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Old 01-15-2009, 10:17 AM   #1
Richard Monro Richard Monro is offline
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Alex,

Amazing what you have accomplished considering the reference material you had too work with. No questions of the details...they are always well done. painterly referred to the brush stokes that appear to be confidently put down without trying to blend them with what lay underneath or along side. Well done.
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Old 01-15-2009, 12:40 PM   #2
Thomasin Dewhurst Thomasin Dewhurst is offline
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Superb portrait, Alex! You have such mastery of your technique and ideas, and in this one I feel like you're riding on a wave of confidence and assuredness. To me, this painting is a pillar of contemporary portraiture making you definitely one of the very top portrait painters around.

A real masterpiece.

I have just come back from 3 1/2 weeks of vacation overseas with family which seemed like a lifetime of intense living and learning, and came back feeling like I wanted to shake off all the things that were hindering me in my art and seeing this one of yours was such an inspiration. A lot of art I saw in this recent trip seemed to be more in the line of art therapy - a getting-out of personal feelings and a kind of punching-the-cushion gestural mark-making. After watching Kenneth Clark's "Civilization" (a lovely revision of art history) I was struck by the professionalism of the painters of the past. A dedication to work and to service rendered to society and humanity. Art is a privileged career, but it is not a society-supported psycho-therapy. To have an income - to take people's money for the services we provide - there must be a respect for the clients, and so there must be a balance between belief and expression of in our own ideas, and a professional attitude toward the hard labour of recreating those ideas in paint. A gestural mark doesn't make it by itself - it needs a lot of painterly explanation. In the end we are workers like everyone else, and should be.

Your painting is a very fine example of this - the balance between original and passionate ideas and a dedication to the unavoidably hard work of creating them.
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