S_V_H Love is All Around image4

loveAllAround4

I have made slow progress on the artwork Love is All Around because of the coming of summer and the need to finish a Winter Vivaldi that I started January 5th 2014.  I have finished the Vivaldi. I think this seventeen footer and I both agreed that it was time to move on.

The big issue with Love is all Around is the struggled I have had with the staffs of this music. Usually, I spread light colors over a dark background and quickly finish the staffs.  That idea, although, did not seem to me to fit this work.  In the past I have used little boxes of contrasting colors for my staffs.  You can see a lot of this technique on the great painting Autumn Allegro 3rd movement Vivaldi.  I also used this same style for the ending notes of the Take Five artwork.  I am guessing I carried over that influence to this work.  My problem became my color choices.  This lead me to repaint the strips several times, which has slowed the progress over this last week and more. I am not sure if this will be the final changes to the staff colors, but for now I am moving on.

I believe I am correct that the client mentioned to me to not use any pink in the painting.  Well, in reality pink is a tint of magenta with added white to lighten.  In this work I could not resist using magenta. This is a love song, and too me magenta and love go together nicely. What I have done is use the solid color of magenta to stay as far as possible away from any perception of the ‘pink color.’

When I was discussing this painting with the client she mention these words “You gave your promise to me, and I gave mine to you.” which I can see how this could be a favorite part of the music. They speak to love between two people. I looked at these measures, but I could not find enough interest to work with.  I did find another section, near the end, which I made the choice for this artwork. Here you find the words, ” So if you really love me come on and let it show.”  This is a strong voice of expression, and the need for and to love.  At this climatic point in the song the music also showed a lot of interest. The choice then was easy:  words with meaning, and artistic potential.

I have a way to go.  I am not certain that I have a total understanding of what this artwork is trying to say or want from me. That means there is still a lot of work to do.

Scott Von Holzen

 

S_V_H Vivaldi’s Winter Allegro Non Molto image 4

 

vivaldiWinterAllegro4

This Vivaldi has taken forever. And the enlarged image does little to portray the power and chill that this work sends through the viewer. You will have to see it up close to know its cold feel. But few of you will, and for now,  that is just the way it is.  I can say if you check out the other 10 Vivaldi’s at my Vivaldi page that this is one unique artwork.  It was better when I worked on this painting in mid February, but lucky for me now, the ‘chill’ is already in this work.  For It was in February that I switch my efforts to complete three commission works. Now, I am somewhat back, for I am also working on another client artwork, that has no hard timeline. I will have enough hours for this Four Seasons piece over the next couple of weeks, to finish it before June.  I need to finish for standing in line are the last two Vivaldi’s: the first movement of Spring, and the Storm that is Summer.  The timing for starting the Spring Vivaldi is already past, but in reality spring around here was nothing. It was bland, boring, and dull. For the most part the feeling of Spring was nonexistent, with most days being a back-en-forth between late Winter and early summer. What this means is that I will have accumulated little inspiration for my Vivaldi Spring based on the weather. Of course, that is not true with this Winter Vivaldi. It was a long, cold, bitter, uncomfortable winter, and it clearly shows in this work. If you are ever lucky enough to view this seventeen foot work in person, you will know and feel winter.

Scott Von Holzen

 

S_V_H Take Five 2014 final image

takeFive2014

 

The great Dave Brubeck’s signature piece Take Five.  I started this work in December of 2013, and just finished it last week.  It was held up mostly because of two commission works that took priority.

You are looking at a work that evolved from its original ideas. What the original concept, creative plan, or art mission was I am sure of one goal of this artwork: I wanted to take the background from the obscure, supportive function, to where it dominated the artwork, with multiple layers of colors across stripping that covered the entire work.  Than I wanted to see if I could use the music to push back against the colors and visual impact that it was covering. Surprisingly,  I had to return to the background and repaint parts of it, to finally give the music the visual appearance I decided it needed. When I applied that yellow-green stripping,  on the second panel, this work finally began to come into focus.  On my sixteenth notes, I used a bright red to add the punch that comes at those points in the music’s flow.  That helped considerably to pull the viewer’s attention to the music, and away from the background. In the end the battle between background and music comes down to finding a balance.  I only know when it is there,  and it is obvious when it is not.

Just as a reminder below is my first Take Five from 2006.  You can see the freer style of painting.Take5_06

The Take Five from 2014 is a lot more structured, and I am beginning to wonder if maybe I should once again return to a more free hand style. My customer for the Japan work, liked this earlier style.  My vision for portraying music is to display its flow in an orderly form so that with a little effort, a viewer could see in the artwork the flow of the music that it represented. Although, few viewers will ever know where the music appears in these artworks. Even with the added help of words the way I choose them would not necessary clear up the mystery.

I will be presenting this artwork to a Professor of Music at the local University.  I plan on showing him exactly where the artwork appears in the music.  If I would not, I am sure he could find it if he took the time, but I am also sure he will still appreciated the artwork without knowing its exact location in the music. And that leads to this question: If few people know where any of these artworks show in the music, what is the need on my part to have such a precise depiction?

The first answer that comes to my mind, is that I portray the flow of the music fairly accurately, to separate my style from other methods of portraying music. Most of the artwork I have seen display music in an abstract way. I am guessing these artists see music as fluid subject. But I do not see music that way.

I have known sheet music since I was seven years old and learning how to play the accordion  I have also know its structure while playing an electric organ in a garage band, and later in college playing folk guitar and blues harp.  I knew that if I wanted to play music I needed to understand and follow the rules of notation that sheet music represented. That seems logical to me, so when it came to painting music I brought those inclinations about music with me.  Looking at music as an abstraction did not make sense. I decided If I am gong to spend weeks of my time painting a song, I wanted the artwork to represent that song, and only that song. Equally as important I wanted that artwork to appeal to the feelings of the viewer. Music has sound that appeals to emotions, and a performance can connect the viewer even more. Musical art is also visual that can be viewed, but it is taking that visual and creating an emotional impact that only the best of this art can do. That is why my music looks very little like sheet music. In order to try to create that ” viewer hook”  I had to abandon the rigid rules of notation, and its standard look. The flow of the music remains, but everything else is my choreography.  This allows me to create art in the abstract, but differently. That brings me to this conclusion.

Like, a singer, group or a band,music can be changed to better represent the performer’s style. The the same goes with me. My artworks are never an exact show of any of the music, but more so my personnel interpretation of the music.That is what separates  my artworks from the mundane representation of notation you see in any sheet music.But because I keep that flow of the music my abstraction makes each work unique to the music it represents. That cannot be said about most musical art. Still the question remains should I loosen up my structure.  Maybe, not so much in the Style of Take Five 2006 or Take Five 2014, but somewhere else, between this and that, and yes and no. I wonder?

Scott Von Holzen