You Cannot Step Twice Into the Same River

I am about to land in Florence, Italy for about six weeks!

I recently revised my Artist Statement to reflect  past experiences while there and its influence on some of the current paintings. I am looking forward to gathering new images and ideas again this year.

You could not step twice into the same river, for other waters are ever flowing on to you.

 Quoted by Plato in Cratylus

Traces and vestiges that reveal the constancy of change fascinate me. The original ideas for my abstract paintings might come from faded frescoes, worn walls, gestural marks, or the random patinas that evolve as a myriad of elements alter surfaces. There is an endless story embedded in residual fragments that commemorate the passage of time. I want to suggest evocative dream-like spaces that hold feeling and a sense of history.

One of the most meaningful influences in my current work comes from spending two months every summer in Florence, Italy teaching at the Santa Reparta International School of Art. Everyday, I experience an abundant palimpsest of imagery. In the span of one day, I see remnants of color in the architecture, decorative patterns, figurative elements, and sun parched graffiti sprawled walls juxtaposed with world-class art treasures. These experiences, intertwined with memory and invention, continue to feed my studio processes when I return home. My paintings celebrate the interplay of past and present, imagined and tangible, that which is lost and what remains.

The recent paintings were all made on panel with oil paint, beeswax, and other media such as powdered marble, dry pigment, and gold leaf. Many unpredictable layers are developed through intuition, experimentation and chance. The process includes adding and subtracting paint, erasing, excavating, scraping, and improvisational mark making. Ultimately, I want these paintings to represent the beauty that is found in objects and places that are continuously shifting within the transformation of time.

Here are some treasures I found in Florence and Assisi last year.