317 Views
17
View In My Room
Canvas
14 x 21 in ($148)
Black Canvas
White ($150)
317 Views
17
Artist featured in a collection
Many people have asked me, why I always paint people walking away, showing only their backs. As a teenager I had read a descriptive scene in one of Ritsos's narratives (a Greek poet and writer) He described that when a man - a miner - returned home from work, his wife was in the kitchen, by the stove, preparing dinner for him. At that moment he noticed - as he was staring at her back - the burdens of her life. He could feel the weight she carried. The way she lowered her head, to ease her shoulders, the way she laid out her one leg just so she could rest her body. At that very moment, he also noticed how careful she was putting his food on his plate. How she took a piece of cloth wiping from any drops the lip of the plate. Then, she placed her hands onto the counter pushing her body upwards and dragging her leg back to its standing position, regaining her strength to continue. He didn't have to see anymore. He understood that she cared. So, from then on I look at people when they walk away. Trying to observe what and if I can understand. Not always, but there were times, where I felt some of the weight they carried. This work is made with acrylic, brush, and my favorite palette knife. The canvas it's wrapped on the wood frame, ready to hang - gallery style.
2020
Giclee on Canvas
14 W x 21 H x 1.25 D in
15.75 W x 22.75 H x 1.25 D in
White
Black Canvas
Yes
Ships in a Box
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Printing facility in California.
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United States
I started out on the street. Well, actually at the park. Union Square Park in NYC. I got a table, a table cloth, a few pieces of the loose canvas - paintings, and that's how I started. It was tough, as I had to get up right after midnight to get that specific location in the park (first come, first serve). I remember the first piece I sold, to an Italian lady for $20. A small piece, around 11X14 inches. I was so embarrassed my chicks turned red. My "studio" was a rented small space, in the basement of the building (in the East Village), where I lived. When it rained the floor would be full of water, so I had to wear rain boots and paint. Since then, life has changed. I have my own big studio in Greenpoint Brooklyn. I have all the top printers and do my own printing. I attend as many shows and exhibitions I can. People from all over the world come especially on weekends to visit, browse, and buy my art. The first question they ask me is what inspires me. Well, I can't really be specific. It could be anything. A combination of colors, a store sign, a street, but I have to admit, most often thoughts do inspire me. Perhaps it sounds strange but when I think, - of anything - images are formed in my head. Images that create emotions. I keep them for a few days or months, and one beautiful day if the mood sets in with an image I sit and start painting. The irony is that when I paint, the brush or the knife take me to new images, new thoughts. The emotions do not change. They become more intense. The question I ask myself is if I'm happy. This is what I always wanted to do, this is what I do, I Keep pretty good company with me.... so the answer is yes...
Artist featured by Saatchi Art in a collection
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