

3511 Views
13
View In My Room
Fine Art Paper
12 x 8 in ($100)
No Frame
3511 Views
13
Artist featured in a collection
The image is the cyclone roller coaster on Coney Island in NYC. Arranged to look like a broken-down ship, this work is about the destructive force of massive hurricanes (cyclones) and our role in creating these storms through global warming. Named after hurricane Sandy.
2017
Print, Giclee on Fine Art Paper
Open Edition
12 W x 8 H x 0.1 D in
No
Not Framed
Ships Rolled in a Tube
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United States
Icons of our human world, national flags are embedded in many of these paintings. At times, they exist alongside imagery in the paintings. At other times, the flags obstruct your view. Painting about the natural world and the human world at the same time in the same painting is what I try to do. Peter P. Marra, ornithologist and Dean at Georgetown University has said that "the American dream has turned into the American nightmare as we start to look at what we're doing to biodiversity and systems that we depend on as humans." In many works, I try to paint about this, too. If a painting is remarkable, it impresses you in a way that expands whenever you look at it. Images in some of the paintings are partially obscured by bands of color, producing a louvered visual field - similar to bands of mist painted by Wang Hui in scrolls over 300 years ago. Likewise, these bands of color resemble the national flag of Greece, flipped and flopped. The paintings reference commonplace images: video games, carnival, television, headaches, nature, disasters, music, charms, signs and symbols. Many recent works are diptychs. One set of four paintings seemingly depict four time zones in the continental United States. A fifth diptych of clocks is painted in fluorescent color and based on the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists doomsday clock - created by J. Robert Oppenheimer, Albert Einstein & Eugene Rabinowitch in 1947. A second set of five works in oil, enamel and fluorescent enamel depict the Cyclone rollercoaster on Coney Island in New York city. These cyclones are named after five major hurricanes: Katrina, Harvey, Irma, Sandy, and Maria. Prior to 1998, the work was brightly colored and highly impasted, often using a cinematic arrangement by placing multiple canvases in sequential order - like a zoetrope. After 1998, I shifted the paintings’ material substance from thick to thin. The thin works explored preternatural elements in our daily lives and focused on incidents of spiritual and intellectual compression. Originally from Sioux Falls, South Dakota Harris has lived and worked in Santa Fe since 1981. His paintings have been exhibited throughout the United States and are represented in a number of private collections including the Sahara Hotel & Casino, Las Vegas, the Graham Collection, Albuquerque and The Christus St. Vincent Hospital Foundation, Santa Fe, New Mexico. An environmental and political activist, he has been painting since kindergarten.
Artist featured by Saatchi Art in a collection
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