Sunday, April 28, 2013

Discovering the Broken Obelisk



A sculpture by Barnett Newman, an Abstract Expressionist painter, a precursor to Minimalism; “The Broken Obelisk” is a geometric steel work residing in the courtyard of Mark Rothko’s Chapel in Houston, Texas.



Interestingly, the work was originally installed at the Corcoran Gallery of Art in Washington, DC. Located on the corner of 17th Street and New York Avenue, NW, it was essentially at the entrance of the Corcoran College of Art and Design. My Alma Mater! Displayed there in the late 1960’s “The Broken Obelisk” was considered very controversial, seen as a reference to the Washington Monument and the social discord of the era.

I did visit the Rothko chapel during a short stay in Houston, however my path to realizing the piece followed a study of line drawings based on the square, and its axis’.

 Discovering the piece didn’t have to do with seeing the sculpture. Discovering that it was hidden deep inside the square, only to be found by deconstruction…an excavation…that was exciting!  Recognizing it, discovering it through a process of ideation, in the process of searching out an idea was more than a surprise.
Believing that something worthwhile will be had in searching out the basic, the fundamental, the essential, before you see it, is perhaps the important point here. 

Hope believes that vision will play out meaningfully, given the chance; even in the simplest exercise.

Ideation Drawing, 2013, 8 1/2" x 11"

Studies for "Discovering the Broken Obelisk", 2013, The Art Library, Brooklyn, NY

Who knew that this ideation would lead to a complete break from 25 years of abstract expressionist/surrealist artwork?  Nearly 5 years later I continue investigating related imagery alluding to order and peace beyond our everyday experience.


"Oblique Tetrahedron", 2017, 36", Welded Steel with Powder Coat Finish,  © James Thatcher

http://jtnwdc.wixsite.com/jamesthatcherarts

  


Monday, April 1, 2013

Making It!


“Process”:  The steps you go through as you make art; it's the act of creating… I wanted to describe my own process with these recent works.  My motivation (in terms of process) was to create some paintings quickly, cleanly, but with random elements—to quote the Wizard of Ads, “surprise is the beginning of delight”*.  I also felt pretty familiar with my subject matter, having used it extensively in art school.
I’ve worked with stencils in one form or another since my third year at the Corcoran College of Art and Design…stencils and spray paint were the go-to materials for these pieces, given my stint as graffiti guy during the heady days of the 80's.

I was interested in creating shoe imagery without distortion so I was off to the internet for a quick search…the “Classic Evening Pump” was the first stop, but so many variations!  I decided to choose shoe profiles that were very different from each other, so I chose the Peep Toe Sling Back, a Strappy Platform, and a nice Open Toe variation as well.

 
I spent a good amount of time paring down and re-interpreting to develop iconic profiles of each design.  The Strappy Platform had this split sole that had to be consolidated…big design changes, but consistent in scale and proportion. 



 I use manila file folders as stencil stock because they are fairly heavy weight but are also easy to cut with an exacto knife, and you can use them on a light table to transfer your designs. 

I picked up some big paper doilies and plastic needlepoint forms in a local craft department to use in the backgrounds and they worked really well!  The doilies have a lace-like quality without being exceedingly delicate, and the tiny grid of the needlepoint forms is delicate while being thoroughly contemporary. 




I create washes by scrubbing lacquer thinner into a preliminary coat of spray enamel.  These washes gather in  the textural underpainting.






 



It isn’t hard to see some of these as finished paintings without any “subject matter”…That may be the image of the future.  For now, an interesting background is what I need.

 


I place my stencil and wonder…am I seeing the most interesting part of the painting thru the stencil, or am I putting the shoe in quiet section of the background?  All of this work, all of these decisions before actually applying the subject to the painting!  Don’t mess it up now!

 
Don’t let the subject ruin the artwork!  The subject always has a precarious role in my artwork…the shoe is not necessarily the most important aspect of these paintings!  Painting is the most important part of my paintings!





 


This is “Process” in painting:  the process is the artwork;  the subject matter is not the artwork…the act of painting is the important part of the painting, not the subject. 




Perhaps the subject matter motivates me to paint…but the wonder of creating, the process of painting is more excellent 
than depicting stuff.
 
This results in a painting that will always be a nice painting!  Generations from now this will be the same fresh and interesting piece that it is in 2013, because it's about painting, and exploring materials and processes.
 
 
"Slam Pump"   James Thatcher     Copyright     2013
8" x 10"     Spray Enamel on Prepared Paper
$100 Framed and Shipped   
 
Painting # 69/72 of an ongoing series.
 
 
 
*Roy H. Williams, "Secret Formulas of the Wizard of Ads", 1999
 

Monday, March 18, 2013

Instant Gravitas

Upon the suggestion of +Donna Moran, I created a quick stamp image...

 
 
Adding the word "FOREVER" to your image changes everything!  I recommend it to all of my artist friends--instant gravitas!  Granted, any word will change your piece, but what a word!  Thanks Donna...who knew!?
 


Saturday, March 16, 2013

Andrew Warhola


Concerning Andy Warhol

           I never met Andy Warhol but I was removed from his presence once.
 
 
 

But that presence seems to inhabit plenty of art work these days…my own included.   Whether I am manufacturing cabinets or knocking out dozens of paintings, the foray into production work hearkens to that 60’s Factory aesthetic; and pays homage. 

I’m surprised to consider The Factory as a precursor to some classic Minimalist artists and their use of industrial practices.  Picture their artwork (as different as it could be both visually and in attitude) as being directly influenced by Warhol:  The cube sculptures of Sol LeWit, the boxes of Donald Judd…He brought multiple imagery to contemporary art, as well as mass production, although the cited Minimalists pursued different ends and means.  Curious….

Portraits of Campbell soup cans (or was that Still Life?) were the uncomfortable birth of something different; made more so by its proximity to the triumph of Abstract Expressionism.  In the immediate wake of the introspective Abstract Expressionists came one who depicted the plainly visible world in iconic fashion. 

Similar to The Ashcan School, with its own depictions of the everyday, Warhol also staked out the territory of everyday life (the boring) as subject matter; as well as the controversy of “urban realism”*.  Consider the early Warhol as an extension of this classic New York interpretation of art/life….

Fun stuff!  …And what about Mr. Brainwash!?

 

*  Weinberg, H. Barbara. "The Ashcan School". In Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2000–. http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/ashc/hd_ashc.htm (April 2010)  


Thursday, March 14, 2013


After nearly 30 years I've rediscovered the high heel shoe as subject matter...above is a selection from the current collection;  all measure 8" x 10" and are rendered in stencils, spray paint and solvents.  Available individually or in numbers to create a fetching array! 

Background:  In 1982 while a 3rd year student at the Corcoran School of Art in Washington, DC I was participating in a public art project sponsored by COLAB from New York City.  A buddy found an abandoned high heel shoe and casually offered it to me.  My assemblage aesthetic kicked in:  I fastened the shoe to an equally abandoned cymbal stand and beheld a delightful result!

Much studio work and numerous unauthorized public street artworks evolved from that initial artistic connection.  Good times ensued:  good associations, good connotations, notoriety...easy to digress!

 
 
Not to re-live the past but surprised to find myself re-visiting the imagery...with some different styles!  I was looking for work to follow up some stencil based valentines I was able to find venues for; thinking about seasonal subject matter I threw the high heel shoes into the mix of spring flowers, sports references, seashells, autumn leaves, snowflakes and stars...never got past the shoes!
 
Stay tuned for more on the subject!
James