|
The easy
integration of natural-looking people and outdoor scenes is one
of the hardest-won achievements in the history of art. Lurking
in the air are irascible art obstacles: technical demons ready
to sabotage the artist at every swipe of the brush.
Jeffrey T. Larson glides past these
devilish difficulties as if his only problem were selecting the
next image for his creamy, rich palette. And his scope is large:
Larson paints still lifes, landscapes, portraits, and figures.
Here, I’ll focus on two of his figure series—one whose theme I
think of as “sheets” and the other as “the river.”
Light and
Color
A special attribute of Larson is his
unbridled play with all kinds of reflected or refracted light,
and with cast shadow. In Color of Daylight, the
peach-colored sheet might appear simply to be a gathering of
beautiful colors, but in truth it is very complex—with every
color being an attribute of refracted, reflected, or filtered
light.

Color of Daylight, 1999, oil on
canvas, 20 x 24"

The cool violet fold,
which the arrow is pointing to in the detailed view, is picking
up the refracted light from the woman’s white dress. The orange
stripe marks the cast shadow from the sheet behind. Above that
boundary is sunlight filtered through the double layers of the
peach sheet. But the bright gold light under the woman’s arm is
a single layer of peach sheet, which is therefore twice as
bright. These areas are like the light filtered through
stained-glass windows.
Where does all this immediacy of light and
color come from? Larson loves the early morning light, and his
way is simply to take his studio outside and paint directly from
observation for about ninety minutes each morning. Light,
easel, action! And he is off breathing, feeling the moment,
and sensing the energy of the light, wind, color, and mood all
around him. With lightning-quick decisions, without hesitation,
he attacks the canvas. His name for this is “Game day!”
Backing up his skill are years of
classical training at the Atelier Lack, an artists' workshop for
drawing and painting established by Richard Lack (1928–). Lack
was one of very few artists who stood proudly against the
twentieth century’s embrace of the nonobjective art of no light,
no form, no subject matter. His method was to teach the
demanding skills that are essential to representational art, and
so Larson’s education began with his painstakingly drawing
inanimate, plaster-cast busts. Then he went on to draw
still-life work, graduating through the courses until he was
painting live models in oil color.
A profound view of art that Larson learned
from Lack was the significance of fresh color combinations, as
espoused by the American and French Impressionists—Monet being
one of Larson’s important early influences. My eye (with forty
years of painting experience behind it) senses immediately that
Larson’s colors come from his direct observation of life, not
from a hypothetical, in-studio construct. Let me see if I can
help you discern this as we look at River Rock.

River Rock, 2006, oil On canvas, 16
x 12
In the studio, without observing colors
from life, it is difficult to place bold colors next to one
another without the combinations seeming artificial. However,
look at the more-detailed views from the lower-right corner of
the painting, and see how Larson pairs golden orange, rich
browns, purples, and intense blues. Note that there is nothing
jarring about the color combinations. They give off the natural,
harmonious feel that is the result of direct observation. Notice
the peach-pink highlight on the painting’s main rock, and
observe that Larson plays with orange, green, blue—but again,
with no discordant note.



Another thing that plagues an artist not
working from life is that it is very difficult to vary the
colors of things, such as gray rocks. But every rock in this
painting is made up of differing colors. It excites the eye by
never letting it get bored through repetition.
Abstraction, Detail, and Symbolism
Larson creates bold, abstracted
compositions, yet effortlessly merges his realistic subjects and
their surroundings. This marks him historically as an artist
coming after the influence of the abstract modernists. Far from
doing abstraction for its own sake, however, Larson believes in
cutting out all nonessential elements until he arrives at the
essence of the overall image. “There must be something abstract
to a composition—like music, or like seeing something at the end
of a corridor—that pulls you into it,” he explained to me. “The
fine details, like those of a beautiful woman’s face, come
afterwards; they are the icing on the cake.”
One of the most enjoyable things to do
while looking at art is to see if there are any symbolic
connotations in it. For instance, Over the Line merges
the abstract composition of the three clothes lines with a few
metaphors: communicating over the line, as well as between the
lines. But there is also a nice spirit to it. Instead of
communicating over the telephone, a neighbor has dropped by to
have a real chat.

Over The Line, 2002, oil on canvas,
32 x 48

Rose Print, 2000, oil on canvas, 24
x 30"
Freud said that sometimes a cigar is just
a cigar, but looking for symbolism can be one of many ways to
develop your eye and get more out of a painting. I find Rose
Print loaded with possible erotic symbols: the masculine,
bold, blood-red sheet in the foreground, and the feminine,
delicate, luminescent, rose-pattern sheet (these are bed sheets,
of course). Note the two horizontal, parallel clothes lines:
Horizontals tend to give a calming feeling to a visual image,
and the parallels are indicative that the two lines, the two
people, see eye to eye. We might even imagine that the delicate
shape of the woman’s cast shadow is unclothed. Yet her body is
screened, as if to ask gently for privacy. And, of course, the
clothes pins. I find this painting to be one of the most
beautiful romantic works I have ever seen.
It doesn’t really matter if the artist did
all this intentionally or not, but I did get you to look at the
painting more closely, to contemplate the colors, shapes,
objects, and their possible meanings. And I am fairly certain
that the artist would be delighted with someone looking at his
work with this sort of care, time, and thought.

River Walk, 2005, oil on canvas, 24
x 20"
Life As
an Artist Sees It
The simple scene in River Walk is
really one of the most complex of the lot. Larson has managed to
pull off a couple of extremely difficult optical effects. The
boy’s ankles and feet are clearly submerged in the water. We can
see the rocky river bed through the surface of the water, yet we
can still sense that there is a surface to the water. But the
most intriguing thing I would like to share with you is that
Larson has managed to cast the boy’s shadow along the river bed,
under the surface of the water—noted in the detailed view with
the “S.” Then, in a warm, orange-brown color, he has painted the
reflection of the boy on the surface of the water, indicated by
an “R.” The “C” marks where the cast shadow and reflection
converge. Amazing stuff.

It would be
misleading to think of Jeff Larson’s subject matter as
lightweight. In our postmodern world, so many people elaborate
grandiosely on what they are against, but so few inspire us with
what they are for. Through his works, Larson shows us a
world worth protecting from terrorism, cynicism, and senseless
anger. “Having kids has helped me hold special moments—like
playing patty-cake with my daughter,” he told me. “She may have
only been four years old, but then it seems that only weeks
before, she was two. We don’t need to be in church to experience
God; we can experience that and wonderful moments in simple
things all around us.”

Pink Swimsuit, 2001, oil on panel,
8 x 10"
Perhaps sometime this summer, on a lazy
day by the seashore, you can spend a few hours looking at the
differences of the reflections and the cast shadows of piers,
docks, boats, or children playing. When the day is over, you
will know that you did not merely look at life, but that you
really saw it. That is what it means to have an “artist’s
I.”
-----
Photo
credits Jeff Larson and Jeff Frey
You can contact
Jeff Larson through his website:
www.jeffreytlarson.com
Recent Jeff Larson shows:
Eleanor Ettinger Gallery, NYC, March 6-30, 2008
www.eegallery.com
Upcoming: Tree's Place,
Orleans, Massachusetts, July 26-31, 2008
www.treesplace.com
Michael Newberry
New York, March 2008
|