Sunday, February 28, 2010

with the last series done, I'm on to making some new work and experimenting a little with colour and surface.




"palette painting", water soluble oil, spray paint on canvas, 20"x24"


Untitled, water soluble oil, spray paint on canvas, 16"x20"


Untitled, oil on canvas, 11"x14"


Untitled, water soluble oil and spray paint on canvas 16"x20"



untitled, 12"x12", water-soluble oil, spray paint, collage on canvas


untitled, 20"x24", water soluble oil on spray paint on canvas



untitled, 11"x14", water soluble oil on canvas






Untitled, acrylic on silver mylar, 16"x20"

Saturday, February 6, 2010

few new works and some thoughts on the series so far...


"Hair Falling", oil on canvas, 18"x24"

"Between Waking", oil on canvas, 16"x20"


The series began as a continuation of an interest and further imagining of the mechanics of quantum atomic particle theory. The subject matter of central idea for the painting was determined ahead of time and then through the process of painting, I focused solely on isolating the idea, for example, smelling a bouquet of flowers, and let the painting as a whole become only about that idea. In particle theory, the entire universe is made of essentially the same particles containing similar information. As the paintings are continually worked the materiality of the paint acts as a conduit for spreading and carrying the same information all over the surface of the canvas.
The works in the series are representations into the idea of an inquiry. Subjectively, the concept is determined and what follows is a search for the way to best represent an idea in a manner that is universally recognized and presents a measurable success by the emotion and transfer of subjective recognition to a viewer. One of the findings of the inquiry is that the paint, as a kinetic particle, can continuously take shape to successfully represent an idea. Also, with some of the end points, after time, it is determined that the original inquiry wasn’t as visually appealing to the artist and the original idea morphs.