Unrepealableness Jussanjuan |
Rough Sanctuary |
Bees Harvesting brown arrows |
Obsidian |
A vehicle to display my work; talk about influences on my work; talk of others' works that get my attention - Prints of some of my work on sale at https://www.artpal.com/Willbrady/
Alex Grey: born Columbus, Ohio / November 29, 1953
“It is the light that is sublime in Grey’s oeuvre - which is the most important innovation in religious light since the Baroque - and that makes the mundane beings in them seem sublime, in every realistic detail of their exquisite being”.
Praying: 1984 48 x 36 in oil on linen |
An American visionary artist, author, teacher, and Vajrayana practitioner. He works in multiple forms including performance art, process art, installation art, sculpture, visionary art, and painting.
His father was a graphic designer and encouraged his son’s drawing ability. Themes of death and transcendence weave throughout his artworks, from the earliest drawings to later performances, paintings and sculpture.
Training:
Grey's paintings are a blend of sacred, visionary art and postmodern art. He is best known for his paintings of glowing anatomical human bodies, images that “x-ray” the multiple layers of reality. His art is a complex integration of body, mind, and spirit.
Many of his paintings include detailed representations of the skeleton, nervous system, cardiovascular system, and lymphatic system. Grey applies this multidimensional perspective to paint the universal human experience. His figures are shown in positions such as praying, meditating, kissing, copulating, pregnancy, birth, and death.
Grey's work incorporates many religious symbols, including auras, chakras, and icons with geometric shapes and tessellations in natural, industrial, and multicultural situations. Grey's paintings are permeated with an intense and subtle light.
His highly detailed paintings are spiritual and scientific in equal measure, revealing his psychedelic, spiritual and super-natural view of the human species.
You can see the works of Alex Grey on permanent exhibit at the Chapel of Sacred Mirrors [CoSM] -
". . . a sanctuary for seeing ourselves, the world, and our cosmos as reflections of the Divine. CoSM's mission is to build a temple to preserve and share a collection of visionary art beloved by a global community. Forty acres of beautiful woods and newly renovated buildings invite the contemplation of art and nature, and provide a center for events encouraging the creative spirit.
"CoSM honors the mystic core of love uniting all wisdom traditions and the transformative power of art to awaken human potential."
CoSM is located at 456 Deer Hill Road, Wappinger, NY 12590 USA : Phone 845.297.2323
In 2017, a friend working at Farrar, Straus and Giroux posited some questions about journal keeping. The following was one of them, and here was my response.
How has journal-writing changed you? Is it or has it become an important part of your identity? How do you feel your identity has informed and shaped your journal-writing? (You can consider your “identity” however you like, but feel free to consider specific categories such as your gender, sexuality, race, ethnicity, nationality, class, age, faith, ability, mental health, geography, profession, educational background, family structure, etc.)
v Hmm. Tough to say if journaling has “changed” me. I have kept journals for so long I’m not certain what or how it has contributed to my personality.
v
The
Journal IS a part of my
identity in that if I go somewhere without either a journal or camera people
will ask where the journal is, and why do I not have it with me.
v
My
“identity” fits into many categories. I have written on or entered materials
related to, many different subjects including:
v
All of
the above and, I am certain, other subjects, contribute in the shaping of my
content, writing, thoughts and journal entries
On the right, Montréal based
portraitist Yvon Goulet shows me pretty much how I look now – minus the cigar.
You can find me posting about art at:
https://willbradyvisualarts.blogspot.com/
over-posting on Facebook at:
https://www.facebook.com/rondacker
and under-posting at:
http://willbradyjournal2.blogspot.com/
Three Small pieces I've done:
Hot Stuff (c) 2011/Will Brady |
Juseice (c) 2020 / Will Brady |
Lug (c) 2009 / Will Brady |
Self Portrait |
But it is not mere sittings he does; you - the viewer - are simultaneously immersed in the scene wherein the person has been observed. They are not formal studio portraits, but people engaged in everyday life; life on the edge, in fact . . . and their are beings as vibrant and alive as one would find them in real life.
To wit:
“The Called” 2020 36 x 50 oil |
Strasburger tells of himself:
born and raised in a working class neighborhood in Scranton, PA. His first artistic influences were the murals in the Catholic Church he attended as a child, admiring and studying the stories and anatomy.
His work is characterized by a strong observation of humanity, of our physical beauty and our goodness. He works mostly in oils and loves drawing as well. He is influenced strongly by his neighbors and the landscape around him, with a focus on what unites us as aware people.
Strasburger is prolific, with many solo exhibits throughout the Southwest and has won several awards for his work. He currently lives and paints full time in Tucson AZ.
Artist's Statement:
Human nature interests me in how it doesn’t change despite a changing society. My work illustrates our commonality. My work is classical in style, and contemporary in content. A comment I’ve heard by someone in response to seeing my paintings is: “This is me.” Would you like to see more? Contact me with your interest and I’d be happy to share more examples with you.
These are but two examples. His other works are dynamic as well. Don't take my word for his work. See it for yourself:
https://georgestrasburger.com/
All works in this entry are (c) 2020 / George Strasburger and are presented here as informational only. Reproduction of his work elsewhere should be obtained directly from the artist.
Other ways to contact him:
WHAT IS PUBLIC ART? (from 2004)