The eXTra finGer

...''He was counting on his fingers.One two three four five six seven eight nine ten eleven.Eleven?Had he been born with an extra finger?''...

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Location: Italy

...& visit my web sites: Claudio Parentela's Official Site ''Claudio Parentela:Contemporary Art with a Freakish Taste!'' Lights&Shadows Disturbing Black Inks http://www.myspace.com/claudioparentela

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Saturday, November 25, 2006

Interview with Robert Craig

Q) So, can you tell me a little about yourself? Full name, age, some background info, etc?
A)My full name is Robert Emmett Craig Jr. My age is somewhere between 1 and 100.

Q)How did you get started making art?

A)Some of my teachers in the first grade suggested to my parents that I find a tutor. I did just that and wound up staying with him for 10 years

Q)How would you describe your art?

A)Crap.

Q)Where do you get the inspiration for your art?

A)I don't know. I rarely look at anybody else's work lest it influence me in any way. I simply see pictures in my mind and then I paint them. Something may spark my imagination, such a toy, a photograph, a Comic book, a waffle, a vacuum cleaner, whatever, but most of it comes out of my head. I may see a single image, let's say a refrigerator. It's just such a wonderful image that I can build a painting out of that one object.

Q)What are you working on now?

A) I'm working on a 30x40" canvas of a cowgirl and a waffle.

Q)Are there some web sites that you would like to recomend? Artists, art communities, xxx,...!?

A)I'd recommend Jason D'Aquino, Amanda Wachob, Travis Louie, and Cam De Leon. I really don't look at other peoples sites very much. I live inside my own head.

Q)What's your favorite medium to work in, and why?

A)Acrylic. Because I just started to fall into it over the years. I'd really like to go back to oils but I'm too lazy.

Q) What advice would you give to younger up and coming artist?

A)Get a job you hippie freak!!! Aside from that, You can't make it for the love of money, and you can't make it for want of fame. The art game is a lot of hard work and sweat, so you have to love the sweat. Genius won't get it. The streets are littered with intellectual derelicts.Talent won't do it. The term 'Starving Artist' is so common, its become part of our vernacular.The one virtue that surpasses all others is 'PERSISTENCE'. Set a goal for yourself and don't stray or get sidetracked. Keep after that goal as if it were the holy grail. You will be discouraged from time to time, this is normal but don't quit!

Q)What is your personal definition of life and art and everything else in between?

A)I don't really ever think about life. I mean the profound stuff like where did we come from? What are we supposed to be doing here. Why are we here? Where Do we go after this? Is there a master plan behind all of this joy and suffering? Is there a God or gods?I did my seeking for the answers to all of this and now I have no more questions. About art.....I think the less said the better. But a good painting should hit you in the face like a hammer. For me, that takes skills like having a feel for composition, use of color, good rendering, accurate perspective, strong lighting, All the old school stuff. An example of someone who uses all this information would be Frank Frazetta.

Q)Take us inside your process a little bit. How do you begin a piece? What inspires the concept?
A)I never know where I'll find inspiration. It's actually there all the time. It's state of mind I'm in that can perceive everything as art. Usually, I can get off on a small figurines. I just bought a book on cookie jars that's chock full of inspiration.

Q)What are your artistic influences?

A) Like I said, Most of this stuff just comes to me without any effort on my part. I have a pretty good size toy collection that sometimes inspires me and music. When I hear Steve Vai really shredding his guitar, all sorts of wonderful images come to me.But as I said, it can come from thin air. Lots of good stuff comes to me right when I'm about to drift off to sleep. I have to get up get up a dozen times to make sketches and notes.

Q)How are the reactions on your work in general?

A)They're great. I get an abundance of praise. Every now and then I get one of these two exclamations : 'Holy shit!' or 'Oh my god!" I like being able to please people and bring some joy into this Mansonesque tsunami of woe.

Q)What are you doing when you are not creating art?

A)I grapple with giant squids. I usually pace back and and forth thinking about painting and before I know it I'm taking photos and gathering reference for the next piece. I do go to the bookstore occasionally, and I love sound equipment so I spend a lot of time playing with the floor models. I also love hunting for DVDs There are some movies that are literally 'moving pictures' They're art and I can see many times.

Q)What are some of the greatest challenges that you think artists face today?

A)How to make it financially ( have a job) and still be prolific. Another thing is that now, EVERYONE is an artist so there's more competition. And for Christ's sake, LEARN HOW TO DRAW!! I mean that in the traditional academic sense. Go to the museums. There's so much more to be learned from them than there is in School. Another thing is to start early like 5 or 6 years old.
Q)What is freedom to you as an artist?

A)Being able to wake up when I want and then paint what I please all day. I don't have to labor over anyone else's ideas. There's no one around to tell me what to do or when or how to do it. I do MY paintings. When I walk down the street, it's MY street. I own it, and everything around it.

Q) Are there any particular works you've done that stand out as your favorites?else's

A)Yes. I liked my 'ascension 2' and 'jinxs' quandary'

Q)Last Books you read?

A) The Shameful Life of Salvador Dali.

Q) Last records you bought?

A) 'Elusive Light and Sound' Steve Vai!!

Q)Who are your favourite artists & Your favourite galleries?

A) I guess my all time favorite artist is Michelangelo. I love Salvadore Dali. And in my genre, I'd have to say that Ron English really trips my trigger. There's so many more but those 3 really knock me out. I really don't get out to the galleries much (too political, hot and sweaty and loud) but here in NY, I like the Fuse. Overseas, I like the Birten Toublanc Galerie in Paris.

Q)Which do you think make good art good? originality, or style? And, why?

A)I think they should walk hand in hand, But I'm more impressed by style. I've seen some stuff that was totally original and it totally sucked. And I've seen mediocre concepts that shine out because they were well crafted. A good example would be that Don Eddy paints a bowl of fruit. Chuck Close paints a head. Heads and fruit aren't to exciting in themselves but for me, it's I could stare at them for hours because of the skill involved.I like realism and strength, good composition, great rendering, great sense of color I like a painting that shoots me in the face.


Q)Do you get emotionally attached to your work and do you miss your work when it is sold?
A) Sometimes, yes. I was going to say It's like losing ac child. But I DID lose my only child so selling a painting hurts just a little less by comparison.

Q)Your contacts….E-mail…links

Tuesday, November 21, 2006

Interview with Dana Carlson

Q)So, can you tell me a little about yourself? Full name, age, some background info, etc?

A)I’m 35. I grew up in Iowa but I’ve lived in Brooklyn for the last 10 years or so.

Q)How did you get started making art?

A)I was REALLY into finger paint and lite brite as a kid. My parents enrolled me in an adult drawing class at a hobby and craft store when I was in second grade. There I learned to draw from magazine and calendar cutouts – puppies in paper bags, kittens in a basket, that kind of thing. It was all about shading.

Q)How would you describe your art?

A)Painting. Hybrid-paintings? Dreamy absurd poetic dorky.

Q)Who is your biggest influence, both art and non-art related

A)I don’t really know how to answer this. Influences come and go. When I was younger my art professors were a huge influence – mostly in making sense of how to be an artist, how to think. I spent a winter at an isolated art residency with a group of artists and writers right after undergraduate school when I was very young. That experience was very influential – the friends I made and what we talked about, watching their approaches to art-making, living the artist-life (whatever that means). The other artists there were a little older and wiser and I took a lot from that time.

