Interview With Mark Bowles Pt.1
When You’re Honest With What You Do, That’s The That People Enjoy.
One of my 2013 resolutions is to update this blog more frequently. One of the most popular and enjoyable posts for me was the interview of Jose Digregorio. So in the coming year I plan on doing one interview a month! *
One of my 2013 resolutions is to update this blog more frequently. One of the most popular and enjoyable posts for me was the interview of Jose Digregorio. So in the coming year I plan on doing one interview a month! *
There is about 30 minutes of really goof stuff that isn’t in
the following interview. Not because it was “off the record, which would make
my process sound cool and edgy. But in reality, I forgot to hit the record
button! Yes that means this interview was even longer! Enjoy :)
Marl Bowles:
Well I’m well
aware of that, but I grew up in the Bay Area, and I went to Arts & Crafts in Oakland. So I was exposed to Bay Area
painters;
Diebenkorn, Bischoff, David Park, all of that
whole school, even though they were much older than me.
JM Yeah you can see a lot of Diebenkorn in there.
I met his wife, Moni, first, then I met
Gregory, but if I look at work I did, say from the 70’s, it looks like Kondos.
So there is this sensibility about how you approach the landscape, which we
both have, for whatever reason. And he’s considered a Bay Area painter too,
he’s very well known in the Bay Area now. But I wasn’t aware of him when I was
there, but now we’re very good friends. He was here in my studio the other
night and we did a critique of my new work. He wanted to see what I was working on, and it was
incredibly valuable he’s an incredible teacher and he helped choose some of the
paintings that are going to be used for a show in Tucson (AZ)
So he’s really quite incredible, but there are so many people who copy him here. I mean it’s just distasteful that there are so many people that make a dime from being an artist who don’t do the work.
JM -Chuckles-
JM Yeah, it’s very apparent, you can go to
any gallery, whether they are open or not over the past few years, and point
and say, “Oh, yeah that.”
JM Which is AMAZING! The fact that you can find a close friend that’s not
an artist who understands, let alone a life partner is HUGE!
Every time I paint, I’m absolutely in love
with it; the process not the paintings. Still, they go through the complete
cycle. From the beginning, here I go, I have to take myself through this
journey, making it difficult and resolving problems and resolving the painting
and coming up on the end and being absent from the painting. To be able to see
that it has to stand on its’ own, and what I’m learning to do now is enjoy that
minute and make that
time longer. And not putting it away and say great I’m onto the next one. Take
time to enjoy it and not punish myself so much, not grab a canvas right away
and start the journey over again. Every painting to me, for some reason, I put
myself into a struggle position. I make sure that if the painting happens too
easy, I’m not happy with it.
JM (laughs)
JM Yeah, when did that happen?
He readily admits it that he is a western contemporary artist. So if I did blue, it wasn’t going to be that shade, so I got more and more into layering and washes through acrylic. Then I developed light particles and different textures to put the sky in and concepts along those lines. So that’s the area I explore when I want to do the sky. The reds and the oranges only live for a time, so it’s an emotionally feeling of a sunset, but not a direct one. So there are three essential parts and the horizon line, and from that I decided I wanted to move into a backdrop, a range, a California Mountain Range. So there’s development, it would be going back in a circle again, because these are similar to a painting I’d done years ago, but I wanted to go back and re-visit what I’ve learned over these years and put it back into that format. That’s like the loop that I do, I like to have a big bandwidth.
MB Yeah a lot with my hands. That’s where it started for me, because I used to love clay, like all kids with mud and dirt. But I used to use my hands instead of brushes- that went on for a long time. Yeah I used tar and would paint with that.
JM Wait, you used your hands to paint with tar???
JM Wow!
Mark Bowles-Shadow-Acrylic On Canvas-50" x 50"- 2012 |
Bowles’ landscapes are individual statements that have emerged with individuality from a rich tradition of California landscape painting. Unlike his friend, Gregory Kondos, Mark Bowles is not a plein-air painter although he finds time in the field crucial to his artistic sensibility. Mark prefers the solitude of the studio to address painting infrastructure and color interplay which eventually find placement in a finished work. Whereas many practicing Northern California landscape painters find richness with riparian settings or city-scapes, Bowles primarily features the broad plains of the Central Valley as his favored subject matter. Often, distinctive landmarks are visible in a setting that is on the verge of abstraction.
Scott Shields, Ph. D.Chief Curator, Crocker Art Museum
Jeff Musser: Sacramento is well known for Theibaud and Kondos, how was it painting the
way you paint, and not be labeled, “Oh he obviously has been influenced by
Theibaud or Kondos,” because it’s obvious when you look around town at other
landscape people. I mean you can see it and know; this person either went to
Sac City College or UC Davis. Your work is obviously yours.
