I begin each picture with a blank canvas (or screen).
The pictures are not scanned images that are doctored.
I create individually unique works of art while
making intuitive decisions about color, depth,
perspective, texture, movement, volume, line and
mass.
The resulting photographic-like paintings, created
and rendered on a computer, are printed on special
photographic or watercolor papers with archival,
colorfast inks. Each picture’s wire frame
or shell sub-structure is composed of hundreds
of individual polygons. The rendering process
of the final image takes many, many hours or even
days to complete. The completed pictures are composed
of several hundred million pixels in size and
are so large that they cannot be seen in their
entirety on a computer screen until they are printed.
The element of surprise is truly a delight, as
I often discover unusual and exciting effects
not previously evident on the computer screen.
In 1998, while pursuing a doctorate in (which
I received in 1999), I created a completely original
CD-ROM entitled From Stoneage to Rock. It became
my all-consuming passion for the summer. After
a performing and recording career as a classical
concert pianist for twenty-five years, I was excited
to discover I could express complicated and interdisciplinary
ideas on a multitude of levels simultaneously.
The computer became my keyboard, camera, and paintbrush.
Most significantly, I experienced a profound joy
in creating “something from nothing”
while combining my instincts as a musical and
visual artist with the sophistication of “cutting
edge” technology. Since then I have become
intensely interested in discovering the point
at which an idea becomes an inspiration, an “entity
unto itself.”
As a pianist, I worked with someone else’s
creation. One of my favorite composers is Johann
Sebastian Bach. He worked with traditional Baroque
forms such as the fugue and variation, synthesizing
these compositional styles already in use, rather
than developing new ones. His genius not only
perfected these forms but also transcended them,
making each work an innovation of both form and
style.
I viewed the printed page as the composer’s
shorthand to his thoughts and feelings, comparable
to a “figured bass” in Baroque music,
which provides numerals below a bass line to indicate
the harmonies and melodic movement above. The
composer’s intentions (and feelings) can
never completely be notated musically. There does
not exist a symbology comprehensive enough to
do so, nor a page large enough (without being
impractical or absurd) to accommodate all the
additional markings required to express every
nuance of his or her concept and emotion. As a
visual artist, I therefore look upon my work as
a “re-composition” or a sophisticated
and complex improvisation of the nature’s
“figured bass.”
Three modern-ear artists have influenced me and
demonstrate an artist expression similar to Bach’s.
Each of the artists, Escher, Dürer and Van
Gogh, worked within the conventions of art –
respectively using pen and ink, watercolors and
oils – yet each transcend the implied boundaries
of their media by creating innovative forms and
styles. Escher used perspective to explore and
“prove” how two-dimensional relationships
can appear as three. Dürer, the Renaissance
painter and engraver, also had the ability to
draw the viewer into the picture and believe in
its reality, sensitively using the techniques
of perspective, detail, color, and texture to
create an overall sense of photographic realism.
Van Gogh used color and gesture to enunciate his
experiments with spatial relationships and rendered
them on a two-dimensional plane.