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(Gary Welton) I think that the dance is a universal language.
It might have even come about before speaking,
so to me it's a very primitive way
to express an emotion or tell a story.
When I go to the theater and see a ballet, for example,
to me it's like watching a painting come to life.
It's a melody; it's melody of the music
and the melody of the rhythms of the dance.
That's what I want to get on canvas.
Capturing movement in a static medium
has always been a challenge for all artists, I think,
and we're lucky today to have had
people like Eadweard Muybridge
who was a photographer that studied motion.
He captured movement of animals and people
in sequential photographs that showed movement,
and that was really the advent of motion pictures.
For a painter painting in two dimensions,
pretty much a static form,
the way I do it is to show kind of the way Muybridge did,
and it's a series of sequential movements
that illustrate the motion forward.
My paintings come from one dancer model.
Sometimes people look at it and think
well, he had 3 dancer models, but rarely is that the case.
I mean, one is complicated enough,
particularly when he or she is moving around.
So it's usually the succession of movement
by the one dancer model.
There's another nice one.
I call my work abstract figurative.
I do like the abstract, and I do like
the more figurative, more realistic work.
Somehow I want it to be in between, a little bit of each.
To me that's where the life is.
It looks good, a good start.
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The speed of the dance, the speed of the movement,
is the direct connection between the abstract quality
or the realistic quality of the work.
The faster the model moves, the more abstract the work is,
and the slower she moves, the more realistic it is.
If the dancer is moving quickly, I have to work very quickly,
and I have to find my way through the maze,
basically as a series of marks that get made on the canvas.
It has very little thought at that point;
the thought comes later in the resolution of the work.
I like to define that kind of balance between the abstraction
and the realistic representation in the work.
Today I have a piece that I started some time ago
and it's ready to be worked on again.
It needs a little resolution.
I think there's always a fear, when an artist is making a mark.
I mean, you can ask anybody to make a mark
on a piece of paper or a blank canvas.
It's kind of a hard thing for a lot of people to do.
And there's a resolution that needs to come eventually
to all the little problems that come up in any kind of artwork.
Once you make a mark, there's something else needs to be done,
you know, it's a nice dialogue.
That's what I enjoy about it.
I love coming to the studio and having that dialogue.
And because I work on many pieces at one time,
maybe 6 to 10 pieces, I can walk in the studio
and have my coffee, and I can look around
and see which piece is talking to me today,
and that's the one I'm going to work on.
This painting is an example of the way I work
because it shows some of the shapes
that I saw in the movement.
I put a skirt on because it really shows motion,
and I believe that it's closer now to the way I want it to be
to explain what I saw that day in my studio.
I like to work with a lot of mediums;
ink and watercolor are fantastic,
I love that, it's so free,
and I love the fluidity of it and the transparency,
the fact that you can't erase it,
you have to kinda go with the flow on it.
What I can do with the fluidity of the ink or the watercolor
or the paint on that paper, to me it's also reminiscent
of the dance as well; it's very fluid.
I think that a good painting
is more understood later than earlier.
There's an impact up front, but I'm asking the viewer
to really give it some time and look at it,
so that they can kind of unravel the mystery.
Paintings live and die a thousand lives.
They die, and they're resurrected
and they die and they're resurrected.
It's kind of a painful process, and I think I have to be
fearless in the way I approach it, because if I'm not willing
to kill it it won't be resurrected to a better piece.