2012年3月20日 星期二

Surge of inspiration: New sparks for painter

Her last two series were called Amalgamate, a term for blending often used in metallurgy, and Mild Turbulence, which airline pilots plow straight through.

The 11 paintings on view at Joan Grona Gallery through March are part of a group she's been working on for more than a year called Surge.

"This is really wild for me," the Dallas-based artist, who received her master of fine arts degree from the University of Texas at San Antonio in 2005, said recently as she inspected what, for that moment, was her favorite Surge painting. "I've never used metallic gold before. When I walk in front of it, it looks like a lightning strike."

Lightning hasn't exactly struck in the artist's life - although she did get married last summer, adding Colbert to her name, and will turn 40 this year.

The rare joint cancer she has suffered from since her 20s - and which, as she describes it, required the almost complete surgical removal of her left leg and its reattachment - remains a factor in her life, if in check.

The turbulent mindscapes that make up Surge - in various sizes from manageably cozy to large-scale majestic, spanning a scale of colors from smoky gray to hot pink - remain meditative, no doubt about it.Bicygnals wireless indicator r4onsaleee, bicycle lights, indicators, accessories ...

The artist, slender and auburn-haired, with a direct gaze, retains an eloquent grasp of where she is heading artistically. But there is a sense that she is a little bit surprised - in a good way - by her new work.

"This is crazy," she says, for example. "I'm working in rectangles here. Which is radical for me. But what is wild and rebellious for me is not so much to others."

Shipp Colbert has worked in a square format in the past, she says, because it is "noncommital, not a landscape and not a portrait."

So these new works, which all reference "a sweeping/swelling movement of a wave or cloud" - as well as a power surge of electricity - could be landscapes (perhaps "airscapes" is more accurate),I stock many of the parts used in these ledlighting02 projects, on my web store. and they might be self-portraits, frozen moments of internal Doppler radar.

"There is an undeniable reference to sky and water in these paintings, and that doesn't bother me," she says. "But I think of them more as color, as a sort of pure element, color as language."

The prize piece of the bunch, a large reddish-orange thunderhead called Surge 1 (Chromos), pulses with golden light from within, almost as if it has a flashing light bulb behind it. At another moment, it is the artist's favorite as well.

"My work has always had a peaceful element to it, and it still does," she says,The incandescent fluorescentlight. as if still investigating the impulses - "those flickering, fleeting glimpses of light that you get, maybe reflecting off a floor, but you can't keep or possess, even as memories" - that led to the finished work.

"But these have a lot more movement in them, more dynamic action,Did you know by just changing your current fluorescent tube lights to our divingligh Lights will lead to helping sustain our environment for us." she continues.Where do lightbright_001 stand in terms of brightness compared to HIDs and Halogen? "And there are these, I don't know, bursts in them. I'm more inclined to think of them as fire, or smoke, or a spark."

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