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On My Landscape Painting |
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Sometimes it is difficult for me to switch gears, to stop painting in order to reflect on what I am doing and try to explain myself. About landscape painting, I wrote this several years ago:
I still basically agree with these philosophical statements although now I see the word "conflict" as too strong. Perhaps "interaction" would be better. In any event, all of my landscapes deal with humankind's effects on nature. Usually I see this interaction as being ironic, sometimes humorous, but always complementary. I believe that there is beauty in the creation of Nature and Man working together. The tableau best epitomized by these ideas is the garden, where the gardener toils to utilize the raw material of Nature to create art (a human invention) while Nature effortlessly and continuously reclaims itself. This is happening in the painting "Mountain Park" where Nature is quickly devouring a human funhouse.
Community Garden at Sunrise
Mountain Park
Another motif I utilize is the pathway, remnants of human footprints, wrestled from nature, appearing vulnerable but clinging to existence. In the paintings we usually don't know where the path is taking us but I like to think that it is leading us to spiritual understanding, through nature. Two paintings that perhaps deal with the ironic nature of my subject are "Phone Booth near the Lake" and "Fire on the Beach". In the first, the phone booth is a distraction, a machine that invites us to connect immediately to anyplace in the world, anyplace but the here and now and the natural beauty of the lake and its sunrise. The irony in "Fire on the Beach" is that the party of revelers, instead of dropping to their knees to praise the sunset and ocean are probably discussing baseball and beer.
In discussing my philosophy of landscape painting, I am probably missing a more direct and immediate aspect of my paintings: the beauty and poignancy of the transitory nature of things and the passage of time. I believe that my interest in light and its effects helps depict
this. My landscape subjects are usually specific moments in time (twilight, fog, etc.) and are more emotional and poignant because we are aware that they will be gone in a moment.
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© 2009 Scott Prior |