LOUISA MCELWAIN |
I have lived and painted in New Mexico since 1985, working outdoors under
a wide variety of conditions, open to the impulse of changing light,
wind, heat, cold, insects; forces of Nature which bring life into my
paintings. For me, painting is a dance to the tempo of the evolving day.
Usually, I paint off the back of a pick-up truck, which gives me access
to many wonderful places, and provides a way to stabilize and transport
large canvases. Here in the West, it seems the canvas is never big enough.
To include my entire field of vision at arm's length, 60x90 inches is
about right. I paint with knives and masonry trowels which allows me
to work fast. Each painting is completed in under four hours, regardless
of size, as permitted by weather and light. Painting large canvases outdoors
invites another interaction with Nature as, inevitably, insects, particles
of plants and soil end up on the painting. I see these as valuable contributions
to the work. Sometimes I put stones, bones, or pieces of glass and plants
into the paint, in the same spirit as the Navajo weaver who incorporates
things into her blanket to bless those who will receive it, and as a
way of acknowledging the temporality of things. My process in an inquiry
into sensuous potential of paint. To explore the mystery of sensation,
to touch that which is known but cannot be measured, understood yet indescribable;
the act of painting is an expression of my connectedness with God and
Nature. I am Nature. |
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