To
me, making art is the statement you make about your subject
from your point of view, from your emotions and with the
skills you've attained to translate and record those qualities
onto the canvas or paper. I am a "Representational"
painter. But , I am not interested in being a human camera,
recording what lies in front of me without bringing something
to the work through my intuition, perspective and creative
urge. So much art is judged by the extent to which an artist
has captured a subject's likeness or how well a scene has
been copied. To be sure, that much takes skill. It is a
craft, but not necessarily art. A skill is learned but the
ability to make art is an attribute with which we are all
endowed. It is part of our desire to express ourselves,
to let our fellow beings know we exist and have a way of
looking at things. It is the common thread that runs through
the poet, the writer, the composer, the painter, the sculptor
or the person who arranges the flowers in a vase to his
or her liking. How well we hone that attribute is what makes
an "artist". And to the extent that that endowment inspires,
enlightens, entertains or moves us is what separates great
artists from artists.
I work in oils, watercolors, acrylics and a variety of line
techniques. I work primarily from photos since many of the
subjects I paint are unable to sit for me. Another reason
I must work from photos is that the people I paint are best
known for they're past achievements and should be immortalized
at the age of their athletic accomplishments. When doing
a portrait from a photo of a living person I prefer to do
the photography myself or at least direct it so that the
work is as much my own as possible. Oftentimes, I select
and combine parts from a variety of photos to make a painting
in order to create a fresh image unseen before. Finally,
I must admit, I prefer working alone, at my own pace, free
to experiment and to be unencumbered by a sitter's impatience
or premature critiques. Working from photographs requires
discipline. One must guard against being too literal. There
is a need to exercise more creativity, to add something
to the image that can only come from within you.
The call I feel as an artist is to make each piece I create
another step in an ongoing process of self-expression, to
get better at doing art and not become stale, predictable,
typical or boring. It is to make my art my own. Kind
regards, Ken Rumbaugh

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