I have been out of town all week, trying to remain productive by
choosing new images and working on compositions for future paintings.
After trolling through a million images and experimenting with a hundred
different ways of working with them, I have decided that I have to just
stop and focus. And paint. I could plan new paintings until the end
of time, but that won't get me very far. So I have chosen to concentrate on portraits for the next couple of months, and leave my other ideas aside for the moment.
Lately, I have been thinking a lot about the work of Chuck Close - his
merging of the idioms of photography and painting, his reliance on the
portrait, and his ability to straddle the worlds of abstraction and
representation.
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Painting by Chuck Close |
I've also been thinking about the work of Shelley Adler - her large scale portraits are so beautifully painted, bold and
yet sensitive to her subject's particular character.
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Painting by Shelley Adler |
Her paintings seem
to capture a tender moment of vulnerability, providing a touching
antidote to Close's restrained, analytical approach. I'd like to think
my work offers (or, I should say, is beginning to offer, or aspires to
offer) a combination of these approaches - the rational with the
sensual, addressing the artifice of the image while exploring the human
frailties hidden within.