Artist Talk with Kristopher Lionel: Surface Tension
Apr 20, 2024 2:00PM
Location
40 Mechanic St. Windsor CT 06095
Cost Free
Event Contact Marianna Martino | Email
Categories Artist Event, Events, Exhibits, Panel Discussion
Artist Talk with Kristopher Lionel
Date: Saturday, April 20th 2:00pm
Location: Windsor Art Center 40Mechanic St. Windsor CT 06095
Cost: Free
Artist Statement:
My art-making process alternates between looking outward, then turning inward. The considerable time I’ve spent thinking about the toll that human activity is taking on the living world of Nature has led me to understand the damage we’ve done and continue to do unabated. The awareness of the danger we’ve put ourselves in and the resulting unease is always present. Rather than give in to fear and a feeling of futility, I use my art-making (painting and sculpting) as an antidote and address these concerns both head-on in a more literal, representational way, as well as abstractly. My focus shifts between several series that include, interactive sculpture, wall sculpture, abstract painting, and surrealistic painting, all conceptually connected by themes directly and indirectly related to or inspired by Nature.
Included among my non-objective, abstract artworks are wall sculptures, paintings, and drawings. I use a variety of traditional and nontraditional materials including canvas, paper, charcoal, chalk, pen, pencil, oil paint, varnish, plywood, wood, steel, and epoxy resin. These pieces are informed by Surrealism and Abstract Expressionism (Surrealism in that I give the unconscious/subconscious mind considerable liberty while working and Abstract Expressionism in so much as the pieces are not rooted in, nor do they mirror, translate, or represent, objective reality). The artworks exist (for the most part) independent of direct visual reference to the physical world. When a direct reference is made, via a representational image fragment or a material that comes loaded with associations, it is done to induce a sense of memory, of fading or forming thought. Several of these works are built around the conventional device of the horizon line to convey the impression of landscape or seascape.
Free from objective subject, I use color, line, shape, material, and composition for aesthetic reasons, like notes of music struck in dynamic, gestural ways as well as quietly and reflectively played. These ‘”notes” occupy visual spaces that are emotive and contemplative—internal, inward-looking spaces.