Musings on Contemporary Art and Artists:
For the average person the contemporary art world seems to speak in a foreign language. I have found over the past decade that many people have an interest in art but feel like outsiders to a very insulated conversation.
The purpose of this blog site is two-fold. First, it includes thoughts, observations, and analysis of contemporary artists and their works. The second type of blog entry is based on my own artwork.
When I first began to
seriously work on painting, as an undergraduate art major, I preferred a
thicker, more opaque application of paint. It was not that I was painting with
such dimensional strokes as Vincent Van Gogh, but it was not in the style of
some renaissance master, either. I still rather enjoy applying paint with a
heavily loaded brush. It just feels good.
However, “art life” happens
and styles change. In fact, style is more often dictated by concept than
anything else within the fine art world. Take Pablo Picasso, for instance.
Those only familiar with his more extreme forms of Cubist abstraction—and with
little or no knowledge of what this master was trying to achieve—believe that
he had no traditional skill. That is simply not the case. The work from the
period when he was a very young artist reveals that he was every bit a master
draftsman, yet he subverted that skill to challenge our assumptions of what a
painting actually is. It is those endeavors in abstraction that set in motion
the major shifts in much of the art of the twentieth century.
I, on the other hand, moved in the opposite direction. My
painting style became more traditional as my work evolved. This was not because
I necessarily improved as a painter—though that did happen, as well. It had
more to do with a change in the materials I was using. Once I started painting over text, especially book pages, I needed a more transparent paint application
if I wanted viewers to still be able to see the words. So I returned to the
process of glazing.
Even before this shift in style happened
within my own work I was teaching the process of glazing to my beginning
painting students. I have them experiment with a variety of surfaces and paint
applications so that they can get to know the materials and what seems to suit
their own artistic needs. This particular method seems to test the patience of
many students. I suppose part of it is that it is not an instantaneous process.
It takes time. It requires an understanding of both color and materials.
The paintings shown here were actually produced as an
attempt to help solve that problem. They were painted outside the confines of
any specific series on which I am currently working. They are slightly
connected to my main body of work, but do not carry the same concerns or weight
of concept. They came into existence because 1) I had these canvas panels
laying around and wanted to finally put something on them after ten years, and
2) I wanted to show my students just how many layers of paint go into creating
a realistic glazed painting.
The video below is a tutorial for my current and future
students. I have posted it here because I feel that those who are unaware of
the processes of creating paintings may be interested in seeing one process of
how I develop a painting. I hope you find it interesting or useful.
Tyrus Clutter is a painter and printmaker who was born and grew up in Michigan. He holds a BA in Art from Spring Arbor University and an MFA in Painting from Bowling Green State University. His work has been exhibited in numerous group and solo exhibitions throughout North America and in Europe. Clutter’s work can be found in several hundred private collections as well as in the Print Collection of the New York Public Library, and the collections of the Museum of Biblical Art, the Spencer Museum of Art at the University of Kansas, Spring Arbor University, Calvin College and Union University.
Tyrus has taught art and art history at colleges and universities since 1995. He also served as the Director of the international art non-profit CIVA from 2003-2008. From 1999-2001 Clutter was art critic for the Boise Weekly newspaper in Boise, Idaho. He continues to produce art, teach, and speak on topics of art, art history, and aesthetics around the country.