Posts tagged ‘william barry roberts’

January 31, 2012

Hermaphrodite Pirates Encounter The Sirens

Hermaphrodite Pirates Encounter The Sirens

I was approached in the spring of 2011 by Craig Turner (Craig Turner Gallery) about a collaborative art project simply dubbed Tag 33. The idea intrigued me because of the distance between me (USA) and the other artists (UK), as well as cultural and philosophical differences. Most all American artists are firmly schooled in the modern and post-modern approach to art because we simply do not have the history those other older cultures have. My background is technical illustration and design, something even further removed from the expressive and painterly dominion of fine art. Most importantly, however, is that I come from a culture where a career in the traditional arts is not a well-respected vocation. In juxtaposition, Europe has millennia of art appreciation and institutionally developed instincts for the nurturing of it. I know that I can never exceed the sum of my parts, I was made by the ascetic American system….but from the New World I project a kinship with those painters and paintings from a far-off land.

I basically stopped painting and drawing in early 2011 and had not really done much with fine art throughout that year. So receiving the packet of art in the mail from Craig was as if I was a recovering junkie getting a package of fresh heroin in the mail. Many have stated that art is merely a means to relax and express themselves, but to an artist, it is an affliction or a compulsion rooted as deeply as the instinct to breath, eat or procreate.

When I received the artwork from Craig and the others, I immediately saw gleaming amounts of optimism within them.  Many had bright swathes of paint applied in primordial undulating strokes, providing an outlet for unrealized or even new ideas to manifest. I went about creating on them with pens, pencils, paint and spray paint; materials more familiar to hardware and craft stores than fine art. With some, I simply used older drawings that fit within the context of the new collaborative work.  I was able to bring in some of my unrealized Unloved Series concepts and some that I was never able to create beyond simple ideation sketches.

One particular piece Hermaphrodite Pirates Encounter the Sirens was derived from an old sketch that I created some time back. This is a special one for me because it is composed of elements of my mind from the past such as the ancient Greek odyssey mythologies, philosophical absurdism and present scientific knowledge about human genetics and disease. The concept blossomed when I saw the acrylic work on cardstock that Craig had created for this project which would later become the sun-bleached island backdrop for the imagined encounter. The painting was featured in Book 7, Class Clowns issue of Beautiful/Decay Magazine. I was asked to participate in one their conceptual “Projects”, and having just finished the work days before, submitted the collaborative artwork after reading the only given description:

Laughter is universal; it transcends culture, trends, eras and time. The art world, however, is not thought of as droll. Galleries and museums are stern, intellectual spaces and works of art are discussed in academic terms. And yet in this scholarly world there are artists that buck conventions and use humor to engage us, make us laugh and make us think.”

December 19, 2011

Self Portrait; End of the Angry Man

Self Portrait; End of the Angry Man

2011

Dimensions: 11″ x 14″

Medium: Pencil, charcoal, acrylic and spray paint on canvas board

November 8, 2011

He was different from Us, he had to be killed!

He was Different from us, He had to be killed
… to the last I grapple with thee; from hell’s heart I stab at thee; for hate’s sake I spit my last breath at thee.
Moby-Dick, Ch. 135    
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 Detail from artwork from collaboration with Craig Turner/Tag 33
 
 
 
 
 
 
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 Year: 2011
Medium: Graphite pencil, pigments pens, and spray paint on bond paper
October 7, 2011

Pluto; The Rapist God

Pluto

To thee, great king, Avernus is assign’d,
The seat of Gods, and basis of mankind.
Thy throne is fix’d in Hade’s dismal plains,
Distant, unknown to rest, where darkness reigns;
Where, destitute of breath, pale spectres dwell,

In endless, dire, inexorable hell;
And in dread Acheron, whose depths obscure,
Earth’s stable roots eternally secure.

O mighty dæmon, whose decision dread,
The future fate determines of the dead,
With captive Proserpine, thro’ grassy plains,
Drawn in a four-yok’d car with loosen’d reins,
Rapt o’er the deep, impell’d by love, you flew
‘Till Eleusina’s city rose to view;

There, in a wond’rous cave obscure and deep,
The sacred maid secure from search you keep,
The cave of Atthis, whose wide gates display
An entrance to the kingdoms void of day.
Of unapparent works, thou art alone
The dispensator, visible and known.

O pow’r all-ruling, holy,
honor’d light, Thee sacred poets and their hymns delight:

Propitious to thy mystic’s works incline,
Rejoicing come, for holy rites are thine.

2011
Dimensions: 11″ x 14″

Medium:
Beeswax/linseed stand oil cold encaustic, oils, and polyester lace on canvas

September 8, 2011

Virgin Mary Nursing Infant Jesus On A Stolen Frigate

Language bearers, Photographers, Diary makers
You with your memory are dead, frozen
Lost in a present that never stops passing
Here lives the incantation of matter
A language forever.