Q) How do you approach the creation of a new piece... how does everything come together?

A)I work in a very spur of the moment way and I try not to get too hung up about “ideas.” I just need a general starting point and/or a vague outline of what I want to do. If it stays to the plan is beside the point. I just keep going.

Q)What's your favorite medium to work in, and why?

A)I’m really into combining materials so I can’t say I have a favorite - but acrylic ink is really nice.

Q) What is your favourite art related web site?

A) http://edwardwinkleman.blogspot.com
http://Paintersnyc.blogspot.com



Q) Is your work all hand done? Or do you use any computer tools to help out?

A)Hand done all the way.

Q)What, in your opinion, are the best and worst places to exhibit artwork?

A)Besides gallery venues I really enjoy going to see other artists’ work in their studios or seeing it as part of a collection in somebody’s apartment or home.
Seeing artwork at an art fair can be really depressing – like products at a high-end Target or something.

Q) I'm always interested in where an artist finds their inspiration. Where do you find yours?

A)I don’t know if it’s really about inspiration per se for me. It’s more about making the next thing, refining the questions and looking for a different solution. You know, trying to find out something new and not be boring.

Q)How are the reactions to your work in general?

A)Some people can’t deal with the crafty stuff and I have a particular way of putting things together that’s a little spastic. I have heard that it can take some getting used to. Little kids usually like it a lot.



Q) What are you doing when you are not creating art?

A)Ugh. Working to make money! Doing life stuff – going out – art and non-art related stuff, lots of concerts, openings, reading, yoga. I’m really into my garden too.

Q)What are some of the greatest challenges that you think artists face today?

A)Art vs. work vs. life. It’s hard to make it all work. Also, strangely, I think it can be hard for some artists to find their community. There are so many artists out there but most of us work day jobs and are so busy that it can get isolating. At 35 I feel like only in the last 5 years have I really found my own art community. It took a long time.

Q) Do you believe that a person is born with a talent to produce art or can anyone be taught?

A)It’s less about talent and more about will. A person that needs to make art will make it. Anyone can be taught - but drive and ambition have to be there to keep it going.

Q) Are there any particular works you've done that stand out as your favorites?

A)Oh I don’t know. The last thing I made is usually the favorite.



Q) What are some current/upcoming projects you are working on or excited about?

A)I’m going to be in a couple of group shows coming up in December and February both of which I am looking forward to. Also I’m working on a commissioned piece for a band’s new album coming out soon.

Q) What advice would you give to younger up and coming artist?

A)Look at art. Be super honest with yourself – ask hard questions. From my own experience I had to realize not to work so hard (at art). I had to learn to lighten up. Grace is involved, you know?

Q) Who are your favourite artists & Your favourite galleries?

A)I feel lucky to know so many amazing artists here in the city that my list would be way too long naming them all. Let’s see… from art history: Philip Guston, Van Gogh, Florine Stettheimer, Egon Scheile, Titian, Tiepolo, William Blake, deKooning, Kandinsky. (I could go on and on here as well)
The last Albert Oehlen show at L.Augustine was amazing.



Q) Do you need others to tell you they like it before you feel validated?

A)Everyone needs some validation – but it can come in lots of ways – not just from sales or reveiws. You have to be pretty tough to continue to make work so the less validation you need the better… I’ve certainly gotten a lot tougher and have put the whole art endeavor into perspective as I’ve gotten older.

Q)Tell us a little about some of the different types of jobs you've had over the years, before/while doing what you do now. For someone who is starting out in art, how would you recommend they go about making a career out of it?

A)Don’t make a career out of it - -Unless you are really built for self-promotion or independently wealthy. (sorry) To be lucky enough to have art be your full means of support is amazing but I think it’s best to not expect that going in. Make art for the art. If you get to live off your work that’s great. Aim high but for the right reasons. Making good work is the most important thing.
I was a waitress for years. I’ve worked for artists a little too. These days I do freelance web production work, coding and such. I prefer to do something not art-world related for money so that my time in the studio is like a different world.

Q)Your contacts….E-mail…links

A) http://danacarlson.com









Wednesday, November 15, 2006

Interview with Andrew James Jones

Q) You in 1…2…3 … In how many words you want…

A)Made of mud.

Q) Do you remember the first draw you made?

A)No not really I have always been drawing as long as I can remember.

Q) What is your favourite thing to draw and why?

A)I don’t have a favourite thing to draw as such but saying that I do keep returning to the idea of the figure.

Q) Other artists do you like…?

A)Brueghel, Goya, William Hogarth, James Gillray, James Ensor, Paul Klee, Philip Guston, Robert Crumb, the Chapman brothers, David Shrigley, Marc Bell, Seth Scriver, Inka Essenhigh

Q) Who and/or …What are some of your inflences?

A)Outsider art is a major interest of mine and I think it informs a lot of my work.

Q) In these days you’re working on…Your current projects…

A)I am involved in the setting up and running of a temporary art shop that goes under the name of Splinter.
www.myspace.com/randomsplinter



Q) What kind of music do you like and do you listen…And is the music important for your art…?

A)At the moment I am listening to a lot of blue grass and traditional Irish music, I think that I pick up on certain themes that exist within some of the music; its importance to the work can fluctuate.

Q)What is creativity for you?

A)The ability to question a subject or object in a way that changes it into something new.

Q) Favourite books?

A)Kafka, Bukowski and I have an audio book of under milk wood by Dylan Thomas which I think is incredible.

Q) What’s your favourite medium to work on?

A)The medium I work most in is ink on paper but I don’t have a particular favourite, it’s what circumstance dictates and what’s available to hand at a particular time.



Q) What else you’re interested in besides visual arts?

A)Not a lot to be honest as I find I find the process of my work and the world that informs it a full time occupation

Q)Got any projects planned…?

A)I am currently working on a new book that should be out in January.

Q)How would you describe your art to someone who could not to see it?

A)Its the clashing together of many opposing factors instigating the idea of the grotesque, but because it resides in the world of visual art you really do have to see it.



Q) What do you fear most?

A)Bees on toast

Q)What is your greatest ambition?

A)To be able to keep working.

Q)How importanti is self-promotion for an artist nowadays?

A)It’s something you have to do, the world is absolutely saturated with artists and no one is going to come to you.



Q)A message for the readers from your heart…

A)Not my words but I agree-
“natural guts defeating natural talent that’s the best”

Q)Your contacts…e-mail…links…

A) www.stolenideas.com
www.myspace.com/andrewjamesjones
info@stolenideas.com

Interview with Albert Hofer

(Art by Mirko Smerdel)

Q)So, can you tell me a little about yourself? Full name, age, some
background info, etc?

