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Artist Statement
Conceptual Evolution of my work
I am in my black and white realistic
period . My last paintings have only used black and the grays leading to
white with much less abstraction. I was calling these paintings
Townscapes but, that just doesn't seem right any longer. For right now
they are my "Current Work".
They are designed to change character as
you view them from different distances. Real or at least quasi real from
a distance to total abstractions on closer inspection. That part has not
changed. I still want both the almost real from a distance and then the
gradual change to the realization that it is also total hard edged
abstraction at closer distances. Light and the absence of light are
major components in the success of these abstract paintings of ordinary
reality.
In my mental exploration of light and the
absence of light made by natural and man made structures, it seemed
logical to explore maximum contrasts with no color to influence the
viewer's eye. Instead, I am using contrast as my primary visual
composition tool.
The following monologue, Layered
abstractions of reality with a clock (evolution of a kinetic concept)
attempts to define how I got to the Townscape series.
My current Townscapes of "layered abstractions of
reality with a clock" is as close as I get to all mind and meaning. I am trying to do paintings that become the
focal point of their environment and change with distance and lighting
to constantly intrigue and interest. Whether it be
abstract slices of space in the Townscape Series, the interpretive
abstractions of the Fall in Provence Series or the geometric
abstracts of simple actions in the Five Series this
approach has served me well.
In 1988-92, I called this type of "layered abstractions of reality with a clock"
painting concept that I am doing the Patmos series.
Before that Vestiges or Island Vestiges . TOWNSCAPES
has been my defining term since 2002.
Another
artist described it as contemporary digital cubism.
The following
is my attempt to explain the
background to the idea, influences on my thinking, the idea (what I am
doing), why, and a little on how.
BACKGROUND
My first
introduction to the concept of serial vision. In
1967, while taking a course in Urban Design one of the required reading
references was Townscapes by Gordon Cullen . Cullen described
a way of looking at urban spaces he called “Serial Vision” which was
illustrated with a series of strong drawings of the different views one has
walking through a quality urban space that proved the value of many formal
design principles. The map diagram tracing your path through an urban space
combined with the sketches done from the path clearly illustrated why we
remember those quality urban spaces. Not a single image but instead a moving
or kinetic image memory. This book and in particular “serial vision” were
extremely important to my development as an artist whether in the design of
an urban space, a building, or a painting. I
really do believe we see reality as a series of frozen images that helps us
process the constant minute changes in our personal reality.
MY INTRODUCTION TO KINETIC ART
Between 1961 and
1967 I was fortunate enough to be a student of Dale McKinney,
Professor of Art at Oklahoma State University. He was one of the most
creative people that I have ever known and his own work in kinetic art was
well ahead of its time. You could not define him as just a sculptor, a
painter or an inventor. Dale McKinney was an ARTIST and TEACHER. He
introduced me to formal color theory and showed me how important it can be
when used properly. The use of complimentary color to cause an edge to
vibrate or seem to move on the canvas as one very simple example.
He also used
to ask us to look for compositions in our surroundings. He stressed really
focusing in on very small areas of our environment (two stones touching a
twig kind of scale). Design and composition was possible even if cropping
was your only tool was a good lesson to learn. He is my strongest artistic
influence by far. An appreciation for kinetic art was only one of the things
he taught me.
In 1980, I
was teaching a graduate design course at the School of Architecture at
Oklahoma State University and asked Dale to help me devise a basic design
project to stimulate their creativity. The product of the project was a
short movie to illustrate the effects of projected images on a rotating
white sculpture of their design. We used a clock motor to provide the
rotation. Amazing things happened. Images seemed to clip in and out as the
sculpture rotated and the films that resulted were definitely more than a
sum of their parts. The project and the graduate student results proved the
value of basic design theories and resulted in sophisticated films with
images seeming to come forward and then retreat only to be eclipsed by other
design elements. Basic design truly is wasted on youth.
OTHER INFLUENCES
I did not paint in any serious way
between 1967-1985 as I concentrated on the art of architecture. I
was both a practicing architect and a teacher at the architectural schools
of the University of Illinois, Texas A&M, and Oklahoma State University.
My personal design work in architectural practice might be best described as
layered spaces with an implied ordering system organized around a strong
