Thursday, July 30, 2015

Orvis Residency: Day 20 (20-29 July)


I have been remiss in my postings lately: Instagram has been getting the best of me! Rift is now roughly 75% complete; very confident the art will be completed with a week to spare. It has always been my goal to have the art finished so the final week of my residency can be spent answering questions from museum visitors. I will also need that last week to plan dismantling and removal for storage until the art's new home has been resolved.

The artwork is important: it encapsulates humanity's march to oblivion (if unchecked) in a poignant,  symbolically understandable depiction. Interested parties have been identified as caretakers/exhibitors, but until details can be ironed out, the work will need to be stored in a secure, environmentally benign space. To that end, I am crowd funding for storage costs on Indiegogo and would appreciate anyone reading this blog to follow and or forward my plea to people that support art preservation. 

Monday, July 20, 2015

Orvis Residency: Days Nine and Ten (18-19 July)


This weekend saw tremendous progress. A big thanks to Sonny and all the volunteers that that helped on Family Day (Sunday), especially Rochelle and Christian from Farrington HS in Honolulu, and a bevy of kids

Saturday we finished the installation framework and hung the ten panels; by the end of the day, the first coat of green and blue interference pigments had been applied.

Today, all panels were touched up in preparation for the eyelet fabric textures layering that makes up the "rift" in the composition.

Next weekend, yet again another extravaganza. Saturday boasts a scissor and staple gun spectacular followed by Sunday's oil paint barn-burner!

Hope to see some of you make good on your threats to help again this coming weekend.

Pip Pip!








Friday, July 17, 2015

Orvis Residency: Day Seven (17 July)

East Wall 11:00
Took today off from my "day job" so I could complete the framework that will support the panels. This weekend is an important day for the museum: Sunday is the Bank of Hawaii sponsored Family Day. Free admission; I want the substrate to be in place so that visitors brave enough to venture into "my studio" can be given something constructive to do!

North Wall 13:30
I guess there is some amount of confusion about the Orvis Residency. Some of my friends and family seem to think it is "a show" going on for 6 weeks. It is that, but not in the usual sense. The Orvis Residency provides me with a a studio space which is also my gallery for six weeks. During that period, I have to complete a work utilizing the rather immense space (former tennis courts) and display the finished art. To top it off, the production itself needs to involve visitors.

My goal is to complete the piece with two weeks to spare so I can observe the observers interaction with what is arguably controversial and poignant.

In short, there is a whole lot of engaging going on on  a number of levels. Tomorrow's objective though is to have the luan substrate mounted to the framework so that the really fun techniques can begin.

Pip Pip!

Finished 15:50

Monday, July 13, 2015

Orvis Residency: Day Two (12 July)

Weather was cooperative today: finished the base texture and applied the background pigment to all ten panels. So happy when the weather forecasts stick to the trend, in other words wrong.

A heartfelt thanks to my wife Sonny for all her help: I couldn't have accomplished this key phase of the project without her assistance. She understands how I build my art and braved two of the stickiest days of the year with highs in the low 90's and no trade winds to give me a crucial hand in moving to the next phase - installation.

Installing the panels on the Surface Gallery walls  will occupy most of the next weekend. So if there is anyone out there reading this and feel comfortable with a hammer drill and a screw-gun "come on down!"

All ten pieces have to be anchored to as a "continuous strip"  that takes a corner from the north to east wall. I know that at close range, the panels will be discernible, but my intent is that the base substrate appears a seamless strip when viewed from between 4-6" and absolutely uniform from 10-12'. This means some very careful abutting and hanging; loads of fun.  Can't wait to figure this one out!




Sunday, July 12, 2015

Orvis Residency: Day One (11 July)

Started at eight-thirty this morning. Completed the background textures on five of the ten panels this afternoon despite the weather.

Still coming to grips with the overall scale: 4' by 80'.  Using 4" masonry trowels and a small bamboo garden rake in place of my usual palette knives!

One intrepid visitor from New Zealand and her family braved the 23 steps down to the Surface Gallery and helped slop some mud onto the eyelet material; need more Spalding House visitors with the same spirit!

Towards the end of the day, when the first five panels had been completed, I couldn't resist leaning them against the north wall of the gallery, which is where they will be installed after the the ground has been applied.  One of my big concerns has been to utilize in a balanced sense, the entirety of the gallery walls; so far, I would say, my "paper design,"is meeting my "as-built" expectations.

Originally, I was planning on anchoring the panels directly to the concrete wall, but I  plan on using furring strips now, so that I will be able to control the  abutment and give the appearance of a uniform, contiguous substrate; "it's the way I want it to look." :)



Thursday, July 9, 2015

Always Have A Plan B

"Stage Entrance" to the Gallery
Delivered mahogony plywood substrate for Rift this morning to Spalding House's Surface Gallery which will be my studio for the next six weeks.

Initially, I was going to uses lower grade 3/8" structural plywood that Home "DeePot" had on sale, but when I arrived at the local store that (according to the website) had 229 sheets available, no one (from customer service right through cashiers and lumber specialists) could find a single piece. So much for plan A.

Surface Gallery North and East Walls
 Luckily there is a local building supplier here in the islands, City Mill. Although Smaller, slightly  and more expensive than the "big boxes,"  the staff is  immanently knowledgeable, helpful and knew a better substitute material. And for a nominal fee, delivered right to the gallery (Plan A had called for me renting a truck and schlepping my purchase solo).  Go Plan B!

No doubt the next six weeks will see more Plan Bs: I learned from Aaron Padilla, Spalding Houses's Director,  that every  Orvis Resident Artist can expect rain the first week of their session: I've already figured how to use rain as a texturing agent and will be disappointed if this weekend's forecast is wrong!