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A Bird for Brian Painting

Thomas Brodhead

United States

Painting, Acrylic on Canvas

Size: 36 W x 30 H x 0.8 D in

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About The Artwork

Brian loved the beauty of birds: their song, their flight, their colors. While it was impossible during his lifetime for him to be spliced with a bird—the greatest transformation he could have hoped for—he received inspiration for a different, posthumous transformation after learning about the creepy compression of cremains into diamonds to be worn as fashion accessories by survivors. Brian's last will and testament instructed his cremains to be mixed with paint pigments and a painting to be rendered with them. Artist Thomas Brodhead was selected after a multinational search resulted in no other takers (the creepiness factor was largely to blame), and the resulting work is here displayed. In a world comparable with the stained glass windows of only the gaudiest of Christian churches, Brian expresses ecstasy at the presentation of a large bird, its beak opening wide, perhaps in song. Unexplained in the painting is the suggestion of an amorphous Minotaurian beast occupying most of the painting's lower left-hand corner. It is perhaps a reminder that just as Brian eventually faced his own mortality, so shall his ephemeral bird of paradise be consumed within the food chain, but as long as the painting is maintained, Brian shall live on in artistic immortality.

Details & Dimensions

Painting:Acrylic on Canvas

Original:One-of-a-kind Artwork

Size:36 W x 30 H x 0.8 D in

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Delivery Time:Typically 5-7 business days for domestic shipments, 10-14 business days for international shipments.

A native of St. Louis who’s lived in middle Tennessee most of his life, Thomas Brodhead studied classical music theory, history, and composition at Oberlin in the 1980s. During those years, he pored over classical scores while studying orchestral and chamber works, unaware that he was absorbing geometric graphic design that’s been in his blood ever since. After college, he worked as a classical sheet music editor and engraver (music typesetter) for 20 years, writing original computer programs to set music notation so that it conformed to the best Greek proportions and geometries. (Importantly, he produced a Critical Performing Edition of the Fourth Symphony of Charles Ives, a work so rhythmically complex that it requires at least two—if not three—conductors to perform.) But arranging black glyphs on white paper grew tiresome, and starting in 2009, he turned to color and began to paint. At first, his paintings were cartoonish and comical, always paired with tongue-in-cheek artist statements on the meaning of each piece. Over time, though, he began to take his work more seriously, exploring color and geometry on large canvases (up to 4 feet by 3 feet), but never failing to pen an accompanying whimsical statement. But more and more the whimsy veiled serious social commentary, often on the dangers of transhumanism (the integration of humans and technology) and the infantilizing effects of social media. Painting and writing thus combined in a Wagnerian Gesamtkunswerk, in which the combination of the two formed the total artwork. He joked that his early humorous style—cartoonish and splattery, with an emphasis on narrative—was “on an overlooked axis connecting Jackson Pollock and Norman Rockwell.” But after studying the color theory of Albert Munsell and discovering the joyous geometries of the artist Stuart Davis, his work took a sharp turn. Still working on larger canvases, he began planning each work in detail, defining the exact composition of its figures and determining its color scheme in advance. The execution of the paintings took longer and longer, one even clocking in at 160 hours. Borrowing a technique from 20th century classical music—and a technique perhaps never before applied to visual art—he produced a series of fractalized paintings that, at times, have a dizzying paint-by-numbers quality.

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