Margaret's Crosswalks
(2019-2021)
Paintings (oil on board) Story and Drawings below.
New Beginning, 12"x18"
All Together Now, 12"x18"
Arrive, 16"x24"
Aware, 16"x24"
Color, 16"x24"
Stride, 16"x24"
What's Next?, 16"x24"
Something Different, 16"x24"
Contemplating Change, 16"x24"
Noticed, 16"x24"
American Artist, 24"x36"
Currents, 24"x36"
Everybody, 24"x36"
Guys, 24"x36"
Everyday, 24"x36"
Thought, 24"x36"
Shop, 24"x36"
Merge, 24"x36"
The Story
It was after I had sent off My Most Recent Proposal for Cincinnati project, and then the project entitled “4” to the directors of CAM, CAC and AAC, that I applied for a Guggenheim Fellowship.
I made My Proposal and the various bodies of work mentioned within it, central to my Fellowship Application. This would be the third time that I had applied.
As with the other two times, I didn’t think that there was any way that I would not win. I’m always like this when launching a project or a show. I’m always expecting the entire world to change.
But I didn’t win (this story will be told in Guggenheim Three which will be the third in My Fellowship Proposal Project) and since I completely thought that I would win, I had no back-up plan.
I turned to Cincinnati Art Galleries because I didn’t know what else to do. They were the only gallery in Cincinnati that I knew of, that I hadn’t already approached, nor had I ever included them on the mailing list for any of my other projects.
I just never thought of them as being a contemporary gallery. Their brand is much more about dead artists and faux gold frames.
But I had nowhere else to go, so I made the call, and Margaret answered the phone. I had no idea that she was working there.
Margaret and I go way back. She has played a major role in my artistic life in Cincinnati since my earliest gallery show, and a lot of it was in the trenches. Everywhere I go in Cincinnati, I seem to attract a lot of political heat.
Anyway.
When I first approached CAG I had just completed my 100 Apples project, in which I had painted 100 individual apples. This being the case, I had a lot of apples laying around my studio.
I began to notice them in groupings, as if they were noticing each other for the first time. I had a similar experience with my brothers and sisters after the recent death of our last parent, and now here I was coming out of the isolation of the studio and joining the CAG family.
So I did this series of apple groupings, but the people at CAG didn’t seem to be too excited by them. I had met them just prior to their Art Academy 150th Anniversary Show (which I was hastily invited to join) but when I specifically asked that my apple grouping paintings be included, they were not.
The star of the show when it came to my work was a crosswalk painting. Someone bought it right away, just before someone else who also wanted to buy it.
“This is the kind of thing our clients like” said Margaret.
I personally felt that the sale was manufactured just to get me to go that way, but this was Margaret who has been through a lot over the years on my behalf, and it’s not like I don’t have deep history of painting NYC crosswalks.
The problem is that I don’t live in NYC any more. I live in New Jersey, 30 minutes away.
One other time I had visited NYC with my camera with the intention of doing a new NYC series, and I came up empty handed. It was like I felt nothing. Not living there, the city wasn’t mine any more.
My experience with the city since moving has mostly been one of being in a car driving around in it, so I ended up doing a short series of paintings and pastels from photos shot through the windshield of our car.
But this time this was for Margaret, and so I thought that with that motivation, the inspiration would be there.
This series is the result of three photo shoots. I had no problem getting into it. I told Margaret right off that my new motivation is to share with Cincinnatians my love of NYC; and that through the process I want to tell them all I’ve learned while being away.
Prior to all of this, I had gone something like eight years without doing hardly any painting at all.
The reason why was because I had become so sensitive that I couldn’t let go of my paintings. I’d keep going back into them 15, 20 times, always seeing and feeling more and more.
I just couldn’t do it any more. I switched to drawing cartoons specifically because they were fast and fun. The work poured out of me.
When I started this series, the same thing happened again. It took me 4 1/2 months to finish the first two paintings (the smallest) in the series.
I knew I couldn’t start another one, so I switched to drawing. There are 21 drawings in the Margaret’s Crosswalks series (see below).
Instead of using charcoal and pastel like my earlier cityscape drawings, I used color markers and color pencil. With the change of medium, it was like the drawings more closely approached what I was doing in my paintings.
When I went back to painting, it was the painting that approached the drawing. I’m painting quicker, more improvisational, much more impressionistically now.
I love this series.
I remember thinking that I wanted it to be 100 in length, making it possibly my last. I love the metaphor involved.
I found it to be a fascinating journey, one in which I completely changed the way I approach my painting.
But for now, it is a series that has come to an end, as my inspiration has shifted course.
I’ll be debuting my Universe Series, possibly in the fall / winter of 22.
21. 22