supremacist pieces. The color is very much meant to be viewed in the same manner and the shapes are much the same as well.
It feels odd to be working in watercolors. I keep fearing that I am using them incorrectly. I layer my color with them a bit more than I remember being taught in school. I do, however, like laying compliments and near compliments over top of each other. I think it gives a particularly vibrant pop to the shapes. I am surprised at how good it feels to be experimenting. I don’t feel as though these pieces are particularly precious which helps me make some more rash and spontaneous color and shape decisions. Perhaps I finally understand what my professors were getting at.
Peace
-Mike