Suspension of Disbelief

Suspension of Disbelief – ©Deidre AdamsSuspension of Disbelief, 48 x 72 inches, acrylic & mixed media on panel – ©2013 Deidre Adams

My last two posts were about a series of small paintings I’m finishing up. But I like to keep things interesting for myself, so at the same time I’ve been working on what are for me a couple of very large paintings. Since my studio is in my master bedroom, this is the largest painting on wood I can conceivably do in that space. I normally work with panels horizontally, on the table, because my method is mostly too wet and sloppy to do upright, at least until close to the end. A panel this size is too heavy for me to lift by myself, so instead of working on my table, I spread out plastic on the floor and work on them there. This is working out pretty well because I can easily get around to all four sides of a work. Once the latest layers are settled enough, I can stand the first painting up in the bathroom to dry and then set the next one down on the floor to work on. Who needs a gym when you can manhandle these things around all day?

Suspension of Disbelief (detail) – ©Deidre Adams
Suspension of Disbelief (detail) – ©2012 Deidre Adams

 

February 19th, 2013|Painting|Comments Off on Suspension of Disbelief

More Primordial Series

Just a quick hit today; more images from my Primordial series.

Primordial III – ©Deidre AdamsPrimordial No. 3, 8 x 8 inches, acrylic & mixed media on panel – ©2012 Deidre Adams

 

Primordial XI – ©Deidre AdamsPrimordial No. 11, 8 x 8 inches, acrylic & mixed media on panel – ©2012 Deidre Adams

 

Primordial IX – ©Deidre AdamsPrimordial No. 9, 8 x 8 inches, acrylic & mixed media on panel – ©2012 Deidre Adams

 

Primordial VII – ©Deidre AdamsPrimordial No. 7, 8 x 8 inches, acrylic & mixed media on panel – ©2012 Deidre Adams
February 12th, 2013|Art|1 Comment

Primordial Series

Primordial I –©Deidre AdamsPrimordial No. 1, 8 x 8 inches, acrylic & mixed media on panel – ©2012 Deidre Adams

 

Like a lot of artists, I’m very big on reading. In the past couple of years, I’ve gradually changed from reading fiction to being more interested in books on politics and science. Lately I’ve been reading a lot of articles written for the general public on various science subjects like biology, physics, chemistry, and neuroscience. Some writers have the knack of making science especially interesting and accessible. I’ve really been enjoying the books on the brain by V.S. Ramachandran, a prominent neuroscientist who has contributed important advances in the field by studying people with brain injuries.

All of these readings have been percolating in my mind and have begun to influence my paintings without me really thinking about it too much. I work very abstractly, never trying to make a conscious representation of any one thing. But in a series of small paintings I started last year, I realized that a lot of them have a look of cells or small organisms swimming about in liquid fields.

I decided to call the series Primordial, after the theory of “primordial soup,” first introduced by biologists Alexander Oparin and J.B.S. Haldane in the 1920s. It is one theory of how life came to exist on a planet that was originally just a big ball covered with gases and chemicals.

The theory is summarized as follows:

  1. The early Earth had a chemically reducing atmosphere.
  2. This atmosphere, exposed to energy in various forms, produced simple organic compounds (“monomers“).
  3. These compounds accumulated in a “soup”, which may have been concentrated at various locations (shorelines, oceanic vents etc.).
  4. By further transformation, more complex organic polymers – and ultimately life – developed in the soup.
(From Wikipedia: Primordial Soup)

 

Primordial II – ©Deidre AdamsPrimordial No. 2, 8 x 8 inches, acrylic & mixed media on panel – ©2012 Deidre Adams

 

Of course, nothing in science is ever settled. Now some are challenging the theory and presenting alternate theories. I still like the idea of it, though, so I’m keeping the name.

Primordial V – ©Deidre AdamsPrimordial No. 5, 8 x 8 inches, acrylic & mixed media on panel – ©2012 Deidre Adams

 

Here’s something I struggle with: these paintings are really small, but when I post them large like this, it makes them seem like really big paintings – especially Primordial No. 1 (top). I rather wish I could do this exact same painting at ten times the size. But when I work large, I can’t reproduce the same kinds of marks that I do on the small ones. Something about the energy and dynamics of mark-making is completely changed with scale. It’s something to work on for the future.

February 10th, 2013|Art|4 Comments