I think of my art-making as a kind of research or exploration. The pictures and objects that result are secondary to entering into a process of discovery. I always hope to emerge renewed - and with a little something to share. I return often to consideration of the fact that both Nature and Culture seem to oscillate between structure and deformation, melody and static: accidents seem to have a purpose... Not Your Mother's Rococo is a print series that combines research and play. It was born out of a larger, ongoing project I call Dans la Nature, l'Ecriture which seeks to reveal structures and calligraphic markings routinely overlooked and often trampled underfoot. It's simply about seeing things in a different way. This research began while walking and drawing in the mountains and village environs of the French Pyrenees. Soon, I began taking photographs along the way, just as a documentary record. The Not Your Mother's Rococo prints available here with Artsicle are the latest step in the process. Through all-out digital manipulation, the photographs shed resemblance to typical representations of Nature. To my eye, they suggest a direct experience of shape, color and line. Where the original photo may be boringly prosaic, the manipulated result is far from it. I've come to enjoy them as a kind of wickedly perverse Rococo - in which chintz is overwhelmed by chantz. (ouch) As for Culture: my extensive photographic archive serves as the picture-library of I Don't Want To Get Too Sentimental, an image/text narrative in which seeing and thinking run on parallel tracks. <b>When</b> or <b>where</b> a picture was taken is not important in this work, nor is <b>who</b> a person pictured may be. The past is folded into the present; place is relative; personal identity dissipates into the anonymous. Meaning comes and goes, truth is illusive, and expectations are not very useful. Just like real life. Created in counterpoint to I Don't Want To Get Too Sentimental are the Permissible Artifacts, a group of assemblages incorporating raw pigment and stainless steel with materials ranging from computer chips to the remnants of found objects. As we are drowning these days in a nearly overwhelming tsunami of information and imagery, I am reassured by good, old solid stuff that you can grab onto and hold. If they floated, it would be even better...
We want you to have the best possible experience with Artsicle, which requires the latest version of Chrome, Safari, Firefox or Internet Explorer.