concept or idea. Framing space and always being aware that people move
through space were extremely important to me. Good architects sculpt space.
The walls, etc. are just the tools one has to define the spatial sculpture.
Again, I saw reality as a series of connected experiences.
Good
architects are also good business people, personable, etc. Architecture
really is a business with all the paperwork and mundane grind that comes
with the territory. The business side and the repetitive aspects of some
architectural tasks led me to concentrate on teaching architectural design
rather that architectural practice. Honestly, it was just more fun. Teaching
architectural design allowed me to concentrate all of my energy on the
creative aspects of design.
I found that
as a teacher juggling student designs and concepts in your head on a daily
basis keeps your mind learning and open to new ideas. I learned a lot more
about design and composition as a teacher than I ever learned in school or
practice. I taught basic design, architectural design and design
competition studios and was fortunate enough to be mentor for over 100
national and international student design competition winners, was awarded
the 1997 ACSA Distinguished Professor, and the 1988 Outstanding Teacher for
Oklahoma State University.
Basic
design for architects at the universities that I
taught at are not that much different than a basic design course for
artists. Good design starts with the abstract fundamentals of composition
like figure-ground, geometry, order, proportion, rhythm, etc. Once again,
I was fortunate to be able to teach with and learn from another great
teacher. Robert Wright, a fellow Professor at both the University of
Illinois and Oklahoma State University. He has got to be the most innovative
teacher of basic design that has ever lived. The design projects he created
are still copied and used at many other universities in the United States.
One of the
many things I learned from him was a genuine appreciation of Piet Mondrian.
Grids and the strength of the 90 degree component as art not just structure.
Also, the critical role figure-ground analysis plays in high quality
compositions. He made me a better teacher and his influence has helped me
become a better artist.
He has been
doing wonderful abstract collages using scraps of photographs
for many years. What I do also appears as a collage of quasi real images.
In fact, I try very hard to reinforce that thought to the viewer by
stressing the division between different image depths. I have been more influenced
by Bob than any other colleague.
EVOLUTION OF A KINETIC CONCEPT
There were
many benefits to being a university professor. Not the least of which is
time for your other creative interests. We got 3 months off each
summer and a full semester every 7 years. In 1985, I spent 4 months
traveling and drawing in Europe. This rekindled my interest in painting. I
began to paint seriously upon my return. Jim Knight and I were renting
a loft space downtown for our architectural studio/office (the Atelier). It
was where I chose to paint. All my prior work had been done with oils.
Because of the fumes connected with oils, I chose to use acrylics as a
painting medium. First, I tried to use acrylics as I had used oils and did about 7 extremely
loose abstract expressionist pieces. At the time, I felt that acrylics were
ill suited to that kind of painting and decided to try to use acrylics in a
hard edged totally opaque manner. I thought that was more appropriate for
acrylics. Even though I have returned to painting hard edged and opaque, I don’t
believe that any more. Layering works so well with acrylics you can do
almost anything.
Back to what
I was painting. Hard edges made it easy for me to incorporate much of my
experience as an architect and as an architectural educator. Light,
layering and the resultant play of planned shadows was a major part of my
architectural work. Geometry, proportion, order and concept.
The FIRST 8
paintings explored the themes of different elements casting shadows and even
began to incorporate images of architectural icons like the Eiffel Tower.
Unfortunately, I have no photographic record of the early paintings.
The following painting series are the
JOURNEY TO MY CURRENT CONCEPT
VESTIGE Series. 1985-86
Part of my
current idea originated with this early series. At the time, I was
interested in challenging a viewer’s perception of a flat rectangle hanging
on a wall. I still am. I wanted to make the viewer believe the surface was not flat.
Instead, you were intended to see a series of articulated planes suspended
in air and whose color and form were defined and articulated by the sun’s
rays passing through filters before hitting the planes. This interaction
between man and nature was explored via my mental three dimensional
constructs viewed under an intense light source and through rectangular
filters of varying opaque and color qualities. The operative word was mental
for these constructs as their interactions existed only in my mind. The
vestige painting are those afterimages. Articulated planes of different
depth are still major elements in the implementation of the idea. Emphasis
on light is definitely still part of the idea. These paintings should
be classified as representational art. They represented what I was seeing
in my mind. Their abstract qualities came from the nature of the subject
matter.

