September 05, 2006

The Process Of Giving

Bokusho-Sam, 10x10, 2006

We attended a delightful surprise party this past weekend, given by the two sons of long time good friends. It wasn't hard to come up with ideas for appropriate gifts, a baseball hat decorated with jokes for him, and a painting for her.

A painting??? Well, this gal was very influential in boosting my career back when my fledgling career really needed a boost. She's the kind of person that doesn't just say, "I like it," she buys it! And not through me, but through my first important gallery, thereby impressing my gallery director in the process. And she didn't just buy a few, she is probably the largest collector of my early work, in particular my serigraphs. Their home is a virtual museum of art and artifacts from around the world as they have traveled extensively, courtesy of the USAF, which is how we came to be friends with them many years ago.

Well, due to continued moving around, we parted ways and became Xmas card friends until we happened to move near them five years ago. Frequent lunch dates have helped us catch up and resume our friendship, but they have as much art as they really need and my career did, indeed, catch a breeze and I've priced myself out of the reach of even the most devoted friends. So... yes indeedy, a painting as a gift was in order.

Funny thing though, the painting I'd planned to give was not coming together and I began to get a little panicky about it as the day drew close. The night before the party, I was having one of my restless nights so got up and spent a little time on the computer... then back to bed and still couldn't sleep. The painting kept stirring around in my mind so I got up again, grabbed a small painting I had thought to use as a back up gift, and took it downstairs to the studio. Using it as underpainting, I started arranging, gluing and glazing... would then work on a different piece until it was dry enough to handle again and this back and forth business went on for several hours. The next day I continued the process, using various gels and mediums, some faintly tinted white in order to give a waxy look. I was working with a hairdryer at this time, trying to hurry the drying process. Something was missing, it wasn't holding together compositionally. Thinking about a Jasper Johns work I'd seen on the web earlier, I added a thin red line which made a square. It was just what the piece needed and I could call it finished... about an hour before leaving for the party.

Sam, if you're reading... now you know "the rest of the story!"

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

what a lovely story and how nice to have someone who loves ones art enough to buy lots of it!

I am sure that your friend was absolutely dumbfounded and delighted with your gift.

C. Robin Janning said...

I love this whole series you are doing, but this one may be my favorite so far! Every bit of it is lovely!

Martha Marshall said...

What a nice surprise! I know she must have been thrilled.

Anonymous said...

I was staring at this piece, liking how it sat on the red swath and how the text block fits into history, when I realized that I was sort of "reading" the image like one reads the sequential art of comics. Hmm.

Karen Jacobs said...

Interesting analogy, Steven. I find myself inspecting the squares individually as well, I start my day with the comics, wonder if the b&w pattern might be derivative.

Annette Bush said...

This one seems to be connecting to your previous work more than others. I like the feel of it.
Annette