July 22, 2012

the photographic source

I teach how to draw and to paint from life. But let's face it, it's easier to work from a photograph, than it is to coax a subject to stop squirming, to get the sun to never set, or to bring all traffic and tourists to a standstill. With a photograph, you can go at your own  pace - stop, have lunch, come back in the morning, and continue where you left off. How easy is that?


Maybe too easy. If an image is right there in front of you, already done - in all its saturated color - why bother?! What are you going to do that is any different? More specifically, how does the image speak to you, or about you?  What is its emotional content and/or conceptual idea? Does it grab you in some way? (If it doesn't grab you, it won't grab us.) Challenge yourself. One way is to work from life. Otherwise, look beyond just the photograph. 


Marlene Dumas, a South African artist, "may crop an original image, removing subjects from their original context and strip them of any identifiable information." What remains of the photographs? A disquieting lineup of portraits.


Marlene Dumas, Chlorosis (Love sick), 1994, 
ink, gouache, and synthetic polymer paint on paper, Museum of Modern Art, New York

Close up of Chlorosis (Love sick)
Close up of Chlorosis (Love sick)





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