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ARRAY Outdoor Pillows

ARRAY Outdoor Pillows

Regular price $49.00 USD
Regular price Sale price $49.00 USD
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Talk about summer love'n, or anytime of year, we've got the cushions for all seasons. 100% polyester insert, poly spun shell, fade resistant printing with treatments in UV protection, water and mildew resistance, these pillows have got you covered! As an added bonus, there's quite the selection. Your choice between pillow or shell only, both with conveniently hidden zippers and 3 size variants (16 x 16 IN, 18 x 18 IN and 20 x 20 IN). Don't worry about cleanup: shells are machine wash, cold with mild detergent on gentle. Don't bleach or tumble dry.

ABOUT THE PAINTING:

ARRAY, acrylic on canvas, 4 x 4 FT.

The structure of this piece is incredibly formalized in its foundation. If you focus on the underpainting, everything is rigid but each layer gets looser and looser, allowing a fertile ground for growth. It's the visual language of an artist being displayed before the viewer.

Visual art training is much like training in any field. You learn the history of art. You learn about materials and tools, how they’re made and they’ve evolved. You learn how to look at things, study things and pay attention to details. You learn the language of art, words like composition, scale, perspective, focal point, balance, gestural, tension, veristic, field, impasto, texture, painterly, et al. If you’re lucky, you have a fantastic high school art teacher who was heavily influenced by the Renaissance masters and taught you how to draw figures from the inside out. She was almost scientific in encouraging us to learn the bones, muscles and joints in the body so we knew how they worked and could approach figure drawing in the most naturalistic way.

With all this formalized education and continued autodidactic training throughout life, one might ask, “What made you go in the direction you have with your abstract art?” First of all, just to clarify and explain, my work isn’t abstract; it’s nonobjective. I understand how it’s easily confused because the term “abstract” is more common than nonobjective. Nonobjective means there’s no recognizable relationship between what you see in my work and the natural world. Wherein, when something is considered abstract, that means it’s an abstraction of the natural world. It’s  a semantic but I write these to share my thoughts on my work. As far as why my work has evolved into what it is today, Picasso said it best, "Learn the rules like a pro, so you can break them like an artist.”

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