JM
Richard Diebenkorn-Ocean Park #83-
Oil On Canvas-100" X 81"-1975
|
Mark Bowles-Night Fall-Acrylic On Canvas-50" x 40"-2012 |
So I knew just as much
about Kondos or Theibaud as anybody. So I wasn’t influence by them much, and didn’t
even know they lived in Sacramento. I’ve been painting my whole life, my mom
was an artist, so I started showing and selling work when I was in high school.
When I went to college at arts & crafts I was selling work in Sausalito,
doing different experimental works with tar and cement, and then doing
landscapes. Living in the Bay Area with the rolling hills, it is a very
pastoral area, with cows and nature and all of that. So when we moved to
Sacramento because of the economy, I wanted to stay home and paint, we wanted
to have kids, Debbe wanted to focus on her career, so financially we couldn’t
stay in the Bay Area, we had to move somewhere else, and Sacramento was the
spot. So I came up here and started painting, and it wasn’t for several years
before I met Kondos.
So he’s really quite incredible, but there are so many people who copy him here. I mean it’s just distasteful that there are so many people that make a dime from being an artist who don’t do the work.
JM -Chuckles-
MB You know I’ve put in 40, 50 years of
painting, maybe 80 grand in education, so I’ve paid my dues.
MB And it’s pretty unabashed and there’s a
market for it. People seem proud that they can copy and make a living of it and
galleries are happy selling it because it makes money. But when it comes into
the world of art, and process, and what’s important, it’s very superficial. I
find much more meaning in my life, to be able to do something that’s more
unique with the canvas, that’s hugely important to me.
JM I think that a lot of people that are
interested in art or what do be artists, don’t take that into account, because
this is a long term investment kind of a lifestyle, with little or usually no
return on investment ever.
MB Yeah it’s hard.
JM I struggle with this everyday, how did
you keep going despite it all? I remember back in 2006 when we met, you
discussed certain times when you just refused to get a “job.”
“I’m artist, this is what
I do, and it’s my job!” How did
you do that?
MB Well one, I was married so there was an
income, so I’m indebted to that. But there was an income, not a huge one. We
learned and grew up with a lot less compared to a lot of our friends. We
weren’t buying homes, we weren’t going on vacations, we weren’t buying boats,
and we weren’t going to Disneyland. We would go someplace maybe once a year,
but much less compared to a normal family. There’s nothing else that ever
interested me as much as painting, nothing that I ever got such a reward from.
I wasn’t very good in school, the way I learn is very different that the way
they teach. Which is common, as I get older I can see, the way the public
schools teach doesn’t fit every kid. And I was one of those kids. So my
self-esteem came from the praise or reward I could receive from the artwork I
was making, plus I loved doing it and always have. So the thought of another
career, I mean I’ve thought about it, my dad was a court reporter, so I thought
about that.
JM Good lord! Um, well I’m sure it’s a
great job for some people but…
MB It’s a job that makes money, that’s all
it is. My dad used to say he was a glorified secretary, and he was not happy
doing it, but his mom did it so he did it, and it made a lot of money, but he
was not a happy man. So seeing that I knew that money doesn’t make you happy.
And my mother being an artist, she really pushed that you need to find what you
want to do, something unique about it. And my wife was ok with it. So
understood it for whatever reason
MB Yeah. A lot of her friends didn’t
understand why she would support me, they just didn’t get it. A lot of times, I
was being teased about why was I being supported by a woman, you know staying
home with the kids. It was kind of new at that time, now it’s more common, but
there was this big question mark around me.
JM “What kind of a man would allow the
woman to be the bread winner?”
MB Right. “ What kind of a man would want
to stay home with the kids? And who would want to be an artist anyway?” So many
people had a huge question mark just about that. It doesn’t mean anything now,
but at the time it meant something, not much. But that’s the good thing about
getting older, you just don’t care.
JM I’ve found that as well, I’m not old,
but thinking about how I was at 25 vs. now…
MB (laughs) It just doesn’t matter.
Obviously you don’t want to be a fool or destructive to anyone else’s life. But
we’re all here and need to do what we’re here to do while we’re alive. You get
to do what you want to do and make your own choices in life, and choose your
life how you want it to be. Having to worry about someone else’s judgment is
really detrimental, you should be fulfilled, cause this is a short lifespan.
It’s a terrible thing to waste as they say. So I’m older, my career is
established, I don’t feel stagnant.
JM (laughs)
MB It would great if I could … but for me
it doesn’t work that way.
JM Human beings don’t value something we
don’t have to work for. In relation to art, if you wait for inspiration, the
clouds to part moment, all the planets to line up and everyone in the Middle
East to get along peacefully, you’re never going to get any work done. It’s work.
You have to get in
there and grind it out and not be happy with the result most of the time.
MB If you do become comfortable, then you
need to change it up a bit, and you have to stop it. You have to learn and grow
on every painting, throughout your life. Even if it’s just repeating lessons,
if you’re learning and you’re excited and getting it and you’re getting
something new, then that’s perfect. If you’re just producing, I know a lot of
artists down in Southern California that are production artists, that just keep
producing and producing. They have people that work for them, and they might
block in the painting, and they make a lot of money and it makes the galleries
very happy because it’s a very kind of stable lifestyle.
