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Q: Your “Gods and Monsters” series consists of tableaux of Mexican and Guatemalan figures that are photographed in a way that blurs certain elements to abstraction while others are in clear focus. Can you please speak more about this work?
Posted by barbararachkoscoloreddust
A: When I depict the Mexican and, more recently, Guatemalan figures in my pastel-on-sandpaper paintings, they are hard-edged, vibrant, and in-your-face. That’s a result of the way I work in pastel. I slowly and meticulously build up layers of pigment, blend them with my fingers, continually refine and try to find the best, most eye-popping colors. It’s a very slow process that takes months of hard work. An aside… One frustration I have as an artist – I am hardly unique in this – is that my audience only sees the finished piece and they look at it for perhaps ten seconds. They rarely think about how their ten-second experience took me months to create!
In 2002 when I began photographing these figures, I wanted to take the same subject matter and give it an entirely different treatment. So these images are deliberately soft focus, dreamy, and mysterious. I use a medium format camera and shoot film. I choose a narrow depth of field. I hold gels in front of the scene to blur it and to provide unexpected areas of color. Even as a photographer I am a colorist.
I want this work to surprise me and it does, since I don’t usually know what images I will get. Often I don’t even look through the viewfinder as I position the camera and the gels and click the shutter. I only know what I’ve shot after I’ve seen a contact sheet, usually the next day.
The “Gods and Monsters” series began entirely as a reaction to my pastel paintings. The latter are extremely meticulous and labor intensive. At a certain point in the process I know more or less what the finished painting will look like, but there are still weeks of slow, laborious detail work ahead. So my photographic work is spontaneous, serendipitous, and provides me with much-needed instant gratification. I find it endlessly intriguing to have two diametrically opposed ways of working with the same subject.
Comments are welcome!
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Posted in 2013, An Artist's Life, Creative Process, Gods and Monsters, Guatemala, Inspiration, Mexico, Pastel Painting, Photography, Travel, Working methods
Tags: "Gods and Monsters", 2002, abstraction, area, artist, audience, best, blend, blur, build up, camera, certain, chromogenic print, clear, click, color, colorist, colors, contact sheet, deliberate, depth of field, detail work, diametrically opposed, different, dreamy, edition, element, endless, experience, eye-popping, figures, film, fingers, finished, finished piece, focus, front, frustration, gel, Guatemalan, hard-edged, image, in your face, instant gratification, intriguing, know, labor intensive, laborious, latter, layers, look, matter, medium format, meticulous, Mexican, months, mysterious, narrow, next day, others, pastel, pastel paintings, pastel-on-sandpaper paintings, photograph, photographer, photographic work, pigment, point, position, process, reaction, refine, result, scene, serendipitous, series, shoot, shot, shutter, slow, soft focus, speak, spontaneous, subject, surprise, tableaux, ten seconds, think, treatment, Untitled, vibrant, viewfinder, way, week, work
Q: Please speak about your background as a Naval officer and aviator and how that has informed your sensibility as an artist.
Posted by barbararachkoscoloreddust
A: At the age of 25 I got my private pilot’s license before spending the next two years amassing thousands of hours of flight time as I earned every flying license and rating I could, ending with a Boeing-727 flight engineer certificate. I joined the Navy when I was 29. I used to think that the 7 years I spent on active duty were wasted – during those 7 years I should have been working on my art – but I see things differently now. The Navy taught me to be disciplined, to be goal-oriented and focused, to love challenges, and in everything I do, to pay attention to the details. Trying to make it as an artist in New York is nothing BUT challenges so these qualities serve me well, whether I’m creating paintings, shooting and printing photographs, or trying to understand the art business and keep up with social media. I enjoy spending long solitary hours working to become a better artist. I am meticulous about craft and will not let a work out of my studio or out of the darkroom until it is as good as I can make it.
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Posted in 2013, An Artist's Life, Black Paintings, Creative Process, Gods and Monsters, Inspiration, Studio, Working methods
Tags: "as good as I can get it", 25 years old, 29 years old, a better artist, active duty, Art Business, artist, attention to detail, aviator, background, Boeing 727 flight engineer, challenge, craft, creating, darkroom, discipline, enjoy, Flying, focused, goal-oriented, inform, keep up, license, meticulous, naval officer, Navy, New York artist, paintings, photographs, printing, qualities, rating, sensibility, shooting, social media, solitary hours, Studio, work, yesterday

