An Exploration : Art || Asemic || Words
Van Vliet Gallery
Bio / Artist Statement:
Claude Smith born 1951 (NYC) Smith grew up in a family of artists. His father, Sidney Smith was a masterful painter and calligrapher who introduced young Claude to the world of calligraphy, gesture drawing and the traditional tools of the trade, setting the trajectory of his life's work. Formal studies began at the Art Students League of New York in 1964, and he earned a BFA from Pratt Institute in 1971. By the late 1970s writing-as-drawing, drawing-as-writing was becoming an integral part of his creative process. Gesture drawing that tended to be thread-like and elastic lent itself to the development of his expressive free hand and served as a bridge between writing and drawing. This gradually morphed into asemic writing, or wordless writing with no semantic content. |
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Over time he added non traditional surfaces to paint on and unorthodox, eccentric mark making tools that yielded unpredictable and surprising results. Beginning in the 1990s Smith began working closely with musicians, often free-jazz composers and players who were exponents of a more fearless, daring improvisational approach to the creative process. At the vanguard of the free-jazz movement was composer/pianist Cecil Taylor who inspired many of the works in this exhibition. In the words of musician, and sometimes Smith collaborator, Richard Osborn : it's the dark space of the blackboard that intrigues me in Claude's painting, the place of speculation and possibility and discovery, its association with thinkers and dreamers working out equations and relationships and imagery, re-imagining their understanding of the universe...it reveals that the darkness is not truly empty; like the universe's deep space, it is a delicate but resilient and living membrane, an "empty fullness." |
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Adversity births innovation. In lieu of a brick and mortar gallery, I’m launching a virtual gallery to share the work of working artists I admire and to share my own work, as well. I hope you enjoy. If you do, please tell your friends. Spread the word. A virtual show doesn’t get traffic off the street, but with your help people unfamiliar with my site can discover it just the same. Also, check out our publications page. We publish a catalog of each Evince Exhibit.
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