S_V_H Thunder Road image2



Thunder Road 3 panel 36 inches by nine feet.  This base is near finished. It has been a struggle working with brown as the general direction of this theme.  As can be seen, what started as a chance to work with a group of colors, that have been sparingly used in the past, have  over the last few days, been painted over. In time maybe the skill to work similar colors together will develop, but this just is not that time.

The color range brown was chosen because this song, and its lyrics are gritty, dirty, rough, harsh, unforgiving, hopeful, sad, encouraging, and basic rock and roll. The surprise was that Burnt Umber and Transparent Brown Iron Oxide turned out to be the best of the browns in the acrylics. The disappointments where Burnt Sienna, and Van Dyke Brown Hue, too green.  The Van Dyke was purchased purposefully for this project, and the acrylic Sienna just is a weak color compared to the Windsor & Newton water based oil.  The thinking is that the oil Burnt Sienna will be used later with the notes and that could help push this works color theme back towards the browns.

There is a realization that development of this artist skills improves, incrementally with each new work. Some sharper shifts at times do occur.  Recent examples are found, for instance with the Birthday Painting from this last year, or I Call Your Name, completed last January.  With Thunder  a  small style technique,  that is missing from Hallelujah, is seen in the bands of different colors across the top.  This change could have a big effect on future works.  Funny, it probably does not look like much, but it takes a lot to put together each of these work together, and what has worked in the past, gets the first chance.   Art takes time to develop and this artist is hoping that time will be generous.

Scott Von Holzen

S_V_H Thunder Road image1

Thunder “its a town full of losers. I’m pulling out of here to win.”  Hey, nice words, probably will not be a part of this work, but they speak to courage and conviction.

This work is three panel: the sides are 3 feet by four wide, with a center one foot wide by 3 foot tall. The base color are Burnt Sienna, lightened Burnt Umber, and Transparent Brown Iron Oxide, with a little Red Iron Oxide.

The browns just seemed the right colors to start with for this music.  The background can evolve considerably over the first few days, pushed by the feel and the look.  Sometimes it just an exercise  to see what a particular color can do.  It is a guess, and many times there is a shock seeing that the results differ considerably from the beginning expectation.  So it goes.

Last night it took a few hours to find the energy and the mindset to start this work.  Working through the physical and mental, fatigue of the day, was the motivation that there needed to be something put down so in the morning, just before leaving for work, it could be view, and there would be something there to actually look at.

Scott von Holzen

S_V_H Stand By Me finalImage

Stand has come to and end, Thursday evening.  The heart is moving on, and the art seems satisfied.  The night was spent preening.   Great art requires care, understanding, and disciple. Great art knows when it is the time to let go.  All artist who are worth their brushes, know this.  If this is a great work of art, time, luck, and a good promotional story, will all certainly help. But there is no real worry, the art knowns, the art cares nothing about the fragilities of humans, or its own worth.  Art exists to make living worth just that. Art knowns that its greatest worth is in its existence.

Although Stand By Me is done it is not finished.  For some reason the eighth note, just before the word darling, a drawn line is going to be left as is.  No work is obsessed over, as far as painterly perfection, and this time it was decided to make that obvious.

Now, time to move on to one of the greatest songs of my generation, Thunder Road.  Thunder Road will challenge Hallelujah.  That is what it is telling,

Scott Von Holzen