My late husband (he died ten
years ago) was a Clinical Child Psychologist. He would walk into my studio,
take a look at the cast of characters I was working on and declare: “Only an
only child would do this!” And he was right. Growing up, I longed for brothers
and sisters, not realizing until much later that all my friends who had
brothers and sisters considered them pains in the neck and would have gladly
been ‘only’ children. I think about his comment a lot now that I live and work
alone.
"Celestial Figure" 2017 oil on canvas 68"x44" |
"Street People" oil on canvas 55"x24" each |
For the past year or two,
I’ve largely abandoned figurative work for architectural fantasies, imaginary
urban landscapes built on years of teaching art history and living in New York.
When people do appear, they are shadowy, mysterious figures that haunt the
rooftops, often astride imaginary pre-historic beasts, as if the city were a
giant painted cave. Every once in a while I long to come back to the real world
and do some ‘people painting’. The figures I am working on now are a warm up
for a series of paintings of 125th Street in Harlem that I plan to
work on this winter. I started exploring
Harlem over a half century ago when I attended the High School of Music &
Art in Manhattan on 135th St. At the time, it wasn’t the best
neighborhood in New York, but it was definitely among the most visually
interesting. Then came the drug plague and Harlem was out of bounds -
especially after dark. Fortunately, it’s once again a safe and colorful place.
I can walk around with my unobtrusive IPhoto camera and nobody notices they’re
being preserved for posterity.
You are an amazing artist. I love the Celestial Figure. I know you are on a ear to do architectural work, but your figures are a hoot and beautifully done. Now let's walk....
ReplyDeleteI came upon your blog by accident. I agree when painting human faces at one point the face becomes alive and looks back at you. If it is a good one it will talk to you without words. Great stuff.
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