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Source
is where it starts. I don't know where it comes from but
there is a constant stream of creativity flowing through me like a
rich, gentle
waterfall of ideas, concepts, solutions, connections, visions and more,
all
available to me when I pay attention. I reach into the stream when it
is time
to make art. The stream is always there whether I am present with it or
not.
Technology,
Science, Nature, and Art are all of a
piece to me. I have lifelong connections to science, technology, and
toys, from
early tinkering with model airplanes, rockets and trains to experiments
with
electricity and radios. I have spent countless hours alone outdoors
enjoying
encounters with all manner of wildlife from crayfish to deer. All of
this feeds
into the way I think about my art work. There is almost always an
underlying
concept in
the work that has some root in the sciences or some direct connection
to
nature. My titles often include references to scientific concepts, some
of
which may even be very obscure. From the "Echoes" series of
mixed media pieces to the sound art pieces like the S.W.A.R.M.s and
including
the "Tectonics" series of gourd sculptures, many of my works are
directly connected to my own understanding of natural laws and
scientific
principles.
Gourd Sculpture is
the first art form for which I
received any kind of public recognition as an individual artist. It all
starts
in a fascination with the idea of this organic vessel, a vessel in
which I see
so much potential for playing with form within a severely constrained
space. With each piece I am trying to make a statement that will
move my
own work away from the traditions of folk art and toward something more
conceptual and abstract. I explore the sensual forms of some
gourds,
exploit the geometry of others, and force contours and surfaces to
appear as
what they are not in still others. Then there is the matter of
teasing out
and executing a kind of technological precision that is unexpected from
an
organic form. I want to challenge the viewer to closely inspect the
work trying
to find evidence of manufacture (in the most literal sense).
Photography
is the
most intimate thing I do in art. It is the sharing of the intimacy that
I
strive for. I want my audience to not only see what I see, but feel
what I
feel. In photographing people, sometimes the intimacy can be a little
remote,
journalistic, even voyeuristic. Other times it is close and knowing. In
most
cases, I have already interacted in some way with my subject through as
much as
a whole conversation or as little as a smile, a nod, a wave, or a wink.
They
always know I am there and what I am doing. Intimacy with the inanimate
is more
problematic. For me it means looking closely, looking beyond the
surface,
looking at texture, at history, at cause, at effect…looking for why it
is
interesting to me. I fully expect to be taught by the experience.
Sound
Art is
what I teach
and where I challenge the privileged position of the visual. I live
easily with
the contradiction of creating visual art while I rail against it and
create
acoustic works.
The
Rest depends on which of
the Muses or their kin sits beside me and whispers in my ear. On their
commands
I will venture into painting, assemblage, odd construction, sculpture
or take
whatever I pluck from the creative stream.
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