When
complete, “If you can't find art in your own backyard ....”
will include 365 digital photographs of various artistic discoveries,
interactions, and manipulations, all done in my back yard.
The
series will change as both the seasons and the weather change —
and as events change over the course of the year. These images bring
both artist and audience out of the studio and into the world.
As
nature is really the model for all aesthetic experiece, what better
way to experiment with color, line, texture, composition, the effects
of light and shadow, juxtaposition of images, depth of field, size
and scale, unusual materials and techniques, etc., than by learning
to see and make use of what’s closest at hand. More importantly,
what better way to get out of the studio and into the world, where
art can intersect with daily life, become part of the larger cycles
of nature, and challenge and delight people by providing them with
unexpected insights and surprises.
By
itself the natural world often seems serene, stately, permanent yet
ever changing, and (for some of us) a bit distant, or even (because
it remains beyond human control) threatening. Nature provides a constant
and reassuring reminder that the life force is infinitely greater
than our power to destroy it.
The
artwork in my project results from the intrusion of human concerns
and ways of seeing, imagining, and interpreting into nature. A careful
bit of meddling, shaping or just paring down and framing can help
uncover the whimsical, the provocative, and the surreal. My aim in
these experiments is to use nature as a mirror in which to reflect
what's noble, sublime, absurd, comic and tragic about the human condition,
to symbolically portray our hopes, dreams, asperations, follies, joys,
and sorrows.
As
winter seems to be a good time to reflect on what’s come before,
right now I’m mainly recycling and building from found materials.
Many of the pieces are constructed of fallen or dead objects: leaves,
tree limbs and sticks, cord wood and rotting fruit. In the spring,
look for art that focuses on growth and imitates or incorporates the
budding of nature...
I’m
planning some large scale painting projects in this environment later
this year, as well as a weekend party and outdoor exhibition...