Like a flame burning away the darkness
Life is flesh on bone convulsing above the ground

-E. Elias Merhige. 1991

(detail from Tag 33 project)

Collaboration with Craig Turner

July 3, 2011

Thirsty Old Pirate

Thirsty Old Pirate
Thirsty Old Pirate

Anyone that has ever suffered through addiction, of one kind or another, knows the consistent desperation of ones eventual life. Addictions transform us into people that we were not before, sometimes even for the better, but in the end, always for the worse.

Stigmas abound, but the character of a person is ultimately what defines them. I have seen more than my fair share of abusive, hateful, racist, bigots that never required a single drop of a substance to be that way, and I’ve seen the most pathetic junkies with hearts full of the most honest unselfish love ever known.

The preparatory sketches for this piece were create several years ago, it was after I found just the right piece of maple board refuse that I decided to commit it to oils.

May 27, 2011

Drunken Pirate Scoundrels Manning Their Cannons

Drunken Pirate Scoundrels Manning Their Cannons
Dimensions: 36″x36″
Medium: Oil, charcoal and pigment pens on panel

…. I’ll see you all aboard ship, until then, man ye cannons my shipmates!

~ William Barry Roberts

March 25, 2011

Vore Convent

Vore Convent

Dimensions: 16.5″ x 20.5″
Medium: Oil on acrylic sheet panel
February 28, 2011

Saturn V

Saturn V
Saturn V

Dimensions: 25.25″ x 33.5″

Medium: Oil on board

From Chaos, You enter my dreams like a river of piss, unbathed with an unclean mind.  The rage of 10,000 dying lunatics cannot match your loathsomeness. You know the length of eternity, and eternity is your wait. My time is fleeting, but my love is not.  O Father of Great Jupiter, Son of Uranus! Most Mighty Saturn, hear me! 

 In Hesiod’s Theogony, an account of the creation of the universe and Jupiter’s rise to power, Saturn is mentioned as the son of Uranus (the Greek equivalent of Roman Caelus), the heavens, and Gaia (the Greek equivalent of Terra), the Earth. Hesiod is an early Greek poet and rhapsode, who presumably lived around 700 BC. He writes that Saturn seizes power, castrating and overthrowing his father Uranus. However, it was foretold that one day a mighty son of Saturn would in turn overthrow him, and Saturn devoured all of his children when they were born to prevent this. Saturn’s wife, Rhea (often identified with the Roman goddess Ops), hid her sixth child, Jupiter, on the island of Crete, and offered Saturn a large stone wrapped in swaddling clothes in his place; Saturn promptly devoured it. Jupiter later overthrew Saturn and the other Titans, becoming the new supreme ruler of the cosmos. This was the end of the Golden Age of Man. 

January 26, 2011

Vore

Vore
2007
Dimensions: 28 “x 40″
Medium: Stainless steel, epoxy resin plastination of dessicated apple and wood

“…For My flesh is food indeed, and My blood is drink indeed.”

Jesus Christ; John 6:51-58

This sculpture  is a juxtaposition of materials and a minor statement regarding the consuming of high technology (nature) to produce low technology (man-made). We need to look no further than a simple flower growing in the garden to witness technology beyond our understanding. The human machination of destroying one greater resource to produce a quantity of lesser commodities is truly equal to de-evolution (Devo), yet we do it relentlessly and without end. We cannot help ourselves from this lust, it is in our religions, it is in our DNA too apparently.

Had human beings and dinosaurs existed alongside one another, the extinct species would have certainly been systematically slaughtered and used for food and materiel by their human predators. There is no morsel on Earth and beyond that can escape the human desire to conquer, destroy and consume.

To create the web for this piece, I generated a CAD drawing that was then used to create a cutting path for a specialized high temperature laser that could cut stainless steel in the delicate pattern taken directly from a photograph of an orb weaver’s design. It would have been disingenuous for me to try to create a spider’s web of my own design, when the original is a flawless layout created over millions of years of natural evolution.

The part of the sculpture that represent the fragile and withering  human form (biology) was made from dessicated apple flesh dried around a wooden skeleton, made from walnut and hickory branches. The parts were carved at about 200% larger than what they eviscerated to. Two part epoxy resin was then saturated into the dried apple flesh, creating a plastination of the materials. The technique is essentially the same used by the ancient Egyptians to preserve humans and other animals, however, they used natural resins rather than the synthetic epoxy that was used on this. The planned dehydrating of the apple sculpture produced a natural emaciated tautness that would be hard to plan and replicate via traditional sculptural means. It was my study in “planned chaos” using apples much like the american folk tradition of dried apple dolls. Ötzi (the Iceman), a natural mummy found in the German Alps in 1991, was referenced many times to look at where the dessication should be most pronounced. The natural discoloring of the apples and wood along with the glaze from the epoxy coating certainly looked remarkably similar to photos of the frozen corpse.

The piece was hung and observed for four years  to ensure the archival quality had taken effect. Another use of dessicated/plastinated apples can be found in my other 2007 piece The Internet and Ol’ Putrefying Uncle Sam.

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