13" x 9"
Original Pastel
Casey Klahn
$700
Shipping Included + Tax (%7.7)
Buy This Original Pastel
The audience at The Colorist has increased recently, and I'd like to take this chance to introduce my art. The following brief describes the abstract foundation of my work.
Original Pastel
Casey Klahn
$700
Shipping Included + Tax (%7.7)
Buy This Original Pastel
The audience at The Colorist has increased recently, and I'd like to take this chance to introduce my art. The following brief describes the abstract foundation of my work.
Gesture and intuition combine in my abstract art. Intuition, not intention. Color choices are simply not derived from nature, but from internal sources.
"Automatism" is an old term that could be applied here. Drawing for drawing's sake, without idea or content. Color has it's own intrinsic purposes and reasons - ideas of it's own.
Am I controlled by my medium? Perhaps, but no more than most.
What are my ideas? To express color as the dominant element in the formal qualities in painting. Color can be the strongest element, and I think that in this age we have yet to plumb it's complete depths. No content; no meaning. No subject, other than red and blue. Yellow, green...these are my subjects.
With a hat tip to Joanne Mattera for the title idea. She is running a great series entitled Marketing Mondays, which is of interest especially to artists who market their art in today's economy.
So beautiful--so abstract, and yet the forest comes through as forest.
ReplyDeleteNice idea about marketing mondays.
ReplyDeleteJala and Corrine - thanks for the comments!
ReplyDeleteI just found your blog - delicious colours. I'll be back!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Anita!
ReplyDeleteCasey,
ReplyDeletePlease tell me more about color as the formal element- how do you begin a piece? What happens first? I am guessing that the next color stroke is a response to the first...but what provokes the first?
Do you have an idea about the forest or does that come later?
Sorry for all the questions.
I love the blues in this piece and the vibration that happens between the two sides. Nice.
Thanks!
Loriann
Hmmm, Turquoise Forest reminds me of a recent find at a used book sale. Let me quote from the "Layman's Guide to modern Art" published in 1949.
ReplyDelete"The average person sees only the surface appearances of his environment. The artist, however, senses the forces that underlie it. He has been obliged to adapt a new way of painting with which to visualize it...to express something [he] conceive[s] but cannot see."
Loriann:
ReplyDeleteI like the Modernist's (esp. Fauvist) palette of primary and secondary colors. Browns are ruled out.
So, I just feel moved by one of these colors first, and sometimes I think of a compliment, or of an analogous color next and then I respond for the next colors.
I try very hard to keep the number of colors limited.
Right now, I am still interested in blues.
MS - agreed. Except that by now, more of the public see this vision, eh?
ReplyDeleteHi Casey, just wanted to let you know that today I've posted something about my still-life setup, if you're still interested in reading about that.
ReplyDeleteCheers!
LOVE these colors, Casey!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Meg. Jala, thanks - I checked it out.
ReplyDeleteHi Casey
ReplyDeleteNice work.
I do like the vibrancy and feel of depth here.
Regards
Trevor
Thanks Trevor and all regarding this work. The photo is a little dark, but the point comes across.
ReplyDelete