A)My name is Albert Hofer, I was born in Florence in 1979, and I lived there up until the age of 18; I used to throw small parties and I used to DJ in local clubs and in a few other clubs of the centre-north of Italy. I also worked on a local radio (Nova Radio) for a year: during this period I became more and more involved with the ‘other side’ of the music scene, promoting, booking, organizing…
I moved to London in 1998 to study Criminology. I finished my degree in 2001, and started pondering upon the possibility of quitting DJing (my deafness would have never allowed me to progress much, I realized) and take on more and more seriously the task of working with music ‘behind the scenes’.
From 2001 to 2003 I worked together with three other good friends on a project called “Scar-Tissue” that was based on the idea of creating a mixed environment merging art and entertainment, a ‘club-night with a twist’ to put it down in a few words. Under the name Scar-Tissue we organized two big events in Florence which were very successful, and allowed me to connect to the local underground art-scene. In the meantime I finished my Master degree in Cultural Studies and became more and more interested with doing research focusing on the body and its most radical forms of transformation: butchery.
Then came Channel 83, the empirical counterpart to my academic research project (PhD), and my first solo-project ever. Channel 83 is closely linked to my previous projects but represents, from my point of view, a step forward from a theoretical standpoint: I moved farther and farther away from the discourses focusing on body-modification to embrace a different approach towards the body and the wound, one that did not necessarily link the process of transforming one’s body to the idea of adornment.
Since then, Channel 83 has become my main focus: under this name I am pursuing different projects, such club-nights, events, exhibitions, etc. Channel 83 is first and foremost a website (
www.channel83.co.uk), an ‘archive of wounds’ acting as platform for those who wish to bring forth a discussion of the concept of wound in its most contemporary incarnations, but also works as booking agency and promotes the people (artists, DJs, performers, etc) involved in the development of the project. All the different aspects pertaining to Channel 83 work alongside, organically contributing to the development of one other.

Q)What is creativity for you?

A)Something very precious and rare: it’s the sparkle in a person’s life. People who aren’t very creative and active are generally quite uninteresting to my eyes.

Q)What is your personal definition of life and art and everything else in
between?

A)In life I look for nearly-fatal collisions, car crashes, somewhat ‘violent’ encounters putting me in contact with new people, situations, experiences. I am not much of a careful person when it comes to my passions, I need very strong emotions/affects, and I tend to pay the price for my being reckless. I need things that, to put it in Franko B’s words, ‘make my heart go boom boom’ - that’s what I actively look for every day.
To an artwork I ask precisely this same thing: a fist in the face, something that pierces through my chest and provokes a strong reaction, another car crash. Emotions.
Apart from this aspect that I have just described (and that I deem essential to any artwork) I am totally unconcerned with determining what art is.

(Art by Killnoir)

Q)What is your objective and purpose in life?

A)I would be content with producing something that is valuable and with learning as much as I can about myself through others. Find the car crash, get the scars, then look back at yourself: who are you? Your body has the answer. You can probably tell by my first few responses above that I am a Sagittarius. Hahahaha!

Q)Do you think that art is a universal language - transcending all the
different languages, cultures and religions etc?

A)Yes, but only to a limited extent.
Art, as for every other element constituting ‘culture’ has an universal character, capable of transmitting emotions in a way that, for example, language is unable to do; in order for us to decently understand a language and ‘relate’ to it we need to be familiar with its grammar, some of the language’s words, the rules regulating its use, while art is more direct…something always pierces through, independently from any knowledge on behalf of the viewer of the elements behind the artwork.
But we should not forget that art has a cultural element too, and that we shouldn’t look at it through a romantic standpoint: it is not an universal language, it is a language with some universal elements, maybe. A piece by Damian Hirst, for example, is as far as you can get from being universal, it is actually very bound to the period during which it has been produced, and the cultural undertones regulating the art-market at the time.
Then again, I am not sure whether ‘being universal’ is at all something that art should necessarily aim to be…

Q)What are your current projects?

A)Right now (November 2006) my main focus is finishing the new version of Channel 83’s website. This will probably require another six weeks of work: the ‘new’ Channel 83 will be much more interactive than its previous incarnation, both the artists and the users will be allowed a direct participation to the development of some aspects of the projects; I am really excited about it, I invested an eye and a leg in this new website and I hope people will take the chance to contribute to Channel 83 actively.
Meanwhile, I fly to London on November the 10th to work with Kaos, who hosts the after-show to Ron Athey’s new piece at Chelsea Theatre; Franko B will be DJing at the party and Channel 83’s video (which - it is worth adding this once more – features your work too, Claudio) will be on rotation during his DJ set.
On the 2nd of December I finally have a chance to work again in my new ‘hometown’ Berlin, as my video “Channel 83 Presents: An Archive of Wounds” is featured at the Boheme Noir event, a yearly party with a very mixed line-up and crowd.
The Italian launch party for the new Channel 83 website will take place in Florence (C/O Ambasciata di Marte) just before Christmas (on 22nd of December), hopefully it’s going to be quite interesting and intimate, with all the friends and contributors of the project showing up to have a good time.
Finally, I am working on the first proper Channel 83 party in Berlin, I can’t say so much about this at the moment, it will probably happen around February. And after that, I am planning to do a very big event in Italy for Easter, and then to start the production of another video to be finished by the end of next year.
As you can see I am on fire at the moment, but I am happy with being busy after a pretty average summer where so much was meant to happen and it just didn’t. 2006 was a terrible year for me.

Q)What artists, musicians, or writers inspire you?

A)Specifically, Channel 83 has been inspired by the work of people like J G Ballard, Nobuyoshi Araki, Romain Slocombe, David Cronenberg, Trevor Brown, Kiki and LouLou Picasso, Hans Bellmer, Georges Bataille, Gilles Deleuze, Antonin Artaud, Shinja Tsukamoto, Antoine Bernhart, Franko B, Ron Athey...this list could go on and on.

(Art by Cristiana Romani)

Q)Do you have many connections in the underground scene?

A)Yes, indeed, especially in Italy.
I started working as promoter in Florence (my hometown) where pretty much everything is based on the underground; there is virtually no contemporary art-scene, and a very poor mainstream club-scene, so that I found myself relating nearly exclusively to the underground while pursuing my own projects there.
I am not into the idea of ‘keeping it underground’ though, the whole ‘staying true’ thing is just propaganda and it misses the point, lacking a knowledge of what is the actual reality experienced by those who work with art/culture full-time and need to see their work rewarded.
I am underground (if you want to put it in these terms) merely because I didn’t have the luck and the capacities to establish myself on another level yet. I have worked a lot on a non-profit basis, out of passion, with the help of like-minded people, and that has helped me establishing interesting connections, friendships that have proved precious to me once I started working on bigger projects: some people appreciate those who are passionate about their work and are happy to help a little, however one has to count first and foremost on his/her own forces.
That said, I am looking forward to moving on, finally receiving some recognition for my work, maybe earning a little too, so as to be able to invest money in new projects without ruining my finances (as I am doing at the moment). Is that possible? Who knows…

Q)Tell us about a recent dream you had.

A)I very seldom remember my dreams nowadays. Generally I remember the most horrible ones only. I tend to dream about being chased by rabid dogs, about work (yes I do dream of people telling me that the Channel 83 website is down…how sad is that?) and sex. I am a very average person in that respect, I guess.

Q)After establishing your love for art, what different inspirations fueled
your creative energy?

A)I find inspiration in cinema (my favorite directors are Cronenberg, Tsukamoto, Kitano, Hartley, Haneke, Mimouni, Lynch, Chabrol, Noe’, Pasolini, the early Avati), books (though I don’t have much time to read nowadays, sadly), from traveling (and I am always moving these days) and especially from meeting people. I have some very talented friends who are extremely passionate about what they do…having conversations with them often makes me feel inspired to pursue my own projects.
Images are also essential to me, as a friend said to me a long while ago: “you and me are way more characterized by the images we like than by the music we listen to” – absolutely spot on!

