“A painting, like an intimate relationship, reveals more and more
about the person/painting as time passes.
There is always a mystery to discover.”
Andrew Hart Adler
about the person/painting as time passes.
There is always a mystery to discover.”
Andrew Hart Adler
Being the son of the famed Broadway composer Richard
Adler it is unsurprising that music plays an important part in the work of the
American painter Andrew Hart Adler. An added dimension to aid in his quest to
interact with his audience.
From his early childhood Adler studied both the
violin and piano but it was through the influence of his mother who as well as
being a musician was also a painter that he was introduced to the visual arts
in general and drawing in particular. And it was the visual rather than the
aural that took root.
A two year stint as an assistant to Willem de Kooning
in his early twenties encouraged the painter to blossom.
But Adler’s inherited genetic code, for as well as his father’s
musicality his paternal grandfather was a noted concert pianist, is never far
away from his painting with music having a profound effect on his work in both inspiration
and studio practice.
As he explained in an interview on National
Public Radio’s Judy Carmichael’s Jazz Inspired “Sometimes
I will interpret the music and I will use that as the
point of departure and take what I get from the music and put it into the
painting and then see what someone else will take out of it as the viewer.”
Alder also
uses music whilst working in the studio as a way to recapture the initial mood
of a work over the six to ten weeks it takes to complete.
“Usually I
use it [music] to keep this sort of emotional stability through the period of
time that I’m working,” he said.
And then
there’s music’s contribution to the painting itself.
About which
he says “I see it in crescendos and accents and the way music flows. We don’t
just look at a canvas, especially when it can be on the large side. You have to
go from one side to the other on top of it. I usually structure my canvases
from right to left, but there’s definitely areas where, I leave areas for
people to rest in before they go on to the next place. I do sort of construct
it in such a way, like a piece of music. When I listen to a symphony or jazz or
whatever it maybe it works towards something and then there’s the bridge so you
can collect yourself. And then there’s parts that are more repetitive, the rhythm
changes, whatever. It’s all a language to get inside of you.”
No comments:
Post a Comment