Tag Archives: painting

A Lost Drawing :: Sharing Process & Technique part 1

A Lost Drawing :: Sharing Process & Technique part 1

5/26/12 – In late 2009 after visiting several cathedrals and museums abroad, I began to re-revisit a lot of renaissance art.  I do reference such time periods in a lot of my teaching, but I usually tend to have a specific relevance in mind with the projects we are working on. Unconsciously I believe, I was seeking something else of a personal nature. In my examinations both online and through library research, I started to collect a series of renaissance images that inspired me. I very rarely feel the need to duplicate anything that already exists, but I do enjoy exercising the inspiration into other “suchness.” Leonardo da Vinci’s Last Supper had always captured my interest. I enjoy looking at the piece, and love how it holds my attention for long periods of time consistently. I took action. The drawing below is my rendering of the Last Supper from late 2009. It was drawn in 30 minutes using a black felt tip pen. I find a cubist influence in the overall abstraction of the drawing, as well as a graffiti influence in the heavy black stylized outlines. I was immediately happy with the drawing. You can click on the image to see it larger and inspect the line quality.

The Last Supper, this was the first rendering completed in a felt tip ink pen.

It was my intention at first (and it still is) to create a painting in full color using the drawing as a map to work from. I find this to be an effective method for works of all scales. I re-drew my sketch and blew it up using a black oil stick. It took about 2.5 hours to re-draw at the scale I was working in. Shortly after transferring the drawing onto the 7 foot by 10 foot piece of heavy weight large paper I removed the drawing to free up the same wall space. I had a commissioned project that needed immediate attention with a tight deadline. In the midst of the busy-ness of the months to come, I forgot about the piece altogether. About a year and a half later it had come to my attention that this was the case, and much to my dismay, I was not able to easily locate the large drawing. For the sake of storage, I tend to roll up several drawings on paper and un-stretched paintings that are sizes that exceed 36 x 48 inches. I am usually diligent with labeling the large rolls of finished and incomplete works, but in this case, it slipped away. The large rolls free stand on the floor like pillars. Currently in the studio there are 12 -14 of these rolls. They usually hold between 40 – 75 pieces per roll. I had temporarily lost interest in my search for the piece. It has taught me a lesson about being even more careful and impeccable with labeling both works in process and stored complete pieces. I have retained that from this contrasting circumstance, but yet something good continued to evolve.

The final rendered image after using the “live trace” feature in Adobe Illustrator.

The image above has taken over this process, and it has reactivated my excitement for the piece which will now turn into a series of various techniques. I archive all of my works in progress by taking sketch photographs. These are usually low resolution images that I can easily access between computers and external hard drives. I stumbled upon the image last week and have since rejoined my process, only this time with a new approach. The image above (click on it to inspect it) has taken on a new life. When I re-discovered the image I made a print out of the drawing and re-scanned it back into adobe photoshop to play with the contrast. I love what technology can do when it is synthesized with the manual process. I saved the file and brought it into adobe illustrator. Using the “live trace” feature, the image quality had become even more fluid, giving it a vector and more graphic look. I feel that it compliments the original drawing. This is a technique that can be used for creating high-resolution silk screen printing image quality. Having the drawing in this format will allow for me to do a series of rough color studies both in photshop, as well as manually in water-color and colored pencil before I redraw it at the larger size. (ill make a series of black and white print outs for that.) So, in actuality losing the original large drawing was not such a bad thing. I may not have had the interest to work on it in a variety of ways had I directly completed the painting. One of my inspirations is the late great Buckminster Fuller. Bucky didn’t believe in mistakes, only learning and new-found awareness’ through one’s experiments and actions. I love that. I will re-draw the piece at the larger size, but in a variety of ways, and complete the paintings over the course of the next few months. I will share my process and progress in part two of this post.

Original link:: http://wp.me/p2SFO-Hx

New Works in May 2012 / Studio

5/17/12- I’m in the process of preparing for a series of new shows this coming fall. This body of work seems to be more thematic and narrative than usual. As you may know by now, I love the use of repetition, especially when an image excites me. I enjoying simultaneously working 2-dimensionally and 3-dimensionally. This helps my thought process expand and consider the 3-dimensional space where the works will be installed. In a recent post I announced that my relief installation pieces were now expanding off of the wall and into the space directly (more free-standing forms integrated with the wall pieces.) This is the first installation process image of how these pieces below have made the 3-dimensional transition. I do feel that they can stand alone as collage based paintings, but I’m more interested in taking a risk with these.

As an artist I’m interested in building  a narrative relationship between the content and the materials. The images below are frozen ice positives cast in colored water. They too can stand by themselves, but I am now photographing the sculptures to use as images for silkscreen. I want to print the images and also integrate them into this series above. I’m also casting the molds in concrete and plaster this weekend. If the prototypes hold up, I will then make an edition in porcelain. These pieces will work well on pedestals as well on the floor with in the same space. This body of work is an extension that falls under the “technophemera” series. It is a term that I coined about a year ago. You can visit the whole series as it grows here::  http://www.flickr.com/photos/rmsmovement/sets/72157626835050092/

Original link :: http://wp.me/p2SFO-Gw

June 2012 – CO-ACTIVATION – 2 man show with Jeffrey Allen Price!

