Legendary artist himself, Dave Kinsey interviews.
27. Richmond, VA. BFA from Virginia Commonwealth University.
I'll start with a little ass kissing and say that working with Kinsey/DesForges is leagues and bounds over working with any other gallery I have been involved with. So... now that's out of the way we can start this interview. I feel the work in this show is a refinement of my past couple years of painting. Visually, I wanted more realism and thematically, I wanted more cohesiveness, and I feel I put that together here.
Starting a new piece really depends on what I am researching or what I might have recently seen. I need to read. I need to know the animal's behavior before I can change it. Studying and note taking are much more important than sketching. I don't keep much of a sketchbook, other than rough outlines for composition. I don't like the way my drawings look, they are too cartoony and sloppy. I really just want to see the finished work. Sometimes I'm scared to start putting down paint because the graphite outline just looks miserable. If you saw one of these things before I started painting, you would give me a pretty disappointed look for sure. I have to trust that it will come together, and it usually does.
Motivating, the quicker I paint, the fewer outlines I have to see.
Understanding the animals close to me is important. Knowing I could see them in the wild is totally exciting and I want to be familiar with them. I like to identify a bird from their song, I like to see a deer and know when he should be shedding his antlers. I've considered painting animals that live outside North America, but I have so much more to learn about the wildlife here. I could paint a kangaroo, but it would possibly interact with a dingo, what do I know about dingoes? Once I learn about the dingo, then I should study a platypus? That's the way it flows, they become dependant on each other, and they are connected. I've started with the animals here and I've still got a ton of work to do.
Always. One of my earliest memories, or I guess my parents tell me so often I think I remember, was giving newborn animals my outgrown baby stuff. Apparently I wasn't having it when my mom told me I couldn't have a pacifier anymore, and I was only convinced to give it up when she told me the baby deer needed it and they didn't have their own. I wasn't gonna let some other kid have my stuff, but if the animals needed it, that's what I cared about and they were gonna get it. We packed up my baby stuff, went to a hiking trail, and left it in log for the baby animals. I felt really good about the decision and never asked for it back.
Growing up I would spend all my time looking for animals and setting up environments in aquariums for lizards and turtles or whatever I could catch. This lasted until I got interested in more grownup things like skateboards and girls and drinking beer with my friends. At that point spending time outside really meant hiding in the woods and smoking. Now, even more grown up, I'm going back to my childhood ways. I spend a lot of time outside looking for snakes and turtles, I just don't bring them home like I used to.
Working on paper was an experiment and a break from working on wood panels. I found out pretty quickly how similar the paper's surface is to the panels once it is gessoed and sanded. I prefer the paper to the canvas because of the completely smooth surface, I can never get past the little bumps and dimples on canvas. I can feel the texture of the canvas when moving the pencil across it and it drives me crazy. The traditional aspect of natural history drawings being done on paper also plays into the aesthetic. The forgiving qualities of paper are wonderful, it's kinda like cheating. When the composition isn't working the way you want, you tear an edge off, problem solved! I've also found that after the surface is prepped, sanding away mistakes is much easier on paper than on panel.
I'm sticking to paper, but you never know when things change.
I'm really interested in installation artists like Mark Dion and Cai Guo-Qiang. I want to be surrounded by their work. I could live in a Mark Dion installation, I want my house to look like one of his exhibitions. Caspar David Friedrich and landscape painters from the 1800's, Edward Hicks, Andrew Wyeth, These are the painters I take little cues from, with trees especially. At a distance, my paintings look pretty meticulous, but at a closer look you can see tree bark is a smear of brown paint, or a feather is a solid brushstroke. I'm also a sucker for any biological prints or diagrams, natural history drawings, and Audubon was ok.
All the time, I'll have to ask Mark Dion where he gets all the taxidermy or borrow Guo-Qiang's crew to make make me some papier-mâché animals.
When the time is right I would love to hike the Appalachian Trail. Planning that trip is not easy, there is a lot to prepare for and you have to put lots of things on hold. You need the money to pay your rent while gone or just move out, quit your job, have money to come home to. It's not something I could afford anytime soon. About two years ago I had plans to hike the first half of the Trail, but they fell through. Looking back, not taking the trip was the best thing for me, as far as focusing on artwork.
I would make it clear from the start that the bears are LEAVES, not BEES. That has happened more times than I would like. The world I've created is a reflection of our own. The bears represent what is lacking in the environment; they embody the growth and wildness that we are losing. The birds and mammals are in charge of their future, they have to manage what resources they have without exhausting them.
