What kind of artwork are you doing now, and how has your work changed in the last 10 years?
Since the 1960s, my themes have included visions of beauty and natural phenomena from places where I grew up and visited often: Mississippi River, Lake Superior, Rocky Mountains, clouds in the sky, planets, stars, galaxies and flowers in my garden. I like to study design and form in nature and extract the essence of line and structure to use in my compositions.
I continue to paint with gouache on paper, and oil on canvas or wood panel as I have since the 1960s. In the 1970s, I began to cut painted/printed papers into shapes and compose into ‘poem papers’, a style of collage. In 2002, I bought a digital camera and now incorporate images of subjects studied since childhood, i.e., mountains, clouds and waves. In 2003, I began to adhere ‘sticks, stones, shells, pearls’ to the painted wood panels to create assemblages. Since 2004, I have made an effort to confine my focus to works inspired by the Mississippi River in Iowa and water-related subjects including clouds.
2007 Iowa Arts Council Major Artist Grant
TWELVE VIEWS OF WATER
I will create and frame photographs and artworks exploring new and expanded approaches/directions/materials in compositions inspired by Mississippi River. Statewide exhibition tour will be developed and sponsored by the Muscatine Art Center. Project includes production of full-color, companion exhibition catalogue funded by Waterloo Center for the Arts.
Funded in part with a grant from the Iowa Arts Council, a division of the Iowa Department of Cultural Affairs, and the National Endowment for the Arts. |
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What motivates you to continue making art?
Studying transformation through observing wave patterns on the surface of the Mississippi River while simultaneously experiencing the attraction from the force of an invisible current identifies the place of origin for my investigations into the realm of infinite change.
Where does Change begin?
What shape does it take?
What form does it make?
These are the questions that formed inside my elementary school age mind while growing up along the banks of the Father Of All Waters. In my search for clues I created compositions painted from a lexicon of images collected over a lifetime of observations, experiences and memories from my life on the Mississippi River in Iowa. The artworks became illustrations and metaphors about the mysterious adventures of human existence.
Recently I have been listening to original compositions by Bix Beiderbecke. We were both born in Davenport, Iowa, where the river runs east and west. This particular zig-zag of the current creates patterns and compositions unique within the river’s continental course. When I hear Bix’s work I see and feel an undercurrent of blues decorated with jazzy wave patterns, juxtaposing rhythms and sequences phrased in a familiar framework of time. Were we both responding to an atmospheric opera presented by the Mississippi River in Scott County?
This year I have given titles to some new artworks that echo titles from Bix’s music: In The Dark, In A Mist, Futuristic Rhythm, Davenport Blues, Clouds. |