Painting by Jeffrey Allen Price

June 2012 -CO-ACTIVATION. Following the success of Energetic Fusion, Jeffrey Allen Price and I will be presenting another community based collaborative, interactive installation during the month of June 2012 at the Second Avenue Firehouse Gallery in Bayshore, NY.   

We will be creating a new exhibition from scratch. We will start with blank walls and work in the space over the duration of the month. Live, site on scene works will be created. The community and visitors to the space are invited to take part in the creation of the show during the Art Labs & Open Gallery hours on these dates-

CO-Activate Fusion Art Lab Dates:: Saturday June 9th -1pm – 6pm :: Saturday June 16th – 1pm – 6pm :: Thursday June 21st – 5pm -9pm & Friday June 29th – 5pm -9pm. Use ours, or bring your own materials to draw, paint or collage onto the walls!

A Closing Reception will be held Saturday, June 30 from 2-4pm.

Spread the word!

Original link :: http://wp.me/p2SFO-G5

About Color and Painting. Defining the Style building process.

4/15/12

This painting above is almost complete. I posted this progress image onto my flickr page in late January of 2012. I will soon post the final piece, as well as the 6 others that have evolved as a result. This blog post has taken several different directions already. I love that about process in general, one idea expands another, and before you know it, you are onto several other topics. Let me start here, and try to pull this together as we read on. This post itself is a work in progress. I have always been drawn to color. My understanding and consistent evolution with color has been through painting, taking photos, and simply looking at things. I do mean really looking at things by critically observing them. I questioned myself a long time ago about this, How long do I really look at things? Do I see what is really there, or just a perceived impression? Which leads me to “think” I understand that “something” as it exists. Hmmm? I always provoke and ask my introduction to drawing and 2D design students this same question. “When was the last time that you really looked at something by actually observing it for more than 2 minutes?” Followed by an exercise, I have them observe their own hands for 5 minutes, and then create blind contour line studies to help this process along. To be truthful, even with my own personal extended exercises and observation sessions, I find that I still want to also abstract representational things. Most of my experimentation with paint has been through frequent practice with acrylic, oil, aerosol, and enamels. My surface studies vary on canvas, paper, metal, aluminum, plastics, concrete, and recyclable containers. The more recent use of colored papers and collage expanded from this experimentation directly. I have discovered that layers can become relief like, and I have always enjoyed the potentials of that, hence my ongoing adventures with collage. Here you can view a set dedicated to this almost entirely http://www.flickr.com/photos/rmsmovement/sets/72157594510901703 Using simple geometric shapes and forms, I spend extended amounts of time developing my knowledge of color by composing with these same shapes.  I also like to arrange variations of form through freshly created hybrid shapes. Layering them by color values, hues and tint fragments to create contrast, compliments, or contradictions with in the works. My intentions were to develop mixing techniques that would allow me to work fast. I like immediacy as an artist, this I know of my process. I am a high production artist. Repetition is something that I understand. Using the sphere shape as a starting point I could make multiples very fast. The use of repetition can change a large space and create a 2 dimensional illusion, this idea lead me to execute a series of installations of flat color with-in three-dimensional spaces. The use of color forces me to make decisions, and this is exactly what stimulates and excites me the most as an artist. Color will always affect a viewer’s eye at first gaze, it may intensify what is being experienced or it may distract the eye causing us to discover problematic and conflicting contrasts. Either way, we have to react. I want to expand upon that by creating both representational and non-representational art. The paintings above and below are inspired by a lot more things than I can list at this time, but 1980′s and 90′s graffiti have always heavily influenced my painting work. The fluidity, color, variety, and movement of writers like Dondi White, Seen, Sento, Zephyr, Lady Pink, & Lee Quinones have and continue to make lasting impressions on me. The works found here in the images below have been completed over the last 4-6 years. These were commissioned works by private collectors. I feel that they are good examples of the evolution of the stylization that I continue to enjoy developing. The works vary in size range. The smallest works being 48″X64″ to 9 feet by 11 feet. It is my intention to archive the process and piece together where it came from, and where it is going. I will be adding additional information about these pieces as they all have unique interactions between myself and the collectors whom had commissioned the works.

Link to the original post:: http://wp.me/p2SFO-Ah

Art work of the Month :: Studio Installation 2/12/11 – 4/4/11

New Studio Installations from 2/12/11
Originally uploaded by The ART of Ryan Seslow.

This is the last day of a 2 month studio installation that has challenged me. Most of the works in this piece are in progress, even though some would say they are complete. Its a grainy photo, it was taken at dusk and I have since taken better photos. I will post those over on my flickr page soon. When it comes to working with a wall I usually like to work less geometrically. But something about the composite idea attracted me, and I have since given it some thought. 15 paintings arranged, all at the same size, composed into a grid. This creates a visual harmony. I’m not sure if the content even matters at this point. I like the idea of creating a visual narrative, or even more so, allowing and inducing the viewer to do so. Storyboard #1 I suppose. All of the works have been painted onto recycled canvas’s. That’s right, mostly discards from my classes, and some donated discards.

2010, The Final 2 Installation Works of the Year.

December 23rd 2010 :: The Last 2 Installations of 2010

The Last Studio Installation of 2010


Image below :: Installation view :: Ryan Seslow ::

Hillwood Art Museum, Faculty Exhibition, LIU December 2010

Both of the installations above were worked on simultaneously.

2010….