chairback, placemat, halfpipe, pipe acrylic, graphite, felt pen on wood panel 48x34 SOLD
2015
chairback, placemat, halfpipe, pipe acrylic, graphite, felt pen on wood panel 48x34 SOLD
Nurses acrylic on paper 22x24 SOLD
I came across an image of a group of 13 nurses in training during the 40's. Made me think of all the nurses we have and have had in our family. We have oodles. Formally, there are a lot of rhythms set up in this image that made my eye dance. My hat's off to the original photographer who snapped this one. Couldn't find the person's name, but they really captured all the conformity in the room - "soup-to-nuts," as my mother (once a nurse herself) would say. I took this pic with my phone, so it's not the highest quality, but you get the idea. As might be noticed, I've taken certain liberties with the original image in order to add certain tensions. Perhaps they'll appear in a slow read of the image. That's the hope anyway.
Purse(Clutch) acrylic on wood 6.5x7.375 not for sale
About 2 weeks ago I went to visit my family in Boone, NC. While there I noticed a sweet pattern on my mom's new purse, or "clutch," as she likes to call it. All around it has big bold black and white stripes with a red interior and accents. Something about the look of it struck me and stuck in my head for a while. I used the basic design of it to make this one. The acrylic allows you to do some pretty interesting things in terms of utilizing it's somewhat plastic properties. I assume you could do something similar with oil, but it would be far more expensive, might be a bit unreliable going from one color to the next, and it would take forever to dry. So I went a more immediate route.
Sweater Nest acrylic on wood 7.375x5.375
I've been having fun using acrylic in a somewhat sculptural way. With a little ingenuity you can make acrylic look fairly close to string. I'll be making many more of this type. They're sort of a bear, but I'm tweaking that process a little bit. Another process I'll be tweaking is my documentation of these paintings. Gotta get some more lights and standardize it a bit so my images don't look crummy. I'll get there.
Siliceous Oozes acrylic on wood 7.375x5.25 (no longer exists)
Pulling from my geology classes at William & Mary here. I was always a big fan of the term siliceous oozes. It describes a situation where microscopic critters like diatoms accumulate on the ocean floor when the water is nearly saturated with silica. Very slowly blankets of a silica-rich ooze are formed. If I remember correctly, these oozes later become chert after spending a few million years in nature's pressure cooker. Chert's cool because you can make cutting tools and arrowheads out of it. I like chert.
I've included an image to show the scale - a good trick for photographing an outcrop or rock. I reckon it's just as useful photographing artwork. I'll try to make a habit out of it. The Nikon cap measures 2.125 inches in diameter, so this one is a little guy.
Snow on the Ground, Bang-bang acrylic, graphite, and cotton on wood panel 12x14
This is another one pulled from my time at the National Training Center in Ft. Irwin, CA. Summetime, 1999. We were on a live-fire range in this valley, and out of nowhere it started snowing like mad. That completely blew our minds since it was around June or so and in the Mojave Desert and it was right in the middle of our live-fire exercise. Everyone was going apeshit. We loved it. Guns and snow in the desert make soldiers very happy and a little confused. We were experiencing something truly bizarre and magical.
Mines of Kinds acrylic and graphite on panel with drilled holes 34x42 SOLD
This is a mashup of a "disrupt" minefield pattern (drilled into the panel) and a field of geologic unconformities (the paint and graphite bits). A little tribute to my active duty days at the National Training Center in California.
Unconformities are tricky little buggars found in the rock record. They are the planes that separate rock masses when sediment deposition is not continuous, usually due to a period of erosion before the sediment deposition picked back up. I say they're tricky because they denote a loss in recorded time. It's tough to know what actually happened when you've lost time. Disrupt minefields are also tricky little buggars. They are meant to disrupt an enemy's plans, causing them to panic and lose precious moments. Warfare and geology are gritty businesses not for the faint of heart.