ISLAND VESTIGE Series.
1987
Patmos and
Santorini are two of the white islands of Greece. I thought it would be fun
and challenging to recreate the ambiance and sense of place where
most things are painted white using the minimal amount of realism. Where do
you lose the sense of place? That edge or point was what I was trying to
achieve. This transition between the Vestiges and Patmos Series was a group
of paintings where different scaled images were mentally projected on
articulated planes of different depths. The images were only visible in the
shadows my carved planes cast on one another. The planes and grid
reinforced the ninety degree geometry of the canvas. A whole rationale for
proportion and rhythm independent of the images was developed. I am still
doing that but with different ordering systems. Fragments of real images
were introduced to give the viewer a puzzle to solve as well as
generating paintings with visual depth and interest. Light created the color
changes and only minimal architectural symbols and elements were required to
capture the sense of place. My fascination with the subtle changes in warm
and cold earth colors began with this series.

PATMOS Series. 1988-92
Vestiges plus
Island Vestiges led to the Patmos Series. I decided to increase the
importance of the image and downplay the visual strength of the abstract
ordering of the various planes. No negative space. The planes of the
Vestige and Island Vestige Series remained but, the definition of the planes
would be done without the use of light and shadows. Scale of the image was
to be the only perceptual tool I would use. I chose images with a strong
sense of perspective to reinforce the depth of the painting and then
enlarged the image as the planes receded. The idea worked even better than
I hoped. All of the paintings were done based upon street scenes of the
Island of Patmos, Greece with the exception of Rio Tera Secondo (Venice,
Italy),
Ghost of the Queen (Queen Mary, the cruise ship anchored in L.A.), and
Windows (Santa Fe, New Mexico).
I changed
direction in 1992 and did not return to the Vestige/Patmos/Townscape
style until 2002. These other directions have also fueled my current work.

SANTA FE Series. 1992-98
My life and
therefore, my work, has been divided into a series of seven year cycles
based upon my association with academia. Looking back, you can see that
pattern in the timing of major directional change in my work. Most of the
changes were evolutionary in nature. I spent one half of 1992 living and
studying the unique regional architecture and art found in and around Santa Fe, New
Mexico that grew as a result of the mix between Native Americans, Spanish
explorers and the artists attracted to the area. Strong relationships
between wall, sky, and earth dictated a representational approach to capture
the essence of this environment. I have always used layering or perspective
to create the illusion of depth in my work. The evolution from Mondrian like
geometrical based abstractions to hard edged realism with more and more
glimpses of buildings and streets as abstractions of reality eventually led
to a focus on architectural elements that reflected or diffused reality. I
was intrigued by the stark quality of openings in massive simple walls. All
of the interest and detail was in the window and way the sun played across
the window elements in combination with the transparent and reflective
qualities of glass. Photo realism of sorts?
1999-2001
were the Paper Years when I was settling into life in Southern France. I
took these years as an opportunity to re explore my roots in Abstract
Expression

FRENCH POSTCARD
Series.
1999
Paintings on paper
in abstract expression style done in the Summer of 1999 in Versailles,
France.

TUSCAN
LANDSCAPES. 1999
Paintings of the Tuscan landscape as abstraction and patterns
done while staying at an estate outside of Siena, Italy in the Summer of
1999.

OKLAHOMA Series.
1999
Paintings on paper in
abstract expression style done in the last semester I taught after making
the decision to leave Stillwater, Oklahoma and move to France.
TRANSITION
Series.
1999
Paintings on paper
in abstract expression style done in the last days of my transition from Professor
of Architecture at Oklahoma State University to artist living in Condorcet,
France

VIOLES
Series.
2000
Violes is a village in Provence we were living in when
these abstract expression paintings of different thoughts were done.

EMOTION Series.
2000
Paintings in
abstract expression style of different emotions and thoughts.


