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Painting, Oil on Wood
Size: 60 W x 48 H x 3 D in
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446 Views
2
My fascination with scale dislocation began in Rome, where I painted still life as visionary cities, then placed giant figures in them. A Fulbright to study depictions of saints, and apply their strange fusion of the neurotic and sublime to portraiture, brought me there - a project begun in grad school ("Self-Portrait as St. Sebastian," etc.). That led as well to 'headworks,' self-portraits with the stuff of thought piled on my head. My 'horror vacui' spatial sense probably formed growing up in a large family; I also respond to foreshortening’s cubist contradictions, wherein forms project into space while shapes stack up on the picture-plane. Recent work has been inspired by Atlantic City's ‘R. Crumb-meets-Antonioni’ surprising beauty. AC struck me as a quasi-anti-Rome; both have small-scale visual drama and self-conscious architecture. But while Roman monuments epitomize the heroic function of architecture to endure, structures in Atlantic City last only as long as their frivolous functions do.
Oil on Wood
One-of-a-kind Artwork
60 W x 48 H x 3 D in
Not Framed
Not applicable
Ships in a Crate
Typically 5-7 business days for domestic shipments, 10-14 business days for international shipments.
Ships in a wooden crate for additional protection of heavy or oversized artworks. Artists are responsible for packaging and adhering to Saatchi Art’s packaging guidelines.
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My approach is both perception-based and surrealist. I move things around, scrape things out, and see the painting's identity emerge over time. My spatial sense is an amiable, cubistic “horror vacui,” my brain probably hardwired toward complexity from growing up as one of ten children. I like painting the figure foreshortened, where forms move back in space yet stack up on the picture plane, contradictions that echo Cubism. Scale dislocation began to appear in my work when I lived in Rome eight years. I painted still life as visionary cities, then placed giant figures in them. I went there on a Fulbright to study saints' strange fusion of the neurotic and the sublime, which continues in portraits with thought, emotion, and memory piled up on my head. Still lifes often contain references to Monopoly, which was based on Atlantic City, where I lived four years, and which reminded me of Rome’s historical center in an inverse way: intense visual drama, a small scale, sculptural effect, and self-conscious architecture. But Roman monuments heroically endure, while Atlantic City structures last no longer than their frivolous functions do - a caricature of American values. In all my paintings, detailed rendering vs. flat color, sensitivity vs. obtuseness, pop culture vs. metaphysical gravity - interact.
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