My painting style is the result of a lifelong deep learning process
that involves art historical references, painting on a daily basis,
observation of nature, and careful attention to the act of painting
itself.
I paint landscapes, portraits and figurative works, often times reminiscent
of the work of Larry Rivers, Modigliani, Cezanne, or Schiele.
I use the principles of abstraction to organize and compose, sometimes
working in a single color while drawing out an infinity of subtle
colors within that monochromatic base.
My interest in portraiture is inspired by the Italian i macchiaioli, early Picasso portraiture,
and by the work of Frank Duveneck, a 20th century American painter. My portraits have a strong graphic quality with large sections of one color.
In “Carlo,” my painting style focuses on close-up portraiture,
a painting style influenced both by computer technology and photography.
I seek a special kind of realism informed by the poetics of the person
revealed in light, preferably bright sunlight, where the reflections
create bold forms that can be studied in the laboratory of the studio
and explored with pigments.
I like to push the paint around in a bold and uninhibited manner,
guided by my research into distortions created on my computer. I utilize
the principlesof abstraction to reconstruct the image based upon an
analysis of the optical information revealed to me in color ink jet
prints.
This computer work is preliminary to beginning the painting, which
then unfolds intuitively and with empathy for both the subject and
the light as is revealed in pigment and subsequent brushwork.
My landscapes have been inspired by trips to Italy and by locations
closer to home, like Amazon Park or Mount Pisgah. Although somewhat
representational, my landscapes are informed by abstraction. I prefer
a poetic, romantic relationship to the subject, nature, which I see
as alive and infinitely profound.
My studies after Old Masters are inspired by the desire to see the
interrelationships forms, intertwining and overlapping, visual energy
flowing and combining into diverse forms. Battle scenes and scenes
from Veronese, Tiepolo, and Rubens are used to explore the possibilities
of Grand Manner painting in a modern style."
Sometimes my focus is line, at other times mass and pure painting.
Trusting my intuition, I am willing to take chances in my art; often
I will begin to paint directly with color on a pure white canvas but
I also enjoy a warm umber ground that I cam paint into, wet on wet.
This is all dependent on the situation and mood.
My landscapes reflect my love for nature and land, both Oregon and
Italy, and my portraits show my attraction for the human form, especially
the face.
My Italian women are metaphors for Italy and all she has to offer.
My old master studies point the way back from deconstruction and conceptual
art, a road back to Eakins, Anshutz and Schiele but not completely
back, just a returning on the reverse side of a moebus strip so to
speak, I am going forward as I return to pick up some very valuable
luggage, namely the elements of the erotic, the sensuous and the mysterious
that are found there once the veil is lifted.