Showcase: Bill Carman
Meet Bill Carman and his surreal work! Bill has a BFA in visual communication and an MFA in painting. He is a professor of illustration and drawing based in Boise , Idaho (USA).
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I walked into a local Stinker (yes real name) gas station and convenience store. Upon taking my purchases to the counter the young clerk remarked, “Dude, your head is perfectly round.” Pause, my reply: “Uh, thank you?” One would think that in such a perfectly round dome ideas and images might be orbiting neatly, ripe for the plucking. Nothing could be further from the truth. If my head were opened it would be quite messy. A lot goes in there and if I did not let it out, occasionally an eye would pop. Though my work can be meticulous in its execution my mind scribbles, jumps, spins, and spits. There is rarely more than an itch when I begin. Surface will speak to me and stuff emerges as unknown yet familiar characters, odd forms, and unbalancing juxtapositions. Some pieces divulge narratives as I paint, some stare back and challenge. Hopefully those who look at my work will be touched in that mad place that lies in the corner of all brains.
-When did you start “doodling”?
I never stopped like most people. So as early as I could hold something in my hand.
Anyone who has worked long and hard enough develops a voice. I try not put too much effort into defining my voice or there’s a danger of affectation. Chasing “style” is dangerous so I’ll let others define my work.
If I tell you a story it might not be the same story you see. That would be bad. I have stories about making work. Dogs chewing up drawings, snakes crawling through oil palettes and then across drawings, cats walking on paintings that were still wet but you don’t want to hear those.
No desk. The table I work at is one provided me by one of my first employers out of college. Well built and I still like it.
The important question for me is not what I’m communicating but that I am communicating or having an effect. To make someone look. To engage someone.
If there weren’t challenges during the process of creating a picture it wouldn’t be worth doing. It sounds cliche, but a difficult process often leads to a satisfying conclusion. I guess the greatest challenge is always time. There comes a point in a painting where new ideas start coming for the next painting. Staying on task can be a great challenge when the next great piece is waiting to be started.
Hell or Heaven, they’re interchangeable.
“The Lyre of Orpheus” Last book in the Cornish Trilogy by Robertson Davies. I am currently reading “Straight Man” by Richard Russo. I read it once a year right before the Fall semester starts. I also read images every day. Illustration annuals, art magazines, etc.
Now you’ve done it. Favourite is an absolute. I’m not fond of them. Favourite, perfect, best, etc.. Too many variables in life. Things need to be contextualized. Favourite color of what, on which day, adjacent to what, and so on. There are artists who have inspired me from Bosch and Van Eyck up to and including Dave McKean, Ian Miller, and Phil Hale. But to choose a favourite would be like asking do you prefer your heart or lungs.
Probably granola and yogurt. Not because I’m a health nut but I can’t think of anything else.
Why are you bald? My brain has grown large enough to force out all of the hair.
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Bill`s new exhibition will be opening on Saturday 16th March at Brumsflield’s Gallery, Boise , Idaho (USA)
See more of Bill`s work here
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Wow. Your work is stunning, eerie, thought and story provoking.
The rich designs are wonderful. I be eye-tripping (written purposefully) on all the eye-tripping details.
Following the line movements, the twists in the heads (masks), the things that are being seen through these devices or hunted or caught, or things within things within things, the backgrounds, and the colors – your work is just so rich and inspiring.
Randy
Didn’t know I could respond here. Thanks for the kind comments.
Fantastic work!
Thank you.
Reblogged this on FREE WiLL and commented:
love the green
So do I.Thanks.