Q)What is your definition of the type of work you do?

A)It is actually very hybrid.

I guess I should answer that, first of all, I am an academic: Channel 83 started indeed as a research platform (as part of my PhD thesis, actually), then evolved into a more complex kind of project which requires me to work also as promoter of events and as agent for some of the people involved in the development of its various incarnations.
I scout for people who work around the theme of the body and of wounds, I showcase their work, in some instances I produce them in order for them to create new pieces attuned to my project, and I try to help them connect with other realities which may have an interest in setting-up collaborations with both them and myself.

Q)What kind of projects/shows have you been involved in?

A)Too many to mention in here, so I’ll just pick a few …
On the 11th of September 2004 I organized a 12 hour long marathon dedicated to wounds called “Every Eye is a Hole – A Coronation of Wounds”, the event took place in Florence and saw the participation of approximately 2000 people, with contribution from several local artists and some of the most interesting artists of the Italian underground scene.
In June 2005 I came back to Florence for Channel 83’s second major event “Errata Corpora – Bodies Against Nature”: this time I managed to gather International artists coming from allover the world, we had contributions from Sweden, Ecuador, Greece, Usa, etc. This event expanded the discussion started with the previous one, considering the idea of ‘wrong bodies’ rather than focusing on ‘wounded bodies’ only.
In Winter 2005 I produced the video “Channel 83 Presents – An Archive of Wounds”: this is a video showcasing the progress of the project by displaying works of 33 of its contributors, artists both established and up and coming based allover the world. This work was developed with the help of Mass_Prod, a very intriguing audio/visual project that has been working with me for a long while; Mass_Prod provided me with an original score composed of unreleased material, and took care of the montage and part of the production of the video. This work has been doing pretty well, having been shown approximately 20 times up until now in clubs, festivals, galleries allover Europe.
In May 2006, together with 3 other Italian promoters, I set-Up “E-Day: Mixed Media Festival” – Channel 83 hosted one of the four rooms presenting Mass_Prod latest audio/visual live PA together with videos from Iternational video artists and a performance by MiArtformers.


(Art by Matt Sesow)

Q)Music is always vital when doing work, what tunes get your creative
juices flowing?

A)As a promoter, I mostly work with the techno/electro/minimal-techno scene. Lately I have started catering for the indie/rock n roll scene too, it depends a lot upon where I am working…obviously I love all these different styles and listen to each one of them a lot. But I am always looking for new DJs and bands to work with, so that I like to keep myself pretty open to what is fresh music-wise.
I admit that have a pretty a weird taste in music, my favorite artists sound quite different the one from the other…I could mention so many names: Massimo Volume, Death in June, The Hole, Depeche Mode, Franco Battiato, Maximo Park, Die Form, El Muniria, We are Scientists, Pizzicato Five, Massive Attack, Basteroid, In the Nursery, The Organ, Dave Clarke, The Editors, Therapy?, Metope, Ellen Allien, The Knife, Grauzone, ecc...
At the moment I am obsessed with a Swedish band called Peter, Bjorn & John who has a very gentle, retro’ and naïf sound. I also recommend an instrumental project called 65 Days of Static which I find highly original. I tend to have short-lived crushes music-wise, but very intense ones: I can listen to the same song over and over for days.
If I am setting-up an event I prefer to listen to fast tunes which keep me active. Techno is good, rock ‘n’ roll does it too: basically to do this kind of work I need a beat. If I have to write, instead, I listen to more chilled out songs, either minimal techno (DJ mixes suit the purpose of keeping my concentration high, as they flow with no interruption), or acoustic things.
My Ipod contains every kind of music, from Carla Bruni to Skinnyman, Nicholas Lens, Brutal Truth and Carcass. There is no logic to what I like; I like pop and I like underground stuff too. My favorite band is totally ‘cult’ material: Massimo Volume. They are to Italians what Marmite is to the English: “love it or hate it”. Most people seem to detest them unfortunately. I love their music to bits, especially the lyrics written by Emidio Clementi, who is also one of the writers I admire the most.

Q)What does music, in its entirety, mean to you?

A)The same as art, cinema, literature: something that evokes and provokes.

Q)Please tell us a bit of your interest about the body, the
wounds, etc..where and how was this interest born?

A)I have always found the idea of transforming one’s body fascinating and, I would say, compelling. I like to change and I am similarly fascinated by those who frequently change their look, demeanor, interests, style.

When I was younger I used to look at the idea of implementing a radical transformations of the body as something that could be mainly achieved through adornment or body-modification practices, now I prefer to focus on the potential of more subversive and seductive approaches towards the same, as for wounding.

Q)Do you think the body is changing…evolving?

A)I think the word ‘evolution’ is often inappropriate. I believe that the body changes, by nature, constantly, and that this movement towards metamorphosis is what life is really about. But change doesn’t necessarily mean progress: decay is a form of change too. The wounded bodies that I speak of are all subject to this urge towards transforming themselves, but the transformation takes place by virtue of butchery, of wounds. The future of the body – so to speak – is not necessarily located in a ‘cyberpunk body’, it could be the transgender/queer body, the abject body, the sick body. It is bound to technology only as much as it is bound to culture and guts. The body has its own future hidden in the visceras.

(Art by Yuri D)

Q)Are you religious. What do you think about religions?

A)There is an element of spirituality in me, but no, I wouldn’t say that I am religious. Actually I think nowadays it is becoming obvious that religions crossover with politics way too often, and that they are very dangerous because of that. I have received a Catholic education but I am by no means a Catholic.

Q)Is there, in your opinion, a strong influence & relationship today between art & death?

A)I see a strong connection between art and violence, more visible than the one you were referring to, with the former dealing more and more often with the latter; contemporary art is very concerned with portraying violence and its many facets: art often deals with issues that are actual, and violence is a very important component of our daily life, I reckon. I don’t think our lives are more violent than our grandparent’s ones, but I am very interested in the fact that our generation is so obsessed with preventing victimization, and deal with violence in an hysteric way. Funny enough, artists who, just like you, have a violent element to their content, seem to experience a disproportionate following paired with an equal hostility surrounding their work.

Q)Your contacts.

A)Albert Hofer can be contacted at:
channel83@gmail.com ,
info@channel83.co.uk

Channel 83’s website (new version online from end of December 2006) can be found here:
www.channel83.co.uk


Thank you so much Claudio.

Monday, November 13, 2006

Interview with Andy Jordan


Q)So, can you tell me a little about yourself? Full name, age, some background info, etc?

A)I am Andrew Robert Jordan. I'm 27. I live in Brooklyn, New York and work in NYC doing freelance art, design, costume/fashion/theater work.I grew up in Akron, Ohio. I did my BFA studies in Columbus Ohio at the Columbus College of Art and Design and earned my MFA from the Cranbrook Academy of Art in Bloomfield Hills outside of Detroit,Michigan. In school I focused on photography and sculpture.

Q)How did you get started making art?

A)The first spark that I remember was when I was about 3 or 4 years oldat my Grandmother's house. We couldn't sleep one night so we sat at the kitchen table and drew together on paper towels. Grandma encouraged me and showed me that it was ok for grownups to doodle and dream.Art has basically been intuitive for me for as long as I can remember.

Q)How would you describe your art?

