“I make images of
things that don’t really exist.”
Shane Guffogg
Shane Guffogg
The American abstract artist Shane Guffogg considers himself to be
a figurative painter.
As the 53 year old Guffogg explained to the Haute
Street Muse’s Lana Carlson “Abstraction
is my subject matter, so I think that makes me a realist…Many years ago, I
began wondering what our thoughts look like before language is attached.
That led me to literally begin throwing pieces of ribbons and documenting
how they landed. It was a play on chance that gave a nod to both
Duchamp and the abstract expressionist painters. I then began thinking about
memory as the discourse between the physical and mental, the mind and
body. I wanted to make figurative paintings but didn't want to
tell stories, so my own physicality of mark making became an extension of
my presence at that moment, thus making the work figurative in a pure way.”
Guffogg was
17 when he decided to become an artist.
As a child
he as an avid drawer “in first grade my teacher
plucked me out of the group as the kid who could draw, and the label has
been with me ever since.” After completing high school Guffogg escaped
from the parental exotic bird farm in the Steinbeck country of Central
California to Europe. His meeting up with Rembrandt’s second to last self-portrait
at London’s National Gallery saw the seed sown, a shortly later confrontation with
Leonardo da Vinci’s Last Supper in
Milan and the determination was confirmed.
After obtaining his Bachelor of Fine Arts from The California Institute of
the Arts Guffogg worked as a studio assistant for the pop artist Ed
Ruscha for six years. About whom he has said “Ruscha, who is a friend, always amazes me with
his creative visual inventions, making me see the world around me with
fresh eyes.”
Today all these references influence Guffogg’s work from “The
furrows that stretch from one side of a field to the other
make amazing patterns as you drive down the back country roads” of his
childhood to “the flying colors of the birds that would swirl around my
head when [as a child] I would go into the pens to feed and water them
also played a part in the movement in my work.”
“The marks I make are the result of a dance that is taking place between
my subconscious, my physicality and my conscious observation of that moment,”
he says.
It is a point Guffogg reiterates in his artist’s statement “As
an artist, my job is to revel not what I think I know or even what I know I
know, but what exists in the space between, which is for lack of a better use
of language, a moment of being. Is there such a thing? I think so, I hope so.
Descartes said it so eloquently, ‘I think therefore I am.’”
His exhibition Shane Guffogg: New Paintings is currently on show at Chicago’s Bert Green
Fine Art until the 22 of August. On the 8th of August a
retrospective of Guffogg’s work will be held at The Russian Academy of Fine
Arts Museum in St Petersburg which will remain of show until the 27th of
September.
1 comment:
Fascinating, enlightening. Wonderful post!
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