
Generally, I work directly with no preconceived idea. I
choose an object, an actual car part or atire tread pattern and
respond to it by focusing on what makes it interesting to me. If I'm
making sculpture, by cutting, bending, blending other parts with it
and painting, I eventually arrive at something that expresses my
response to the part's dance. When paining, I expand the shapes,
create backgrouds by printing with the parts and color them. There is
always a temptation to make the work representative--Oh, that looks
like a leaf-- which I usually find distracting. I frequently listen
to Soca music while I work to free me from over intellectualizing.
I now live in Kingston, Ontario and have had to change from sculpture to
painting/printing as I can't weld in my current
studio. My first paintings were "message"
oriented--Roadkill, Sprawl, etc.-- and though I will probably keep
making the occasional message piece, I've recently returned to using
car parts, this time printing with them or using them as templates
for painting.
LIKES--
Children's art—direct, expressive,
colorful. Graffiti—it's big, it's public, it's got lots of
patterns, it's not precious, it's got a message.
Hundertwasser—organic, colorful, is driven by a deep sense of
the earth.
Copyright 2009-2011. Jeff Mann