A)I consider what I do to be figurative sculpture. Curious, restless,experimental, sometimes psychological, sometimes metaphoric, body obsessed, cuddly yet slightly perverse, oh wait, I'm describing myself...

Q)Where do you get the inspiration for your art?

A)The ongoings, artifacts, and narratives of Planet Earth.

Q)What are you working on now?

A)I'm making an outfit for a friend and planning a group of wearable pieces based on crustaceans and mollusks. Right now exactly - I'm drawing an octopus.

Q) How do you approach the creation of a new piece... how does everything come together?

A)It depends on what I am doing. Most of the time I do lots of drawings.I like to think things out that way. Some reading and research if needed. Experiment with materials and then dive in. Often I try a new process and or materials so I have to learn as I go. I learned to crochet when I made a 22 foot gown out of polypropylene. I probably should have taught myself by making a scarf with yarn...nah, starting with inch think hooks and plastic twine is the best way to learn.

Q) What's your favorite medium to work in, and why?

A)I seem to always work with the figure... At the moment performance and photography are key. As for a specific medium I've always been drawn to materials that are synthetic - plastic, PVC, rubber, vinyl. There is something about them, a sterilized kink, that I enjoy.



Q) Do you collect anything?

A)Art books. Photographs - I always have a camera with me. Fabrics and miscellaneous materials.

Q) Is your work all hand done? Or do you use any computer tools to help out?

A)For some of my photography pieces I use the computer. Some are completely assembled from parts into digital collages.I'm a hands on type though, I like to get dirty and work with objects.

Q) What, in your opinion, are the best and worst places to exhibit artwork?

A)It's really subjective. Context is important. Different pieces require different exhibition spaces. At the moment, for me, galleries and stages seem too safe. I'm thinking about guerilla action and more experiments with the underground art scene... if there is one to be found...

Q) What are your artistic influences?

A)Skilled Costume Design - like English women's garments from the 19th century and earlier, and contemporary haute couture.Science Fiction / Cyberpunk Experiencing other peoples ideas and creativity always excites me.



Q) How are the reactions on your work in general?

A)I like viewer participation... or rather consider viewers participants. I think people enjoy this. And if you are in my life chances are I will incorporate you into something- dressing you up,asking you to perform, collaborate, pose... I like to think my friends appreciate the process and my assimilation of them.Also people tend to like fashion-esque things, even when they are bad.Some of my early figurative stuff was a tad dark and I still have an interest in "black beauty." That work brings the most obvious knee-jerk reactions.

Q) What are you doing when you are not creating art?

A)Running around the city, reading, playing on the internet (I'm addicted to Wikipedia and flickr.) I like movies. And I have a new kitten named Norman. We like spending time together.

Q)What are some of the greatest challenges that you think artists face today?

A)I think there is an overwhelming belief that creativity is dead... or rather that creativity is recycling with a new spin. I do not think these things are true.

Q) What is freedom to you as an artist?

A)A friend once asked me to list 5 things that represent the "goodlife.". I think they apply here in thinking about artistic freedom.
1- Self actualization
2- Having the opportunity and ability and perhaps encouragement to dream.
3- Not only dreaming but acting on, striving for, and attaining those dreams
4- Finding support in others, sharing dreams5- Maintaining momentum



Q) Are there any particular works you've done that stand out as your favorites?

A)Yes. The pieces that seem to me to be break throughs, raw and unexpected.Some of my early photo-masks,The Polymorphous Perversity Suit,the 2Fashion body of work

Q) What it the coolest thing you have seen recently while wandering the streets?

A)Well it was actually on the subway. A few weeks back my roommate and I sat next to a young woman on the train wearing a unique black and white blouse and tight black pants. She had with her a large trunk.She opened it up and rummaged through it's contents, withdrawing a little tray with a mirror and makeup. She pulled her hair into pig tails. She began to apply the makeup - making her face completely white, with small red heart lips, some black eyeliner accents, and red dots on her checks. After a few stops she exited the subway as a mime.And the Halloween Parade was last week in NYC. That's always impressive. I think NYC is the goblin capital of the world.

Q) Do you carry a notebook? Do you draw in public?

A)Yes. I have a special book for subway drawings and random ideas that must be remembered. My camera is very important to me also.



Q) Who are your favourite artists & Your favourite galleries?

A)Artists:Hans Bellmer, Louise Bourgeois, Leigh Bowery, Rei Kawakubo, AlexanderMcQueen, Issey Miyake, Julie Taymor
Art Spaces:P.S.1 ( http://www.ps1.org/ ),Brooklyn Museum ( http://www.brooklynmuseum.org/ ),New Museum ( http://www.newmuseum.org/ ),Dia: Beacon and Chelsea ( http://www.diacenter.org/ ),The Met ( http://www.metmuseum.org/ )

Q) Do you get emotionally attached to your work and do you miss yourwork when it is sold?

A)I try not to. I try to make as much stuff as possible so that there is no room in my mind or apartment to hold on too long.

Q)Your contacts..E-mail.links

A)andytoad@gmail.com
www.andyjordan.net
http://www.myspace.com/andytoad

Sunday, November 12, 2006

Interview with Michael Kerbow

Q) So, can you tell me a little about yourself? Full name, age, some background info, etc?

A)Michael Kerbow. 42 years. Born and raised in typical suburban fashion on the east coast of the US. Attended college in Richmond, Virginia. Received my MFA from Pratt Institute in NYC. I lived in NY for a number of years and began exhibiting my art there in a few group shows.. In 1993 a job offer brought me to San Francisco where I have lived ever since. Still trying to keep the art thing happening.


Q) How did you get started making art?

A)I'm told I would smash my peas into a green paste and smear it around on my high chair as a baby. It's been downhill ever since.


Q)How would you describe your art?

A)Beautifully repulsive.


Q) Where do you get the inspiration for your art?

A)Everywhere, all the time. I just experience the world I am immersed in.



Q) What are you working on now?

A)I often work on several projects simultaneously. Right now I probably have over a dozen works going on simultaneously. The main theme tends to be about the environment and man's impact upon it.


Q) How do you approach the creation of a new piece... how does everything come together?

A)A majority of the time I sketch ideas in my journal. Sometimes the ideas come to me in dreams. The finished artwork rarely resembles these original sketches however. I find it is wiser to allow the artwork the freedom to evolve during the creative process. I just wait for the moment when I feel ready to attack the painting and jump right in working. Every once in a while stepping back to see what is going on and study what it is trying to tell me.


Q)What's your favorite medium to work in, and why?

A)I like drawing with pencil or charcoal but it doesn't always satisfy me. It tends to be too facile. I like the challenge of painting with oils and watercolor. I really have to struggle to make the medium do what I want so that when I succeed I feel a sense of accomplishment.


Q) Do you collect anything?

A)Books. I tend to buy a lot of art books. And I have a modest library of old medical books.


Q) Is your work all hand done? Or do you use any computer tools to help out?

A)All by hand. I use the computer exclusively for my day job which is photo-retouching & illustration for print advertising. When it comes to making art I prefer to work with tactile media that I can hold and manipulate with my hands. It allows for a more visceral experience.




Q) What, in your opinion, are the best and worst places to exhibit artwork?

A)If the point of creating art is to share it with the world then I suppose any opportunity to show one's work is good. It helps if it is a place where people are going to be receptive to looking at art.


