Posted on November 17, 2012, in 2012, An Artist's Life, Art in general, Art Works in Progress, Black Paintings, Creative Process, Inspiration, Painting in General, Quotes, Studio, Working methods and tagged "as good as I can get it", aggregate, art exhibitions, autobiography, change, choice, correcting, critical, days, decisions, done, experience, faults, feeling, final piece, finished, finished piece, framed, happy, imperfections, inevitable, influences, life, listen, looking, mess, mix, moment, music, mystery, New York, painting, pastel painting, personal, plexiglas, programs, radio, re-thinking, re-work, reacting, reading, reason, recent work, revising, sad, searching, snapshot, teach, television, the country, THE END, the world, thinking, time, time capsule, touch up, zeitgeist. Bookmark the permalink. 2 Comments.
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- Q: You take 3-4 months to complete one artwork. How do you plan a series such as Bolivianos over a year’s timeline and over the years? (Question from Vedica Art Studios and Gallery)
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- Q: Over your 40-year career as an artist, you have managed to keep presentation, technical, subject matter, conceptual consistencies in your art practice and work. How do you manage to filter out inspirations that might be luring at that moment but do not support your art practice? For example, you master pastel works. There must have been moments when you might have been inspired to make oil works. How do you keep such inspirations aside. (Question from Vedica Art Studios and Gallery)
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This was a very interesting and well articulated commentary! What you say is so true, but in my case, I think I have a hard time drawing a curtain closed on any experience and feeling. They all run into each other and never stop! But–absolutely!–it is not a good idea to go back and fiddle with a work you felt was finished. Just start a new one. However, there are some famous artists who were notorious for trying to alter paintings later on, even ones hanging in museums. Bonnard is one who comes to mind…
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Donna, much of my thinking on this is driven by practicality. To re-work a piece I have to bring it to my framer in Virginia (I don’t trust anyone local with a pastel painting) so he can take apart the frame. This costs time and money (usually a few hundred dollars). I can either bring pastels with me to Virginia (anticipating exactly which colors I’ll need, not so easy), or I can bring the newly unframed piece all the way back to NYC. Then back to VA again when I’m done! It’s much smarter to just start another painting.
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