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Yeah Retinal I Painting

Eric Shaw

United States

Painting, Acrylic on Canvas

Size: 66 W x 66 H x 2 D in

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About The Artwork

“Yeah Retinal I” has the same origin story as its sister canvas, “Yeah Retinal II.” It started with a rearrangement of the letter elements from a Christopher Wool painting. The basic phrase, "Yeah Retinal," is stacked in two columns here, slightly off-center. Though, it’s unreadable because of the paintwork. This one was completed first. It’s more layered. It received lots of mid-tone washes and stroke patterns, but it ended up resting mostly in black, white, and a single mid-gray. It was one of the first canvases I completed after returning to full-time painting. It ended up being a paint and mark-making playground. I used unfamiliar tools. I also used every kind of black or white artist’s paint I could find — embracing the moire patterns that occurred where water-based and oil-based materials wouldn’t mix. I used the work to understand tone, and different ways of rendering tone, better. Despite the painting’s colorlessness and stark lettering, it’s an earthy bit of canvas. I like the diptych format and established it strongly when I started. At the same time, I threw veritable buckets of gray wash at the thing at different points, and that corrupted the initial partitioning. To re-establish it, I spray-painted white on the left side late in the process— protecting some useful splatters and other marks by first sealing them with tape. This put those strokes in quote-marks of a sort. I built up and broke down the typeface in different ways, leveraging the alphabet towards unintelligibility—towards near-abstraction. I wanted to interfere with the letter's standardized action as signs. I worked at it the canvas lengthily, and, some have suggested, angrily. I like the effects. It bears close looking. It gives back to the scrutinizing eye. “Yeah Retinal I,” 66“ x 66“, 2022, acrylic, spray paint, oil stick, tape, oil pastel, charcoal, and pencil, on archival print on an archival canvas print.

Details & Dimensions

Painting:Acrylic on Canvas

Original:One-of-a-kind Artwork

Size:66 W x 66 H x 2 D in

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I decided I’d be an artist when I was four. In grade school, I drew constantly, and, in high school, I had a special relationship with my art teacher, spending weekends with him and accepting special projects that came with pay. In college, I painted with some focus at Willamette University, then finished my BA at the University of California, Santa Cruz. (A number of my college paintings were stolen, and that flattered.) I went on to do a 5th Year Graduate Certificate at UCSC. I had a host of potent teachers in those years—Robert Hess, Hardy Hanson, Patrick Ahearn, and Eduardo Carrillo, among them. While at UC Santa Cruz, I spent a summer working as a somewhat-confused boy-Friday for the art historian, Nan Rosenthal, in New York—who’d undertaken a monograph on Robert Rauschenberg. While claiming her drycleaning, repainting her table-lamps, and visiting Rberg’s studio, I was deeply influenced by the artist’s work, and that of his foil, Jasper Johns. Nan stuck our noses deep into both artists’ careers as we studied with her. My BA focused drawing and painting. My 5th Year Certificate concerned itself with painting and printmaking (the school had no MFA). I spent the next two years painting canvases, while painting houses with a very hip--but equally lazy--buddy and working as a TA for UCSC art history classes. I had one-man shows in Santa Cruz, and further ones in Oregon, Minnesota, and New Mexico—working both abstractly and figuratively in those years (painting a cache of 60s family photographs at one point). I focused on color, tone, and found imagery. In the 90s, I completed two master’s degrees (in Education and Religious Studies) and taught art and performance in inner city Minneapolis for two different museums (then taught Special Ed. on the Navajo Res in New Mexico from 1994-98). At decade’s end, I got engaged to someone even more troubled than me, then got back to Portland to do four years of adjunct teaching. I had a regular gig in art history at Clark College, and did minor work at Oregon College of Art and Craft, too. In the new millennium, I let go of painting and my fiancé. Remaining in Portland, I undertook performance art from 2000-04 in the scene around Linda Austin’s PerformanceWorks Northwest. I did dancey and athletic one-man and collaborative pieces, chatting with inanimate objects and the crowd. I studied and taught aesthetically-informed styles of yoga.

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