
Wednesday, gouache on board, 14″ x 15,” 2010 [larger image]
Based on an amazing photo taken by Bryan Derballa for the Secret Lives series on Wired.com, featuring comic book store employees.

Wednesday, gouache on board, 14″ x 15,” 2010 [larger image]
Based on an amazing photo taken by Bryan Derballa for the Secret Lives series on Wired.com, featuring comic book store employees.

New gouache, based on a still from the film Erotissimo – a swinging French pop satire on sex and advertising. I’ve been planning to paint something from the flick for ages – every scene is a perfect mod diorama. (amazing Flickr set here.) [larger image]
I got wind of it via the site World of Kane, a seemingly inexhaustible font of “retro eye candy for the eyes and ears” impeccably by curated by Londoner Will Kane. Kane also DJs at a swinging occasional called the Stagnant Society, “a cinematic banquet of salacious psychedelia, euphoric euro-jerk, polyester pop, & hysterical Hammond, accompanied by an array of atmospheric visuals and beautiful dresses…” Well put. Perfect description of his site as well. I’ve gleaned a ton from Kane and a toast is richly deserved and long overdue. Visit often.

Burberry, gouache on illustration board, 10″ x 21,” 2009

Varshtat, gouache on illustration board, 10″ x 17,” 2009
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Whew. That took long enough. Here’s a new one… a departure from exclusively figurative work, working up paintings from my own photographs. Early yet in this mode, but already deeply rewarding personally – circling around specific details indulges the miniaturist / Nicholson Baker fan in me, while testing the balance between impressionism and verisimilitude is endlessly absorbing. Nice to know a ramshackle workshop can be as compelling a subject as a young Shirley Maclaine. More upcoming.
A word on the title… Varshtat is what my father called our workshop in Ukrainian. While this particular one was discovered during a road trip in rural New Jersey, it evokes our own perfectly. Growing up, in terms of utilitarian spaces the workshop was second in importance only to the kitchen. Now that I think about it, the satisfaction I get from realist painting, both in practice and as an observer, probably began there, with my father, losing ourselves in the underlying mechanics of everyday things. [larger image]

The Great Redistribution, 2009, collage on board, 10″ x 13” 2009

Roman & Renata’s, gouache on illustration board, 12″x12,” 2009

The Paisley Headscarf, gouache on illustration board, 16″x 24,” completed Dec 2008

Goodbye to all that! II, gouache on illustration board, 16″x 19,” completed Nov. 2008
:: Dan Shepelavy :: this, that, and also, etc :: |