The last time I was part of an emplacement crew was in 2000 or so, training in the Mojave Desert as a wiry 21-year-old army combat engineer dude. My comrades and I were in this low area at the foot of a small mountain and the sun was just calling it a quits for the night. Below our feet was a mixture of big rocks and little rocks with a light dusting of sand on top to conceal the chaos below. The mines (inert) weren't too bad to put in, but the razor-wire frat fence around it was the real challenge. We spent hours pounding those pickets into the red rocky ground. Half the time the pickets would just bounce off a rock just below the surface, sending vibrating shocks into our hands and arms with each "Pang!" of the heavy, black picket-pounder. Sometimes we could find a crack in the rock to work with, but other times we'd have to find a softer spot to the right or the left, making for a wavy edge along our fence. Fortunately, I can't quite picture the fruits of our labor. The mental image is all but gone. Maybe it was dark by then, but I'll bet it was one of the roughest looking minefields we ever put in - haha! Needless to say, I enjoyed putting this painting's minefield a lot more.
Tube Top/Bottom acrylic on wood panel 16x20 SOLD
Another little ditty that follows the stripe theme. There are these times when things far away (say, a horizon) line up with things close up (a horizontal edge of some sort). In those moments it seems that space is collapsed and the world becomes flat just briefly. Keeping still keeps that phenomenon going; any movement and it falls away. I love those moments of being still and seeing weird things that destroy a logic that a moment ago seemed so sound.
Nice Try, Tie acrylic on wood panel 12x16 SOLD
I'm a bit happier these days and am making work that reflects that. This piece and others that follow this post refer to my studies in geology, my time in the military, a deep attraction to stripes, and a recently developed appreciation for the benefits of meditation and meditative work. Maybe the attraction to stripes has something to do with how they vibrate visually or describe a texture that begs to be felt. I don't know what it is, but I enjoy creating them, toying with them, and looking at them immensely.
sidenote: For simplicity's sake, I've included prices with the title/medium/size info. If you see something that speaks to you that you'd like to purchase anywhere on this site, please don't hesitate to contact me: joegolney@gmail.com , olneyjoe@hotmail.com , or give me a call on my cell if you have that handy. In most cases I can ship it out the following day.
Thanks, and I hope you enjoy the posts!
Joe
Distorted George, 1969 #2 (Camo George) gesso and acrylic on paper 22x25
Having more fun with this image of George Carlin being a goofball. I decided to expand the view to that of the original image while pushing "digital distortion" look a bit into the decorative. I have him slightly camouflaged here, which wasn't really planned, but I like it. Well, it was sort of planned. I had been thinking a lot about Ann Gale's work and how her subjects dissipate into their surroundings. I suppose that's the aim of camouflage, too. With this painting, I think had I aimed for a camouflaged look on the outset, it wouldn't have turned out quite like this. I've tried making an image like this before (with lines making up the figure in the foreground and also the background) with pretty bad results. Something about the boundaries of the body being too strictly adhered to makes for a stiff drawing or painting and one-way ticket to the garbage can. I'm much happier with how this whacky picture turned out. It seems loose enough, and it makes me laugh every time I look at it.
Distorted George, 1969 gesso and acrylic on paper 9x12
I've been making a lot of heavy stuff for a while, so I decided to lighten it up a bit. This drawing is from a still of George Carlin performing on, I believe, the Tonight Show in 1969. Shamefully, it's taken from his Wikipedia page, but fuck it, the original image made me laugh as he always has. As I made this one, I decided to pass the source image though a couple of imagined modes of distortion - first by the lined static common of the era of the original broadcast and then through a more digital distortion of the video viewing we enjoy today through youTube and other online video sites. Distortion on top of distortion. Something like that.
untitled illustrations (2014) ink, graphite, and/or correction fluid on paper ~9x11
Although I haven't posted anything in while, I've been working on some illustrations and planning other dog tag projects over the last year and a half. The collection of drawings above were created while I was working at a local fountain pen company. While there, I made illustrations for a short time in order to promote the products they sold. A few of them have that feel as well as the company's watermark. Making these were a lot of fun and reminded me how much I enjoy building an image with a collection of little marks using a pencil, pen, syringe, Q-tip, brush, or whatever I can get my hands on. They're of James Gandolfini, Robin Williams, Buckminster Fuller's Dymaxion Car, a study of an Ann Gale painting, and Bill Mauldin. All but the Gandofini and Williams photos were taken by the very talented Sarah Mattozzi.