Posted on February 12, 2014, in 2014, An Artist's Life, Art in general, Art Works in Progress, Black Paintings, Creative Process, Inspiration, New York, NY, Painting in General, Pastel Painting, Pearls from Artists, Photography, Quotes, Studio, Working methods and tagged "Bad Boy: MY Life on and off the Canvas", alone, anticipation, anxiety, anyway, apotheosis, applaud, April Gornick, artistic, bigger, blurred, bumps, canvas, caressing, collects, conversations, created, creating, creative, details, different, distracted, doing, end, endured, Eric Fischl, evening, event, eventually, everything, excitement, exhibition, existence, face, fade, feelings, fixed, flowed, frictions, grin, hands, imagine, important, instinct, jaw, jostling, lazy, leave, making, memory, merit, Michael Stone, nothing, opening, ordeal, paint, paintings, people, performance, pinnacle, place, pleasures, process, quickly, relief, remember, scars, shaking, show, something, sore, stand, stay, stop, story, stroking, Studio, stuff, thank you, theater, touched, touching, turning point, unlike, victory laps, walk, want, wife, within, working. Bookmark the permalink. 2 Comments.
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RSS- Pearls from artists* # 690
- 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)
- Pearls from artists* # 689
- 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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- Q: You’re also known for being remarkably consistent with your blog and writing. How do you keep that rhythm? (Question from “Pastel, Passion, and Perseverance: An Interview with Barbara Rachko” in .ART Odyssey: Healing)
- Pearls from artists* # 686
- Q: You read books on Friedrich Nietzsche and other philosophers. How has philosophy and your personal experience shaped the latest series, Bolivianos? (Question from Vedica Art Studios and Gallery)
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As for my self some of my best ideas come from openings .
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Peter, that’s unusual, I think. My solo show openings are a means to demonstrate what’s been happening in my work, i.e., to provide a snapshot of my work’s evolution, but I can’t say anything useful to my creative practice has ever come from them. What ideas have you gotten at one of your openings?
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