
Mini-Bio
I am a New Zealand artist, 33 years old, recently relocated to Atlanta, Georgia
with my wife and our new son. (That’s about as mini as it gets)
Education
I am a self-taught artist – my formal art education stopped after what
I think would be the equivalent of your 8th or 9th grade. I don’t feel
that this has hampered me, however as even that early my teacher started me
off on the right track in terms of perceiving things in a creative way. I don’t
think I would have thrived in an Art school situation – my style has developed
from an almost hermit-like avoidance of exposure to any influences other than
those that I felt were important to me. Probably the strongest influence on
me has been the work of Freidenreich Hundertwasser, the Viennese artist and
architect, who made New Zealand his home after finding Austrian values too restrictive.
Gustav Klimt, Paul Klee, Jan Miro have also provided me with insight into where
I wanted to head art-wise, but it has been a long, slow process – developing
internally long before finding an external expression. I don’t think I
would have developed the same perceptive eye that I have (not to say that it
is a better eye, just different), had I been studying in a school). The advice
I most often give people – art students or people who would like to “be
an artist”, is just to start putting some paint down on canvas. To me,
beyond teaching basic skills, this is the primary function of an art school
– to get people to DO IT! If you can look at your work with a critical
analytical eye, then you serve as your own assessment committee.
Past
Exhibitions
I have only started exhibiting in the last couple of years through prodding
from various friends and family, and only since arriving in the U.S. in September
of 2002 have I been painting full-time.
Past exhibitions include ("N.Z."
are all in New Zealand):
· Small Things, Group Exhibition, Waiheke Art Gallery, Waiheke Island,
N.Z. 2001
· Waiheke Friends, Group Exhibition, Mairangi Arts Centre, Auckland,
N.Z. 2002
· Small Things, Group Exhibition, Waiheke Art Gallery, Waiheke Island,
N.Z. 2002
· Sun, Sea and Surf, Group Exhibition and Auction, Waiheke Art Gallery,
Waiheke Island, N.Z. 2002
· Being and Becoming, Group Exhibition, Waiheke Art Gallery, Waiheke
/ Artstation, Auckland, N.Z. 2002
· Art Works Charity Art Exhibition and Auction, Hilton Hotel, Auckland,
N.Z. 2002
· Private Exhibition, Atlanta, Georgia, U.S.A 2003
· Summer Splash, Atlanta, Georgia, U.S.A 2003
Style/Medium
I work in oils in an abstract expressionist style. The random is of most interest
to me. Splinters of broken concrete in the sidewalk, the texture and colour
of a fall of pumpkin skin peelings, the aerial view of a freshly tilled field,
can all suggest a starting point for the kinds of things I'm expressing. I often
begin working with the pallet knife and paint tubes directly on the canvas to
generate colours, shapes and 'moods' that develop from the subconscious. I then
work the piece up from what flows naturally from this initial process. The knife
allows me to lay down broad motifs very quickly, so I can generate a kernel
of an idea that will spark the flow of visual textures. This process is loose,
chaotic and unpredictable. At other times I will work in a much more linear
fashion, working from top to bottom or from the center out, and sometimes from
a drawing that itself was quite loose and expressive. I always feel a struggle
between the chaos of unfettered expression and the logic of formal relationships
between (even abstract) 'objects' within the space of the canvas. For me the
trick is finding the balance between them in each piece. There is an internal
logic specific to each painting. Of course, every painting experience is different
- some more chaotic, some more logical. The trick is to finish the work at the
same level on the continuum that it started on. When working at the most chaotic,
it's virtually a one-step process, as it is very difficult to rework or add
to the painting and still retain the original freedom. When I feel the flow
of expression I like to continue painting until it is spent - working on late
into the night, because the thread I pick up tomorrow morning may not be the
same one I was following tonight, and may in fact sabotage the work that I have
already put in on the canvas. I find it helps me if I maintain a kind of 'detached
attention' when I work, almost a self-hypnosis to let my mind wander where it
will go. My favourite result is the happy accident. If I can find a happy medium
between the crazy and the anal-retentive, I will generally return to the painting
some days or weeks later to refine the expressions I have written. This can
be a very exciting and/or frustrating process, with much standing way back and
gazing sort-of half-focused as well as standing right up close and leering menacingly
at a particular space. There is much wringing of hands and muttering under the
breath in-between brush strokes. Colours will be changed or eliminated entirely,
and frequently the canvas will be rotated many times before I am happy with
its final orientation.
Intention/Meaning
I like an artwork to be something that the viewer can revisit and rediscover
- finding a new area or internal relationship of interest. I intend for my paintings
to be viewed up close as well as far away - it is the relationships between
adjacent areas of the canvas that interest me more than the overall image -
I like to think of the work growing from the detail to the entirety, from the
specific to the general. The end result is always a surprise to me. The greatest
difficulty in working in this way is that I have to find my way around the canvas
almost by feel rather than by sight. Because it's abstract, there is no objective
right or wrong. There is no perspective or shadow. Where then, to place the
next stroke? Philosophically, this is the greyest of grey areas, because it
is only right when it 'feels' right. One of the hardest things to establish
is when to stop. Often a painting that I think is done is reworked several weeks
or even months later, to give more life to the piece or because it just doesn't
seem to 'work'.
I am not generally painting to deliver a particular message, but hope for a work to be uplifting or interesting simply by it's very nature, the presence of paint on canvas. This kind of work can be very difficult for some people – often I hear “I just don’t get it”. It’s not supposed to be inaccessible – indeed I try to make my images pleasing to the eye, but at the same time the viewer does have to just let go and trust in the image before them. This is not to say that there are not things I would like to express more overtly, or am thinking about whilst painting, but expressing it in an accessible way is difficult in an abstract painting. As contemporary artists I feel we have a certain obligation to provide some kind of a moral conscience for society, and this is something I’ll be looking to develop in the future.
Simon Deighton, June
2003