Friday, August 21, 2015

John Murray classes week of August 24, 2015

Another Summer comes to an end.
The beauty and endless pulse of Summer has run its course for my Supercharged class at NAC.
I love the hot late afternoons and gradually darkening early evenings in the big studio.
Next week both sessions (Monday and Wednesday) will have a model. A female nude.
Thank you for attending this Summer term.
See you next week.
John.

Saturday, August 15, 2015

john Murray classes week of August 17, 2015




Night fishing at Antibes
 

Hot Summer morning relieved by aloft slightly whispers of past breezes Long evaporated in whatever there is or is not...

-John Murray

Make art!

Thursday, August 6, 2015

John Murray classes week of August 10, 2015

In keeping with last week's assignment let's stay with a theme: Rauschenbergian playfulness!
Find a few pieces of scrap metal and use them in some manner to initiate a painting.
Trace them over and over attach them to your canvas or surface write about them and their history or origin across your surface and then paint as a counterpoint to the narrative.
Search the roadways of America and gather the fruits of our insane destructive energy and industry.
See you next week, john

Saturday, August 1, 2015

John Murray classes week of August 3, 2015



Next week let's get personal...
Robert Rauschenberg got very personal with Amerikan Kulture in the 1960's.
His "Combine" paintings took our national obsessions, loves, hates, fears, desires and prejudices from the media and transferred them onto canvas, he then painted around and into them with a pastiche of Abstract Expressionist gestural punctuation and irony.
For you the assignment (if you choose to accept it) is to bring to class images (preferably photo copies) of what you love, hate, fear, despise, admire and find weird.
I will show you how to transfer these images to canvas and then counterpoint them with paint and ironic plasticity.
The top painting is mine and includes such personal icons as my much admired and loved Yamaha Z1 liter class motorcycle, a Picasso woodcut and a "t" square...Rauschenberg's is self explainatory.
Rauschenberg  used Xylene, a very toxic industrial cleaning fluid, to transfer his images,,,I will show you how to transfer safely with acrylic medium.
See you next week, john