DRAWING LIFE by fred hatt

2010/05/04

We See Differently

Filed under: My Events: Exhibitions — Tags: , , , , , — fred @ 22:52
Poster for “We See Differently” exhibit at CUNY Lehman

If you’ve attended an open life drawing session, not a class where an instructor is steering everyone down a similar path but a practice session for artists of all levels, you’ve probably had the experience of walking around the room on the breaks and noticing how very differently different artists are responding to the same subject.  Everyone is seeing basically the same thing, but one will have bold hard slashing lines and another gentle clouds of color, in one the model will appear serene while in another he looks angry, one will look like a study of classical sculpture and another like an acid hallucination.  It’s a dramatic demonstration of the power of representational art to reveal not just the subject, but the subjectivity of the artist.

Artist Daniel Galas, currently in a graduate program at CUNY’s Lehman College in the Bronx, has curated an exhibit based on that idea.  He organized a free life drawing session, two days with the same model in the same pose, and invited a variety of artists to come to the session and submit their results for a show.  The participants include Lehman art students and artists Daniel met at Spring Studio in Manhattan – the latter category includes me.

The model, Tedra, took a classic angular seated pose, with lighting from both sides and an Indian batik cloth as a backdrop.  Here’s my first of four sketches from the session:

"We See Differently" #1, 2010, drawing by Fred Hatt

In the following example, Lenward Snead captured Tedra’s strong face in profile:

"We See Differently", 2010, drawing by Lenward Snead

Ray Rosario focused on the angular structure of the arms and shoulders and let the face merge into a cloud of light that defines an inky shadow around the body:

"We See Differently", 2010, by Ray Rosario

I got to know Kimchi Kim back in the 1990’s, when she was a regular at my movement drawing sessions.  She’s a specialist in loose and lively gestural figures.  Kim made multiple studies of the model’s feet, curving in opposite directions like the fishlike forms in the Taegeuk or yin-yang diagram.  Kimchi Kim has a solo show opening this month at Spring Studio.

"We See Differently", 2010, by Kimchi Kim

James Horner is an artist and writes about art for the examiner website and his own blog.  I believe the linear shapes in his abstract painting are derived from the model’s pose, but he certainly didn’t feel constrained to restrict himself to a physical depiction!  Nonetheless, the colors and forms here make me feel happy.

"We See Differently", 2010, by James Horner

Daniel Galas, the organizer of the session and its exhibit, was an abstract painter doing cathartic expressions of inner states until he began to feel the need for an external focus in his work, which led him to take up the classic themes of landscape and portrait.  His portraits all feature a certain controlled distortion, but powerfully capture the individuality of his sitters.  They also show a fascination with the textural specifics of pores and blemishes.  Daniel cites El Greco as an inspiration.  To me, his work also evokes the cockeyed psychological realism of Alice Neel.  Here is Daniel’s very large-scale charcoal portrait of Tedra:

"We See Differently", 2010, by Daniel Galas

I did a big face drawing too.  It’s interesting to compare these two larger-than-life heads.  To my eye, Daniel’s head of Tedra has the stony grandeur of an Easter Island moai, whereas mine has a much softer, maybe sad quality.  Notice the difference in the size of the eyes relative to the head.

"We See Differently" #2, 2010, by Fred Hatt

These and many other visions from the same life drawing session will be on view in “We See Differently” in the basement gallery of the Fine Arts Building at CUNY Lehman, 250 Bedford Park Boulevard West in the Bronx.  The opening reception is on Thursday, May 13, 2010, at 5 pm, and the show will remain on view through the Summer.

2010/04/23

Healing Hands at CRS

Filed under: Figure Drawing: Energy,My Events: Exhibitions — Tags: , , , , — fred @ 14:25

Healing Hands #11, 2010, by Fred Hatt

Tonight I’m hanging a new suite of drawings entitled Healing Hands for a solo exhibit at CRS, 123 Fourth Avenue  (between 12th and 13th Streets), NYC, second floor.  The artwork will be on view April 24 through May 26, 2010.  The opening reception will take place ONE WEEK LATER, on Saturday, May 1, from 5:30 to 7:30.  On May 1 only, I will show a large selection of my work, in addition to the Healing Hands series, in the beautiful large dance studio at CRS, and at 6:30 I’ll be publicly interviewed by CRS director Yasuko Kasaki.  Details on the opening are here.

I got involved with CRS several years ago, through their performing arts program, Dharma Road Productions, directed by Christopher Pelham.  Dharma Road and CRS sponsor artists from Japan and other countries working in New York, and have become one of the city’s important presenters of butoh dance, action theater, puppet and clown theater and other forms.  I have studied butoh myself and have a long history of collaborating with dance and experimental theater artists.  Since many of these artists were performing at CRS, I had multiple occasions to work there and to get to know Chris and Yasuko.

Earlier this year, CRS renovated their studios.  They’ve added a full schedule of classes and workshops in dance, exercise and meditation, and they’ve appointed Satomi Kitahara as art gallery director.  I was honored to be asked to be the first artist to exhibit visual art in the beautiful new space.

The mission of CRS has always combined performing arts and visual arts with healing arts.  They host regular meditations and healing circles and provide working spaces for practitioners of various bodywork modalities.  Yasuko invited me to observe and sketch at healing circles, and the energy healers who work at CRS sat in meditation for me while I drew their hands.

Healing Hands #2, 2010, by Fred Hatt

If you’re in or near New York City, please join me at the Healing Hands opening on Saturday, May 1.  Please note, the work is on view starting April 24, but the opening reception is one week later, on May 1, 2010!

I also have two pieces in the exhibit Ten Years of Figureworks, which remains on view through June 6, 2010 at Figureworks in Williamsburg, Brooklyn.

2010/04/06

Figureworks is Ten

Filed under: My Events: Exhibitions — Tags: , , , — fred @ 14:25

"10 Years of Figureworks" postcard, illustration: Arlene Morris, "Untitled", oil on wooden box, 16" x 16" x 4"

Friday, April 9, 2010 is the opening reception for an exhibit celebrating ten years of Figureworks, Brooklyn’s premiere gallery specializing in figurative art.  Figureworks hosts an open life drawing session on Saturday mornings, and I’ve been a regular at those sessions for years.  Gallery director Randall Harris has selected work by ten artists from his diverse stable for an exhibit to celebrate the anniversary.  I’ll have two color drawings in the show, and I’ll be there at the opening between 6 and 9 Friday evening.  Full info at this link.

“10 Years of Figureworks” is curated by Randall Harris.  It will be on view through June 6, 2010 at Figureworks, 168 North 6th Street, Williamsburg, Brooklyn, NY.  The gallery is open Friday through Sunday from 1:00 to 6:00 pm.  Open life drawing session is Saturday morning 10:00 am to 1:00 pm.

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