Wednesday, March 28, 2012

As an artist, I am often asked, "Who inspires you?" Over the course of the years, I have been consistently drawn to various painters and photographers such as: Marc Chagall, Christopher H. Martin, Gregory Crewdson, Jackson Pollock, Henri Bresson Cartier and W. Eugene Smith.
Each artist has an attribute that causes me to gravitate towards their work. For example, in Crewdson's work, I enjoy the unknown narrative of his photographs which leave you with an eerie and voyeuristic sensation.  If you have seen the "Wonder World" exhibit at the Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, you will see one of his works. My love for abstract came about from a gallery showing many moons ago in Dallas that featured the work of a local artist by the name of Christopher H. Martin. I began to understand how color can move you in mysterious ways without explanation. After several years into my photographic education, my professor discussed the work of the photojournalist, Eugene Smith. He persevered with relentless energy and tenacity to capture photographs that told a unique story within the picture frame. He truly understood and honored the editing process in photography. Nothing was put into the frame without intent. Henri Bresson Cartier also upheld the believe that everything in the frame should be considered. It is to grab you in and lead your eye throughout the photograph. He embodies the idea that you must always be alert to the environment around you for things change in a blink of an eye. One a different note, the Abstract Expressionist, Pollock, took a 180 approach from Cartier and Smith, for he he delved into his work without intention but rather an impulsive method. While not on the abstract realm of Pollock, Chagall engaged his viewers with his use of vivid colors, animals, and lovers through the sensation of light, aerial, and symbolic applications in his paintings.








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