Tuesday, September 1, 2015

Artist Statment


My passion is creating art that allows me to disconnect from reality. I am empowered when I can use my art to explore new places and times, and the freedom is exhilarating. I view escape from a personal level, charged with a psychologically emotional perspective. This perspective is embedded within my art, and reflected throughout various themes of escapism that include landscapes and figurative work.
I also love painting nudes.  The nude is perfect for depicting many aspects of escape. The nude is more than an unclothed figure. It can unleash emotions that are steeped in cultural and familial attitudes. As an adult, I obey both written and unwritten laws that govern how and when I reveal my body. I covet my fully clothed persona closely, so that when I do present myself nude it is with the caveat that this is special. This special way of looking at nudity is not mine alone. In most western cultures, it is mostly through high art that we are allowed to take pleasure in looking at the human body in full daylight, and in the most sober of settings: a museum. This brings me to question; if it is sanctioned for me and others to find escape from the cultural rules governing the nude in art, than is there such a thing as an improper nude pose? If so, whose idea of propriety are we emulating?
Many people turn on their TV to escape their daily routine; I leave my ordinariness of day-in, day out by creating my personal rabbit hole and escape through art. At times, a short escape from reality is a necessity--not just a luxury.
 



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