Q) What are your artistic influences?

A)I am fascinated by things that can be beautiful and repulsive at the same time. There is an interesting dynamic created when something can draw you in and simultaneously push you away.
Rot, decay, patina, meat, nature, organic forms.


Q) How are the reactions on your work in general?

A)My work tends to have a "dark" sensibility which some people may shy away from. But those who enjoy my work are often drawn to its dark humor and the imagery. If I'm able to create an emotional reaction in the viewer, whether positive or negative, then I've accomplished something.


Q) What are you doing when you are not creating art?

A)Nothing exciting. Either sleeping, eating, or at my job.




Q)What are some of the greatest challenges that you think artists face today?

A)I think they would be almost universally financial in nature. Probably the toughest challenge any artist faces is figuring out a way to support his or herself in a way that allows the greatest amount of time and energy to make art.

Q) What is freedom to you as an artist?

A)Having the physical means and the motivation to create.


Q) Are there any particular works you've done that stand out as your favorites?

A)On average my favorite work is usually the one I have just completed.


Q) What it the coolest thing you have seen recently while wandering the streets?

A)I'm partial to when I come across places where Mother Nature tries to keep her toehold in our manmade world, like when a tiny flower grows from the crack in the side of a large building.




Q) Do you carry a notebook? Do you draw in public?

A)I try to keep a journal near by at all times. Or at least I try to have something handy to write on should I be struck with an idea.
As for drawing in public, yes I do this occasionally but I can become distracted by the people around me. I don't mean irritated by them but rather I become engaged in a conversation with someone or I simply become immersed in people-watching.


Q) Who are your favourite artists & Your favourite galleries?

A)With respect to favorite artists, I couldn't mention them all.
What comes to mind right now: Da Vinci, Velazquez, Francis Bacon, JP Witkin, HR Giger
I haven't any favorite galleries. I respond more to the exhibits I see than the spaces they are shown in.


Q) Do you get emotionally attached to your work and do you miss your work when it is sold?

A)As I pointed out in question 16 I do get attached to my work. This can be dangerous during the creative process as you become less apt to take risks making changes to the work for fear of ruining it. The best thing is to be relentless with it until it just feels right and then stop. I find it hard to sell something immediately after finishing it. If I have the opportunity to live with a finished work for a period of time then it isn't so hard to let it go by selling it as by then I've moved on to other things.


Q)Your contacts….E-mail…links

A) www.michaelkerbow.com

Saturday, November 11, 2006

Interview with Ronald J.Llanos

Q)So, can you tell me a little about yourself?Full name, age, some background info, etc?

A)Ronald J.Llanos, 35. I'm a Los Angeles native. I've lived here my whole life. I don't know of any other place..really. I hate and love Los Angeles.I don't have any other choice.

Q)How did you get started making art?

A)I've been drawing since I was little kid. I remember coming home from seeing Star Wars (the movie) and being so excited by it, I immediately did some drawings of the x-wing fighters and the Tie fighters. I remember doing a sketch of my first dog. He was a half coyote/half German Sheppard. I was really close to him growing up,and I did a watercolor drawing of him. My closeness to him led me to want to create a drawing about him. That was one of my first watercolor drawings that I did that I was really proud of. His name was Tiger and I was probably around 9 years old. I guess my need to communicate what was important to me through images was my way of communicating. My parents were both immigrants to America and they spoke Spanish. I learned English in elementary school and drawing was the way I could communicate while I was learning English.


Q)How would you describe your art?

A)Fun,thought-provoking. Snap-shot like...Documentary…Urban realism.


Q)Where do you get the inspiration for your art?

A)Many places: many come from driving around L.A. and observing people on the streets, in restaurants, and looking at other artists from the past. Honore' Daumier, Francisco Goya, Toulouse-Lautrec and many other artists are my heroes. Sometimes I get inspirations from thoughts and ideas that I pull from my journal which I keep on a daily basis.



Q) What are you working on now?

A)I'm doing a series of drawings inspired by anxiety and anger.


Q) How do you approach the creation of a new piece... how does everything come together?

A)Sometimes drawings develop in my journal where I sketch out small thumbnail drawings. And sometimes, they just come in the form ofa "flash" or I'm inspired by looking at other artists.Everything comes together to me, when my idea,concept, story, mood, etc. matches my final by-product. I really do spend a lot of time "internalizing" the idea/mood. I have to own that idea/mood first, then I can begin creation.


Q) What's your favorite medium to work in, and why?

A)Pen and ink and watercolor (by far!) I like working in this medium because its FAST and immediate.I have (literally!) 8 small sketchbooks with writings and small sketches with ideas of projects that I would like to one day work on. I feel responsible to give life to as many of those ideas as possible. I love working in oils, but sometimes it just takes too much time. The idea/mood would have disappered by the time I'm halfway through the project. Pen and ink keeps meas honest and spontaneous as possible. It keeps ME from bullshitting. But don't get me wrong: I do occasionally like to work on more "finished" looking pieces.


Q) Do you collect anything?

A)Sketchbooks.I have about 50 different kinds..and pictures of beautiful women, pulled from magazines. (not THOSE kind of magazines!)


Q) Is your work all hand done? Or do you use any computer tools to help out?

A)All my work is hand done. I rarely use computer to do all of the beginning work. I might touch it up on the computer later. But not much. I like to be physically close to the work and my eyes can't stand looking at a computer screen for too long.



Q) What, in your opinion, are the best and worst places to exhibit artwork?

A)I don't thing there are best or worst places.I'll show out of the trunk of my car, if need be.


Q) What are your artistic influences?

A)Daumier,Goya, Toulouse-Lautrec ..Robert Crumb.


Q) How are the reactions on your work in general?

A)They like my work…However, they want to see more color, more paint,more bigger, different presentation. CRAP! People like it, but they want to art direct me like crazy.!!! I know what I'm doing. Thanks! Thank you though!I appreciate it!


Q) What are you doing when you are not creating art?

A)I teach drawing and painting to adults as well as middle school kids.



Q)What are some of the greatest challenges that you think artists face today? Competition from other artists and not getting lost with SOOOOO many people doing art and illustration! The market is full and very few jobs.How do you keep up???..its tough!

Q) What is freedom to you as an artist?

A)Freedom is to be able to be able to create whatever you want.


Q) Are there any particular works you've donethat stand out as your favorites?

A)Yes: my favorites by far is "Leaving thering", "Cherry Blossom Ninja Girls Enter The Temple of The Bad Robot Dudes", and two pieces I did about the meeting of Snow White and Pinnochio. They fall in love.


Q) What it the coolest thing you have seen recently while wandering the streets?

A)I saw some kids skate boarding and just being kids. That was cool!



Q) Who are your favourite artists & Yourfavourite galleries?

A)I have many favorite artists. I mentioned 4 above. Sandow Birk's work is cool.I really admire Tomer Hanuka, Adrian Tomine, The Hernandez Bros., Lizbeth Zwerger.


Q) Do you get emotionally attached to your work and do you miss your work when it is sold?

A) In the beginning I do get attached..But I'm able to detach myself eventually. Do I miss my work?? Only if something that I spent a lot of time on! If not, no. I think they're like children who are now grown up and must leave me: their creator.I'm totally cool with that!


