Where were you born – was it close to a major city? What does this place mean to you?
new jersey summit close to NYC grew up in mattisdon NJ
on a train line into NY
go to other towns and into the city
level of freedom that most kids don’t have
What was your childhood like?
youngest child by a long shot
lot of freedom
positive
When did your passion for X develop?
started abilities (if you want to call them that) at 11
Were your parents active in your pursuit of education/activities? Did they support you pursuing your passion professionally as a career?
mother was a sunday painter
oil paint in the house
father was reluctantly supportive but lovingly supportive nonetheless
mom passed away at 17
Did you have a mentor? If so, what did you learn from him/her?
late mentor.. maybe a few
one in high school
one out of college/profs
mentor/friend/connections/access
stephen antonakos
brent saville (first)
(both deceased now)
What was the moral authority when you were growing up? [religion]
not religious
Did you find you compared yourself to other people your age when you were just starting out? Is your field now competitive?
never looked at work in a competitive way
private high school (business oriented)
competitive now (marketing yourself)
Did/do your parents do something related to your craft?
father was a business man
Did you have a good relationship with your parents/family?
good relationships all around
support outside of family
father of a girlfriend high school into college
introduced to employer and studio assistant
Practice
What emotions do you associate with your practice?
intellectual: making work about nature there is the love of it and the deference and respect for it (and sorrow in acknowledging its destruction)
creative: get into the zone and time goes away and live in the moment and creating and being subjected to outside powers and there aren’t many experiences outside that
Why this specific domain in the field?
why create art about nature? need to be in nature often. demanded presence in the field (pun intended).
versus being a historian… i am a maker
When did you find things came naturally to you? Do you have a workflow that allows you to work without thinking about minutiae and details?
being out in a field in a collecting mode.. certain level of awareness that is very meditative and withdrawn observation.. no hardwork
in studio making a piece.. physicality is demanding in a different way that forces you to be analytical
restricted medium.. pure immediate response (push-pin pieces)
What is the greatest difficulty you have faced over the course of your career?
constantly questioning yourself
finding the fortitude to continue to make work
persistant
every artist has a pitfall
Were there any costs/sacrifices to pursuing your passion? What were those?
decided not to have children but had some anyways (not hers biologically) his wife already had two young children
Expertise
What qualities do you associate with mastery? What about in your field? How do you compare against those criteria?
knowledge (broad and deep knowledge of your field)
knowledge, awareness, experience (historical, technically trying to achieve and the ability to execute it, awareness of others in the field who have better knowledge than you do, the ability to work with other to achieve a goal)
meet some and fall short of some
How long have you been working in your field?
exhibiting right after college 1986
manhattan at 25, 29 years ago
What was the evolution/changes in your practice?
work in stages and themes
moved from college using a lot of found objects, because of their history
interest in nature and its structure
flat work v sculpture
still goes back and forth
Are there any limitations in your field? How do you get around them?
he’ll let us know when he gets around them
kind of like hollywood
the more big and powerful people you know the greater access you have
many gate keepers
many artists don’t get the recognition they deserve
When did you experience a breakthrough moment? What is your next step?
haven’t come from studio moment rather than introduced by an idea by a scientist or philosopher… who posed a question or approached an idea in a very novel way. more intellectual discussions.
Motivation
What motivates you to keep practicing?
it’s way of life. first out of college back at home, no studio, pretty depressed looking for a job… wasn’t making art (4-5 months) really needed to make art. that keeps him happy and satisfied. nurture the soul. can’t not do it.
Do you have any regrets?
very few, not to do with art career.
see below.
Presently
Do you mentor others? What have you learned from being a mentor?
Professor so, fairly hands off mentor. one of his regrets is that he’s not a forceful mentor or friend… let them do their thing.
Do you collaborate with younger practitioners?
surrounded by them. high school program too. creating opportunity with collar (with professional artists too)
Which project of yours is your favorite?
like asking favorite child
piece collaborative project Heinz project (57 artist) 7 different objects and each one had an itinerary of artists it would go to (schedule) a week to manipulate the piece (painting, sculpture, video) photograph it beginning middle and end and send it along. around 1989. everything was mailed and digital photography wasn’t around (sent rolls of film etc). lack of control and surprise.
petri project (2000 artists) all these dishes that cascade down in a circle from above onto the floor, ongoing
Which project of yours do others consider your best?
spore drawings (PBS documentary)
What is your favorite part about what you do? Least favorite?
freedom of doing what you want to do and creating, sometimes an audience and a place to show work (very privileged not taken for granted)
least fave is that the creative process has its costs (asking for money, having to make money)