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Showing posts with label Pearody. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pearody. Show all posts

Thursday, April 12, 2012

Food For Animals...and for thought...Pearody


Pearody   oil/canvas   8 x 24 x 1.5
Who among us hasn't experienced extreme love and attachment to a pet?  These are some of the strongest bonds we experience in our family lives, sometimes ever-so-strong due to the simplicity of the bond.  Well, Kathy Johnson of Hudson Fine Art and Framing does her annual thing to support The Humane Society of Greater Akron where a percentage of the proceeds goes to provide food for these animals who are often victims of abuse or neglect.

Where:  Hudson Fine Art & Framing; 9 Aurora Street; Hudson Ohio 44236  (located in The    Brewster Mansion right on the square)

When:  Wine and Cheese Opening; Friday, April 13 5:30-8:30 pm

What:  This year Kathy is exhibiting food art....appealing to all

Hope to see you there!

Thursday, January 26, 2012

Informed Chaos...sends the work in a new direction.Pearody

Pearody   oil/canvas   8 x 24 x 1.5
For years now, I have been introducing a bit of chaos to my work.  Chaos in the way of subtle destruction, dripping, squeezing paint onto, scraping back, palette knife additions or subtractions, dots and lines.  This chaos provides a way of temporarily exiting the constraints of the reality of the subject matter.  New puzzles to solve.  Excitement.  The extra-ordinary.  I have come to realize that this chaos is not necessarily random...rather, it is informed.  Informed by all that I have come to be.  My experiences, my travels, my dreams,  my passions and, most importantly, the varied movements made with brush or pen on the artistic ground.  Keeping the tool moving without any particular goal while doodling, sketching and playing lets the confidence build in your own capability.  Play becomes the thing, the reward.  The more one plays, the more comfortable one becomes.  The more comfortable one becomes, the greater the possibilities.  Informed.

The right hand segment of Pearody reflects this notion.  The line work was scraped through to an earlier layer.  This process was planned so that the colors reflected, for the most part, the work that was happening on the left side of the canvas.

Chaos.  Informed.