You can scrape back the painted line
between figure & landscape. The forms may be simultaneously blurred &
strengthened by pulling color through color.
When you want to leave behind
composition as a problem to be solved, it helps to think of color,
form & surface as elements of centrality.
Pynchon was writing about a specific
era, but he could have been describing a landscape or a figure as "...this little parenthesis of light."
Ideas like these get in the way of
painting & are useful in that way.
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| "D's Back" - mixed media on paper, 8 1/2" X 5 1/2" |
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| "Fields & Hills" - oil on canvas, 18" X 18 |
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| "Backyard Table" - oil on canvas, 14" X 11" |
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| "Lagoon-Figure Study" - mixed media on paper, 12" X 9" |
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| "Painted Fields" - oil on canvas, 12" X 12" |
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| "Hillside Road" - oil on canvas , 8" X 8" |
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| "Arranging Her Hair" - mixed media on paper, 12" X 9" |
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| "Woman With A Cup"- mixed media on paper, 8 1/2" X 5 1/2" |
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| "Farming Lavender"- oil on canvas, 12" X 16" |
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| "Head Twist" - mixed media on paper, 8 1/2" X 5 1/2" |
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| "Garden Right" - acrylic on paper, 12" X 9" |
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| "Footstool" - mixed media on paper, 8 1/2" X 5 1/2" |
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| "Blue Hills" - oil on wood, 12" X 12" |
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| "Leaning Back"- acrylic on paper, 12" X 9" |
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| "Listening"- mixed media on paper, 12" X 9" |
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| "Beach Walkway"-oil on canvas, 18" X 18" |
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| "Lagoon Figure"-oil on canvas, 20" X 16" |
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| "Left Thought"-mixed media on paper, 12" X 9" |
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