Q)Your contacts..E-mail.links

A)llanos@artcenter.edu,
www.ronaldjllanos.com,
www.myspace.com/636139
more recent images @ www.ghettogloss.com/exhibitions and @
http://www.bamboolane.com/artist/llanosron.htm

Thursday, November 09, 2006

Interview with Derek Weisberg

Q)So, can you tell me a little about yourself? Full name, age, some background info, etc?

A)My name is Derek Weisberg, I am 23 years old, and I am an artist working in the San Francisco bay area.I am primarily a ceramic sculptor but do not limit myself to that medium.

Q)How did you get started making art?

A)I started making art when I was very young. I have all those funny stories from when I was a kid and I would sculpt my mash potatoes instead of eating them, or take apart my action figures and glue them together to make new toys.My mom saw my interest in art and enrolled me in a ceramic class when I was 7 years old.From then on ceramics and art have become my life.

Q)How would you describe your art?

A)I make figurative ceramic sculpture. I comment on human emotions and the human condition. All of my work is self portraiture, not necessarily a physical representation, but an emotional representation for sure.However I try not to make work that is limited to my own experiences and feelings, but create work which reflects also a larger picture; work which reflects the atmosphere or emotions of the world around me.There is all this work that is being made now which is called "street art" or "urban art" or "graphic art" whatever you want to call it, and some of the influences are coming from Hip Hop and Punk cultures, skate culture, graffiti, etc. I would say that my work is that type of "urban art" in a sculptural form. It takes some large influences from Hip Hop.What I tell people a lot is that my old work used to comment on Hip Hop, however now I use Hip Hop in my work to comment on something else. My work deals with content and not concept, I think this is a big distinction. I want my work to reach all types of people not just an elite group or a specially educated crowd. And I think conceptual art tends to appeal only to that special group. Concept by definition deals with the number 1, specifics, and the idea of abstraction. I want my work to be more about content, multipe issues in layers, like a "table of contents", general themes, and grounded real experiences.

Q)Where do you get the inspiration for your art?

A)Inspiration, I know this is corny but life is my main inspiration, as I am working with my emotions and the emotions of those around me, life effects me. I guess that is really general. Other inspirations, Hip Hop music is a huge inspiration. Also groups of people or an individual who have done something unique and new out of nowhere or nothing. In terms of artists who have inspired me the list is long but off the top of my head quickly: Ancient Egyptian art, 14th century Spanish Sculpture, 15th century Christian Art, Fra Angelico, Hans Holbein, Egon Schiele, Van Gogh, Giacometti, early Picasso, Cy Twombly, Basquiat, Odd Nerdrum, Robert Arneson, Peter Volkous, Stephen Desteabler, Barry Mcgee, Thomas Campbell, Phil Frost, Doze Green, Clayton Brothers, my good friend Mike Simpson, I know there is more I just cant think of them right now, I love art history.

Q)What are you working on now?

A)Right now I am working on several projects, I have a bunch of shows coming up this month of November and I am getting ready for them. I am working on a series of jars inspired by Egyptian Canopic Jars, but instead of Egyptian Gods faces on them they have just regular down and out dudes faces. Also working on a series of small (20 inches or so) wall hanging pieces where the upper torso, arms and hands and heads are sculpted out of clay, and the lower torso is made of some other material, like cloth or wood or plaster. I have a show in Riverside California were all artists have to make 50 pieces and I am making these pieces that are kind of suggestions of a figure but have faces and hands made of clay in different gestures. Just finished a bunch of work where the figures were put in shanty town environments for a show called "Shanty Town" in LA at the Lab 101 gallery.



Q) How do you approach the creation of a new piece... how does everything come together?

A)Most of my work is done in a series so I get an idea for a body of work or a series and create from there. My work always starts with an emotion I want to depict, and it starts in one of two ways. Either I hear some song lyrics (which usually become the title or part of the title) that I like and want to reference and then I do a drawing from that and then the sculpture.Or I do a drawing first, then make the piece and then title it later. On bigger projects I take photographs for reference and I might make a maquette.

Q) What's your favorite medium to work in, and why?

A)Ceramics is by far my favorite medium. It is forgiving, you can do anything with it; push, pull, add on to, take away from, carve, texture, etc. There is a process to it which I like. It can be colored in so many ways. Clay just has a great feel to it, for some they fall is love with it from the first touch, I think that is what happened to me.

Q) Do you collect anything?

A)Yeah I collect music, I know we are in a digital age with all this electronic file stuff but I love CDs. I really love the hunt for used CDs, like for some the hunt for records, but I never got into records. I also collect a lot of junk. Rusty pieces of metal, pieces of wood, little odds and ends, which I then use in a lot of my sculpture. My friends and I go out every Sunday morning, often to railroad tracks and just walk and collect junk, which we call gold, to reuse for some other purpose.

Q) Is your work all hand done? Or do you use any computer tools to help out?

A)My work is all hand done, I hate the computer, but know its importance.

Q) What, in your opinion, are the best and worst places to exhibit artwork?

A)I like exhibiting work on the street, in the public, then it takes on its own life, and is accessible to everyone. However I also like the gallery setting because people who are specifically looking for art can find it. I think it is important for art to be used as an educational tool, and should be available to appreciate, and I think galleries can help with this.



Q) How are the reactions on your work in general?

A)People generally like my work. And Figurative sculpture and I think sculpture in general is lacking, so I think it is kind of a fresh medium. However most of my work is a little depressing or can be scary, and I hear that a lot. But people can usually deal with or even begin to associate with the content of the work, and the good craftsmanship, and tend to like it.

Q) What are you doing when you are not creating art?

A)There is very little time when I am not creating in some form. If I am not creating I am probably sleeping.

Q)What are some of the greatest challenges that you think artists face today?

A)In America, I think the greatest challenge is the importance art is given. In this society art has little importance, it is always the first thing cut from school programs, government funding is limited, limited press, etc. Because art is not valued artists struggle.



Q) What is freedom to you as an artist?

A)To be able to go to my studio everyday for as long as I want and just create whatever I want. Which does not happen for me (yet I hope)

Q) Are there any particular works you've done that stand out as your favorites?

A)Yeah I just finished this piece called "Illuminating the Lonely Path of Forever". It was a piece I did for "Shanty Town". A seated 3/4 figure is sitting on a makeshift throne or perch of some sort, in front of a makeshift stain glass window. The figure is pointing and looking off somewhere, to me to an unseen object, but some might think he is actuall pointing to something, which is cool. he is kind of fat with pathetic skinny arms, and he sits slumped. His mouth is slightly open in mild awe as he stares off. Some people say there are religious overtones, but I am not really religious, to me it is more spiritual feeling, and the figure is trying to deal with or find some sort of spirituality.

Q) What it the coolest thing you have seen recently while wandering the streets?

A)I can't really think of anything specitically right now, there is always some good graffiti, crazy people, etc, to provide for good times while roaming the streets.

Q) Do you carry a notebook? Do you draw in public?

A)I always have my sketchbook with me, but only draw in public if I have to put down a quick idea. Unfortunately I dont have the time to just hang out in a park or a cafe and draw, as much as I wish I had the time.



Q) Who are your favourite artists & Your favourite galleries?

A)My favorite galleries: Well in San Fran and area: Upper Playground, White Walls, (in a shameless plug because it is a gallery I co run) Boontling Gallery, there are a bunch in LA that I really like, Black Market, Lab 101, New Image, 1988, Anno Domini in San Jose, Dietch Projects in NY.

