Doug Simon
The Color of Transformation
November 20 - December 11, 2009
Reception:
Thursday December 3, 2009 6-8 PM
Press Release
The most striking constant in California-based, Pennsylvania-raised painter Doug Simon’s work must be the infinite play of light over gestural brushstrokes, but the most exciting variable is his ability to shift styles and aesthetic modes. The influences of Cezanne and Matisse—whose work Simon studied at the Barnes Foundation—are evident, but other canvases evoke Rothko and other more contemporary Los Angeles artists. Some paintings visit American pastoral settings whose rolling wheat fields teem with light, while on the coast, a sad little island becomes a booming feast of lush blues and greens.
Alongside these Expressionist works, which feature Simon’s style at its purest, others deploy Minimalism, Collage, Abstraction and Realism to great effect. Throughout, he seems concerned with a particular mythology of the American outdoors and its attendant ideals of freedom and self-determination. Roads, streams and iconic horizons figure prominently, teasing our curiosity to see what’s over the next ridge. However that inviting point is rendered, Simon’s brush captures its brilliant, warming glow.
Artist Statement
I have always been artistic, and the hours I spent copying pictures from art books in the family library were followed by a college studio art class, where I realized that I had found my calling. Direct access to contemporary and old masters’ works, particularly Impressionists, greatly influenced my style. When I paint, I feel focused and spontaneous in a liberating way, my spirit is freed and time stands still. This mystical quality of the creative process is unlike any other life experience. I especially enjoy plein air landscape painting; working in oils quickly, using expressively kinetic brushstrokes. By gradually building layers of color, the intrinsic value of the oils translate nature, capturing the moment. Some paintings are finished in the studio to avoid contaminating the fresh qualities achieved on location. This two-stage process acts as a springboard for further ideas, like exploring the abstract qualities of nature on a larger scale.
Invitation to the exhibition
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Artists in this exhibition
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