DREAM
Series. 2000-01
The thread that bound this group of paintings together was their purpose. Seek and explore "THE" future direction. I was trying to identify the direction
I wanted to concentrate my future upon. I explored alternatives within each direction until I felt I could see the
potential of the idea. Then, IDEA, study alternatives, evaluate, IDEA, repeat again. I continued doing the Dream series until I felt that I had identified the most promising directions. I really feel like I found a lifetime's directions all worth exploring.
I am still exploring some of the directions exposed in this series.

DREAM WINDOW
Series. 2001
Dreams, particularly the day after, seem to be scenes from our imagination viewed from a great distance by a person almost like us. That filter becomes the window in my metaphor. Four dreams each viewed through the same window (frame and grid) became the basis for the Dream Window series.

WINDOW Series. 2001
This
series explores the visual potential of a painting that hovers on the edge
of becoming six paintings instead of just one. The visual tension or implied
movement when you place the painting right on the line that separates one
from multiples results in more kinetic and exciting compositions or at
least, strong architectonic forms.

NINE SQUARE
Series. 2001
The Nine
Square series are paintings of my dreams of an alternate Earth where the
real and tangible are thoughts, wishes, time, and dreams (what might have
been and what can be). The square is the most challenging format of the
rectangles to create dynamic and interesting compositions. By it's very
nature, it is self centering and static. But, it is best suited to multiple
orientations and the challenge of geometry is worth overcoming to
facilitate the ease of rotation for the collector. This series is designed
to be displayed in any orientation.

TERRE or EARTH Series. 2001-02
Each painting had its origins and first gesture in the shapes and colors of the Eygues River valley in the Baronnies Mountains east of Nyons. As the layers built up, meaning and content evolved and the origin receded until the imagery and content was 100% meaning.

EAU or WATER Series. 2001
In the summer, our entire house opens up and we essentially move outside. The days are warm and the nights cool. We take advantage of it and eat, sleep, party and work outside. The Eau (Water) series, while continuing
my dreams of alternate worlds, has it's beginnings in blind contour drawings of our
swimming pool.

REFLECTION Series. 2002
The paintings of the Reflection series are just that, reflections on life, the things around me and my expectations for the future. I deliberately kept my color palate small and created within the zone between two of the primary colors. Conceptual directions often come by setting specific limits and then abiding by them.

SUMMER SUN Series.
2002
This series
was done in the sun and with the sun in mind. "How bright can I make a
painting before it overloads the senses and the result is visual chaos?" These painting are my answers to my question. I can get pretty bright. Color theory is not just a phrase to throw around. Itten
and Albers knew what they taught. Every now and then, all painters need to
re-examine their roots and re-learn elements of design that are often taken
for granted.

TWILIGHT Series. 2002
This series is a deliberate study of limits. What magic can
happen in the last transition between light and dark?

FALL IN
PROVENCE Series. 2002
This could just as easily be called CHANGE. Provence is slowly changing as it moves into the 21st Century. Traditional values still are present but the influx of more people and the development that comes with people are forcing a new geometry and pattern upon the land. This group of paintings is my interpretation of that change.


TOWNSCAPE Series. 2001-present
The
Townscapes series, by incorporating the elements of time and movement,
illustrates the beauty and charm of the ordinary street scenes of the hill
towns and villages that surround my studio. These kinetic images give the
viewer a sense of "place". They are designed to
change character as you view them from different distances. Real or at least
quasi real from a distance to total abstractions on closer inspection.
Light and the absence of light are major components in the success of these
paintings.
My paintings
have varied between trying to be all heart to all mind with a little bit of
heart always there. At the heart end, it is all about emotion, gesture, and
attitude with the mind trying to throw in some tools to make it work.
My current work of layered abstractions of
reality with a clock is as close as I get to all mind and meaning. It is a strong
conceptual approach. I am trying to do paintings that become the
focal point of their environment and change with distance and lighting
to constantly intrigue and interest.
This is
what I think that I am doing.
The viewer may see a completely different
rationale behind this painting concept. I welcome any thoughts you might
have. Please write and tell me what you think.

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