Yes.
I grew up in a small town about thirty miles from Richmond and have lived in the city for 10 years now. The main attraction to move to the city was the music scene. When I was 15, I started going to shows and was blown away by all the bands, even when they were terrible. These people are putting out their own records, printing their own shirts and traveling around the country and they are my age? I wanted to know these people; I wanted to be in a band. When I was 17, I was accepted into VCU's art program and moved to Richmond. After I got here I made a lot of great friends and played music and went on tours. I did well in school, but was more focused on playing music and putting out records. When I finished school I gradually turned my attention towards art and away from music, kinda backwards I guess. So, why do I still live here? Richmond is a fairly small town and continues to feel smaller, but I still really like it. Finding a hiding place is important, but I imagine that's the case in most towns. My family lives here and I have the coolest friends in the world, that's what keeps me around.
Bass, never liked or learned to play guitar.
We would wake up and get coffee, then head straight to the park across the street. Describing this park and what it does for me I can't even explain, especially here in this interview. It's my sanctuary and I can't believe I'm moving away from it next month. Anyway, we would hang out there and then make our way to the river to sit on rocks and swim. We haven't even been in a car yet! This ain't LA. We would go back to my house and eat peanut butter & jelly sandwiches for lunch because I do that everyday, even though I get ragged on for it. Now we get in a car. I guess I would show you around town, see the sites like Hollywood Cemetery and Belle Isle, whatever kills time until dinner. We would eat at Edo's or Mamma Zu, best restaurants in town. After that we probably wouldn't want to do shit cause we'd be so full and drunk. Sounds like a perfect day to me.
It's a beautiful and historical cemetery that overlooks the James River (the river we are gonna swim in). You'll see when you come to town.
I thought I wanted to move to New York and was making plans to (just as I had planned to hike the Trail, sometimes I don't go through with things), but I decided that would hurt me more than help right now. I want to focus and live here for cheap and have the freedom to work at a pace I am comfortable with. So no, I don't feel the need to live in a major city.
I do. As much as I like Richmond, I don't think I'll let myself live here forever. When I move, I doubt it will be to a bigger city.
About a year after finishing college this guy Chris Carroll, who is now one of my closest friends, asked me if I wanted to get in on a studio space he had. At first I wasn't all that interested, I hadn't made any art since school, I hadn't thought about art, and I didn't really know Chris all that well. After a couple of run-ins and his gushing over this amazing space, I finally made it over to take a look. The space, I think it was an old print shop, was perfect. It was enormous, had concrete floors, 20-foot ceilings, shelves lining the walls, skylights, rats, a tree growing through the brick wall, and right between galleries in Richmond's "art district". One look was all I needed, I wanted to live there (Chris was living there), and I wanted to be an artist and paint and get drunk and do nothing else. That's pretty much what we did for the year or so we had the place. The time in that building really changed the way I felt about art.
My schedule varies constantly. One month I can get straight to work on a painting after rolling out of bed, next month I can't concentrate until it gets dark. Setting up a new studio space is when I am non-stop. Since I moved into the studio I was just talking about, I have always painted where I live. I've moved four times in the past three years and I'm about to move again in two weeks. New surroundings are so motivating for me, hopefully I'll get over that so I can eventually settle into one place.
Always listen to music while painting. I can't work in complete silence. The needle on my record player broke a while ago, so lately it's been whatever shuffles on my computer.
Spending time in the park watching for owls and deer, setting up a new studio, living by myself (learning to cook), driving less, getting started on a new body of work, [being included in] the latest edition of New American Paintings magazine, getting this interview done.
In November I will have a two-person show with Amy Ross from Boston. Amy and I have been in contact for a while now and have wanted to do a show together, so this was the perfect opportunity. This will be at Transmission Gallery, which was opened last year by my friend Bret. The space is fairly small, so I am working on a smaller scale than I did for the Kinsey/DesForges show. I'm excited about working smaller, it's a change of pace and a challenge. It's been a while since I've had a show in town, so I'm really looking forward to this.
OTHER INTEVIEWS/REVIEWS:
styleweekly.com/article.asp?idarticle=15013
neublack.com/art-design/ryan-mclennan-from-fur-to-bone-kinseydesforges/
PHOTOS:
In-studio shots by Liza Kate
Exhibition shots by Kinsey
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