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View In My Room
Painting, Acrylic on Canvas
Size: 39 W x 53 H x 1 D in
Ships in a Crate
133 Views
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Artist featured in a collection
Before coming to Idyllwild Arts to head up the jazz program, bass player Marshall Hawkins once played with Miles Davis. He's kept up that high standard whether he's performing with his contemporaries or teaching high school students. I met Marshall at the school where I was a driver and he was a teacher. He also started the Jazz in the Pines concert Series to raise scholarships for students. I must've painted seven portraits are Marshall over the years! Somehow ended up on T-shirts, but mostly on large banners like this one! Once it was hung from a tree near the main stage, I didn't like it as much! I teased Marshall saying in the painting he looked like Karl Marx or Groucho Marx, but not like himself! He just laughed and said that's the way I look when I play! Now in his 70s, Marshall is still learning to play the bass. He said it takes a lifetime! That's the way I feel about painting portraits of people! After 30 years, I'm still learning! The colors in this composition came out a little different! There's neon pink on his cheek and copper in the background! But I think it works! Marshall doesn't talk much about his time playing with Miles Davis! Everybody thinks he should write a book about it! But he's pretty close lipped, except that he loaned Cafe Aroma, a local restaurant where he plays in the evenings, a picture of the two of them together! Maybe that's all he needs! The angle of this painting is of a worm's Eye view! Likely the photographer was lower and looking at up at him onstage! Marshall looks a little surprised or annoyed probably at the camera's flash! I just hope I captured some of Marshall's essence!
2015
Acrylic on Canvas
One-of-a-kind Artwork
39 W x 53 H x 1 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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I'm a journalist by trade, but I have been an artist most of my life. I started taking private art lessons in Omaha, Nebraska, at age 9. But then by age 12, I had put art on the back burner for cheerleading and boys. So then when I went to college, I got poor grades in art so I switched to writing. I worked at small ad agencies, newspapers and large corporations most of my career. I've always done portraits because I find them the most challenging. I would always paint pictures of friends and coworkers during the holidays to make extra money. When I lived in Chicago, my portraits became bigger and brighter. I think it was because I lived in an artist building on the corner of Milwaukee and Damon, where there were artists from all cultures living there. They encouraged me to stretch the limits of my creativity. On my way to work in the city, I admired the large scale bright banners that I would see in the apartments along the El line. Some were political, others decorative, but the Expressionist portraits I'll never forget! Big gallons of acrylic hardware paint usually cover the backgrounds of the door-sized cotton curtains that I have been painting for the past 10 years. I use tiny brushes to get the hard edges. In 2009, I painted a small banner of Barack Obama in response to a rousing speech I heard on TV. It was later used at a political rally at a restaurant in Idyllwild where I live. Then I started doing more banners of jazz icons to decorate that same restaurant each year during a jazz concert. I like painting big because of its impact! It can be challenging to get the right scale. I don't use a projector or any equipment except chalk. Sometimes it takes awhile to get it right! I turn the canvas over and over and make the blocks of color more abstract and bright! Even though sometimes I paint political figures, I don't like to discuss politics with strangers! They always talk louder than me and seem to know more about the subject, but I believe that a strong image is better than all the words you can say! Most of the banners I've done are of people I admire who are creative in the arts or in the public arena who have courage and determination! Lately, I have been doing a series that deals with race relations in the United States. Every time there's a shooting, and another young black man dies, it makes the news for awhile, and then disappears from public memory.
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