A Face Is A Story Untold

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Figurative work, to me, has always been more than working in the studio from a model. My first experience with a model was an educational one. I learned not about artists and art, but rather the history of Vietnam. He was a student at Columbia who spent his time protesting the Vietnam War.

My next model was also a student at Columbia, and was an exchange student from Paris. She told me about life in Paris. Her parents ran a cheese shop there and sold cheese only. I could not conceive of a store that only sold cheese. She told me about where the cheeses came from and the little farms that produced different types. Her little stories were wonderful to listen to, and I was lucky to get a painting of her done.

Every model I hired while living in New York had their story, and I discovered I had a talent for pulling their story from them. I think I could have been the next Johnny Carson if painting had not been my real love. To this very day I love hearing my models tell me who they are, tell me about their families and their experience. One model told me about her dad, who did not believe in girls going to college. She joined the army just before the first Gulf War. She served in Kuwait as a tanker truck driver, got her college degree and stayed in the army. She is twenty years in now.

Not all stories I hear are great stories, some are of abuse. I listen to each, some I keep to myself, others I smile while sharing them to friends. Meeting one model's dad, and hearing him talk, I grabbed my paints and did one of my best portrait studies. For me a face is a story untold. I lay out my paints and let the person before me tell me the colors to use with their story.



Learning About More Than Art

“12 Angry Men " is one of my all time favorite movies. My friend Ron listens to music as he paints. Many artists connect with music while working. I like painting while listening to a movie, not watching, just listening. The dialogue is great, direction is right on. It's a movie about men serving on a jury that teaches us about people. It’s about getting one to think about other people's lives and how other people think. It also has great acting by some very talented actors. My brush is always put down to watch George C. Scott react to the reading of a secret written vote by the foreman. Seeing a master actor perform is inspiring and makes me think, as a painter, am I doing my best? People in the arts can inspire.

Beautiful, talented dancers inspire me too. Watching them perform and knowing the pain they go through to get to that beautiful performance they give on stage. My first model, in New York, was a dancer who explained why her feet were so red and why she always asked for a reclining pose. Where a painting gets its bright or dark color sometimes comes in different ways than we think. I looked at that young lady a bit differently hearing her story. Forty years later another dancer posed for me, after three sessions she told me she danced topless at a strip club. Her story was a bit different. She was dancing to earn money to put her husband through college. I learned the club she performed at rents the stage to the girls. The girls get their tiny costumes stuffed with dollars, and then those tips are split 50/50 with the club owner. Again, I gave this model a reclining pose.

When my art teacher told me to never stop learning I never stopped learning - it’s just not always about art.