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Archive: Paintings from the U.S.A.
1999 - 1985
| Santa Fe
Series
1999 - 1992
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?
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sold, in private collections |
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Reflections 122x122 1994 |
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Beach at Seven Thousand Feet 61x122 1992 |
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Patmos Series
1997 - 1987
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).
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sold, in private collections |
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Windows 122x122 1991 |
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Ghost of the Queen 153x92 1997 |
| Island Vestige
Series
1992 - 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.
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| Vestige
Series
1989 - 1985
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.
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Martian Canals 61x183 1989 |
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Vestige Nine 92x183 1986 |
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