Q) Do you get emotionally attached to your work and do you miss your work when it is sold?

A)I get emotionally attached to my work occasionally but usually am willing to let it go, as I know I will be making more and more art, and there will always be something new. If I get good documentation of it I am happy. Plus I always liek the money, and I can run out of storage space fast.

Q)Your contacts..E-mail.links

A)email: dzel83@hotmail.com
website: http://www.derekweisberg.com

Wednesday, November 08, 2006

Interview with Sergio Sericolo

Q)So, can you tell me a little about yourself? Full name, age, some background info, etc?

A)My name is Sergio Sericolo. I am 40 years old and live in Albany NY. I have two children and just recently got remarried.

Q)How did you get started making art?

A)When I was young I would draw all the time. My mom noticed this interest and signed me up for art lessons. Every Saturday I would go to this big barn that was converted into an artist’s studio and I would sit around with other kids and learn to paint. You could pick from different books such as landscapes, seascapes, still life etc. and the teacher would walk around the room and help the students copy the painting from the book they chose. The paintings were awful, but the experience was great.

Q)How would you describe your art?

A)I would call it natural abstraction.

Q)Where do you get the inspiration for your art?

A)I find inspiration in found images such as old books, nature, textures and abstractions of paint. These images become a catalyst for my working process.



Q)What are you working on now?

A)I have a pretty big painting in my studio and always find myself simultaneously working on smaller drawings. Currently I am working on drawing into a book of printed engravings based on artists’ paintings from the 18th and 19th centuries. I find these pieces interesting because they started out as an original painting by one artist, then were transferred by another artist into an engraving only to then be printed and ultimately turned back into an original by me.

Q) How do you approach the creation of a new piece... how does everything come together?

A)For painting, the work at first comes from a very chaotic process – I lay the canvas on the floor and proceed to splatter paint and turpentine on it and move the canvas around until I see some interesting textures and shapes. I enjoy making marks that don’t necessarily look like I had my hand in the process. When I feel that there is enough interesting marks I slowly begin to see images in the paint and start to build layers of paint and form more organic images that relate to nature and anatomy.
For drawing, the process starts with seeing an image in a book and drawing into it or taking pieces of the drawing away and then find other images from that point.

Q)What's your favorite medium to work in, and why?

A)Oil for paintings and graphite for drawings. In the pages of the antique books the graphite and ink blend really well together - sometimes blurring the line between what I created and what was there to begin with.

Q)Do you collect anything?

A)I try to trade my work with artist friends when I can – my goal is to have my house filled with other artist’s work. I don’t like to have all of my work staring back at me.
However, it is a great way to store work; I often find that because I am so productive, I have a severe lack of storage space.



Q)Is your work all hand done? Or do you use any computer tools to help out?

A)My paintings and drawings are all hand done. I have made digital prints in the past but always found that I needed to get my hand in the work. I would always draw something then scan it and then add to the digital file.

Q)What, in your opinion, are the best and worst places to exhibit artwork?

A)I would never hang my work in a coffee house. I feel it makes the work look like a decoration and people can’t see the importance of the work because the work becomes reduced to a mere decor. I feel if you are fine artist, you should think of yourself that way and have respect for your work and not just show it anywhere because you can or because some one asks you to.

Q)What are your artistic influences?

A)I remember going to Italy when I was about 13 and just being overwhelmed by the art from the Renaissance - it had a huge impact on the formation of my aesthetic sensibility. The richness and craftsmanship from this time period is something I strive for in my work. Other influences would be - Kiki Smith, Anselm Kiefer, Fred Tomaselli, Gerhard Richter among others.

Q)How are the reactions on your work in general?

A)I think they have been very good. I actually received a NYFA Fellowship this year which is very competitive and I was in shock. There are so many great painters living in New York and some guy (me) from upstate got one of these prestigious grants. I could not believe it. It gave me great confidence to continue what I was doing. It is nice to know that there are people out there who understand what you are trying to do and show support when they can.

Q)What are you doing when you are not creating art?

A)I am an Art Director and photographer at Siena College (a liberal arts college near Albany NY)
I am also an adjunct drawing professor there as well.



Q)What are some of the greatest challenges that you think artists face today?

A)I find that the biggest challenge is to just keep making art. There so many other realistic obstacles to face. Most artists can not support themselves solely by making art so you need to have a full time job so you can have health benefits and money for art supplies, studio space, food, mortgage and to supplement the rest of your life. There is also the aspect of time- if you have a family then you have even less time, energy and money to make art.
And finally you have to market yourself. I find I do a lot of emailing, trying to go to galleries, sending out packets etc. which takes away from actually making art. I have found, however, that if it is important to you then you make it happen- It is a pretty tough to balance sometimes. I think the one thing that a real artist has, ultimately, comes down to a compulsion to create -sometimes at the risk of neglecting other areas of his/her life.

Q) What is freedom to you as an artist?

A)Freedom is being able to make my work the way I want and solely focus on my vision and voice.
The term artist is synonymous with freedom- you have total autonomy. All of the choices, good or bad, are yours and your work stands as a documentation of those choices. Out of this freedom you hope to be able to make something lasting and personal that others can relate to as well.

Q)Are there any particular works you've done that stand out as your favourites?

A)I guess I would have to say ”The Ballad of Saint Jerome”. It is in a very prominent spot in my house so I see it everyday. I still enjoy it after seeing it for quite sometime. It is a very quintessential piece of mine. The organic form in the piece exemplifies this idea of referencing nature in a way that you might have seen before but can not quite figure out. You may see the main form as a tree, a mushroom, or a vagina but it still has this abstraction and ambiguity about it.



Q) What it the coolest thing you have seen recently while wandering the streets?

A)I grew up in a small city where there were not a lot of trees. I had one tree in my yard and for some reason we chopped it down. Now, the older I get I really am in awe of the beauty of trees, the sky and other natural forms. I am not a great outdoorsman nor do I hike, however, regardless of how overused nature is in art or as a decorative motif I still feel it will always remain as an inspiration to artists.

Q) Do you carry a notebook? Do you draw in public?

A)Yes- I carry a backpack filled with various supplies and usually one of these old heavy books inside. I bring it to work everyday and sneak in some drawing when I able to.
I also find myself drawing on long airplane trips. I try not draw in public, I think that making art is a very intimate thing for me and I don’t like to bring attention to myself in that way. It is ironic because the work will usually end in a public forum at some point but the process is very personal.

Q) Who are your favourite artists & Your favourite galleries?

A)Pierogi 2000, The Whitney Museum, The Metropolitan Museum of Art in NY, The Uffizi Gallery and The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. I recently went to the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts and they exhibited a nice selection of contemporary Canadian artists as well.

Q) Do you get emotionally attached to your work and do you miss your work when it is sold?

A)I feel that making art is a process. The moment I feel that I have made my masterpiece I think my work would stop growing and changing. I feel as an artist that you have to have respect for your work because it ultimately represents you. I think of my work as self portrait in a sense. Because it is self portrait, I do have a certain emotional attachment, however, I want my work to be out in the world and enjoyed by other people.

Q)Your contacts….E-mail…links

A)ssericolo@siena.edu
www.sergiosericolo.com