They kind of change with
the seasons, you know if the colors change in people’s home they change too, or
if shiny is in they change. They’re much more about marketing than painting and
making a lot of money. For them, they’re happy with that, but I’m not happy
with that at all. I’d love to make tons of money, who wouldn’t, but to able to
have to take those steps … it’s a
very personal, private thing in my studio and painting and so it’s a very
sacred space to me. I have collectors in here and people that buy and other
artists, but still it’s a very private thing for me. So I can’t imagine having
a factory with two employees turning out artwork, that isn’t my way.
JM And those blissful moments that you
just mentioned, is that something that happened recently?
MB Taking the time to look?
JM Yeah, when did that happen?
MB Probably within the last year or so.
Instead of standing there and making all physical changes, I make mental
changes of what I’m doing. In my brain I can change this or that, make it to
look like that and work off that in my brain, instead of physically changing
the painting. So when I get to a resolved part when I need to see it, then I
can stand up and do it. So in a sense I’ve been painting intellectually. And I
skip some paint steps that I would be working out with material and work off
that…then if it doesn’t work you have to find another way to tackle that
problem.
JM How is it that you are able to convey
atmosphere. Because I don’t see that in too many landscape painters?
Mark Bowles-Ethereal-Acrylic On Canvas-40" x 40"-2012 |
MB In certain parts, the atmosphere or the
sky, I very deliberately try to find something that could be identified as me
and not somebody else. I approach that and challenge myself with how do I come
up with a new sky? One that I haven’t seen, although we’re all a collective of
art history, but something I haven’t seen or is too common about the land or
the sky. That’s one of the reasons my work is very minimal, I wanted to reduce
everything down to the atmosphere and the earth. And that’s where I stay, with
the horizon line and I’ve been developing that for years and just work with
that concept. The variable you have between those two, by render and by color
and by light, goes on forever, you can do it forever. Certainly I wasn’t going
to touch Kondos’ Blue, which is almost a copyright/trademark thing, you can
spot a Kondos Blue anywhere.
He readily admits it that he is a western contemporary artist. So if I did blue, it wasn’t going to be that shade, so I got more and more into layering and washes through acrylic. Then I developed light particles and different textures to put the sky in and concepts along those lines. So that’s the area I explore when I want to do the sky. The reds and the oranges only live for a time, so it’s an emotionally feeling of a sunset, but not a direct one. So there are three essential parts and the horizon line, and from that I decided I wanted to move into a backdrop, a range, a California Mountain Range. So there’s development, it would be going back in a circle again, because these are similar to a painting I’d done years ago, but I wanted to go back and re-visit what I’ve learned over these years and put it back into that format. That’s like the loop that I do, I like to have a big bandwidth.
JM And before you started painting the
landscape, you said you worked a lot with concrete.
MB Yeah a lot with my hands. That’s where it started for me, because I used to love clay, like all kids with mud and dirt. But I used to use my hands instead of brushes- that went on for a long time. Yeah I used tar and would paint with that.
JM Wait, you used your hands to paint with tar???
MB And gloves don’t work, gloves just rip
apart. And all sorts of chemicals I would buy without reading the labels…
MB
And trowels!
There was this one painter, Louis Siegriest and he did beautifully
textured landscapes of the earth. He never got that much critical acclaim for
what he did, but he was part of that Bay Area Movement along with Diebenkorn
and everyone else. And his son, I took a class with him once, I used to take
art classes outside of school a lot, a lot of his work was texture, gravel, so
that made a huge impression on me because they were more emotional paintings.
So that was interesting and he would frame some of the stuff with materials he
found on the side of the road. It would be in a museum and you would see a
piece of metal bent here and piece of wood there and that would make up the
frame. So you could tell he would
think and re-think the materials and the tradition of what was normally being
used.
JM They’re interested in the story.
He would paint on doors,
old doors because that was cheaper than canvas, and just frame them how he
felt. So his work was incredibly good, and still is - there is a gallery that
just opened up in the Bay Area that represents him. He did these Sausalito paintings,
that didn’t really impress me that much, but his strictly abstract paintings I
just loved them as a kid, somehow they just resonated with me. So I started doing works on canvas and
wood and it got to the point where I felt comfortable, I knew what I was doing,
sold enough, and the response was good enough kind of thing, but then you have
to shake things up, and say,” Ok I did this, now it’s onto something else.” So
I got into painting, and I’ve gone through different modes, but what I came
back to was something similar, the composition was similar to what I did 20
years ago. But I wanted to see what I came back to it with; it’s a different
line quality, different color, different layering. All those years of painting
now come back into a different focus. But I like it, and as long as I’m happy
with it then it’s fine. You have to be genuine and honest with what you do,
with the canvas and that comes across. When you’re honest with what you do and
how you paint and how you present yourself, I think that’s part of the energy
that people enjoy.
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