S_V_H The Ghost of Tom Joad images 3

 

theGhostOfTomJoad_3The Ghost of Tom Joad before removing the tape I used to cover the flow of the music.

theGhostOfTomJoad_4Of course this is The Ghost of Tom Joad after removing tape. I have tried this experiment  before but not to this extent. I do not think I will do it this way in the future.  I am thinking differently about how this should be done. Next time I will just indicate the general areas where the music flow will land, and then pull the layers of paint across these areas with more care.  By doing this l am thinking that each layer will be thin and soft enough that masking the music will not be worth the time spent masking.

I can see the need for a lot of touch up after removing the tape. Also, I found, especially trying to mask out the circles, that the taping overlapped, which then made the layers that cover the tape thicker. That has created a lot more finishing issues.

The base painting is done, so now it is on to the music and smoothing out the transition between the music and the background. I save the blues and their relatives, for the music. What that means even though I am trying to stay with earth tones, * brighter colors are going to creep back into this work. I can not help.

Scott Von Holzen

S_V_H The Ghost of Tom Joad image 1 & 2

the Ghost Of Tom Joad image 1

 

 

The Ghost of Tom Joad image 1

The Ghost of Tom Joad image 2
The Ghost of Tom Joad Image 2.

I am painting this Bruce Springsteen song because I like the music and the words. The name in the title ‘Tom Joad,’ comes from the main character in the book Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck that is set during the Depression. Springsteen updates the struggles of Tom Joad through his ghost.  He expressed his feelings for this music at a Madison Square Garden Concert in 2009, “…..If Woody Guthrie were alive today, he would have a lot to write about,  high times on Wall Street, and hard times on Main Street.” This music is still relevant today, with the worker that punches in struggling to stay in middle class, still  believing  that hard work, with determination, and effort will result in success, and a prosperous life.  Bruce might have said it best about the American Dream in his music, “Is that you baby, or just a brilliant disguise.”

The Ghost of Tom Joad started out as a simple single canvas artwork 20 inches by 40 inches, which was chosen for it is a nice standard rectangle artwork they would be easy to frame. The first image shows that rectangle with blends of Burnt Sienna and some basic striping.  Soon after I realize that the way I had mapped the music left little room for the words.  All I could picture was a crowding of words, and music in small parts of this work,  while leaving large expanses of canvas with little interest.  I also could not avoid the inescapable conclusion which was that this canvas looked boring.  It looked like I was trying to cut corners. I am thinking I, at first, wanted to speed up the process of creating that was so drawn out with Fine & Mellow. I halted that thinking, and that is what you see in image two.

For these early images I wanted to use some base colors that I believe would be the foundation for the music similar to what I have seen on the cover of the album The Ghost of Tom Joad. albumCover

Here is another version of this great Bruce Springsteen song:

 

I have painted, in the past, a few other protest songs. Two early, earlier, works are For What its Worth, and Fortunate Son. These two artworks represent  the sixties, Madison Wisconsin, and Vietnam.

For What’s it Worth:

For What Its Worth

Fortunate Son:

Fortunate SonI received an Interesting comment about this work.  A long time ago I was using an image of Fortunate Son as my background on my computer, when another worker saw my screen and commented that it look like a picture of a watermelon with seeds. No no, I said,  but to this day I am still surprised that Fortunate Son has not sold considering that it appeals to not only the artsy elite but to the food crowd.Waist Deap in the Big MuddyWaist Deep in the Big Muddy, is a small early later work. This one was to protest our invasion of Iraq.

Since The Ghost of Tom Joad is also a small work, next up I am going to push my technique of spreading different layers of color to see what look I can create.  Also, if I can figure out, what I want to try is paint dripping. This is going to be an experimental work, that I am not in a rush to complete, for things are bound not to go right the first time.

Scott Von Holzen

 

 

S_V_H Fine and Mellow image3

fine&Mellow_4

Fine and Mellow has been slowly coming together. The words for this artwork are, ‘love so fine.’  Billie’s words are, “He’s so fine and mellow.”  I have filled, with a few extra pieces of music, that colorful bowl on the far right, that ties the music.  Also, I would have liked the music flow, the circles, to have been larger to fill more of the background space. I did enlarge the  music from my original plans, but that had it limits.  What I have done since this image above, is in the spaces between the music, I have added extra stripping. Hopefully this adds interest, and improves the feel of a dark, imaginative, smokey bluesy atmosphere, of this artwork.

The pace of this artwork has been so slow, because much of my free time, my artist time,  has lately been consumed by practice, not my drawing skills, but expanding my musical skills. My artistic focus is music. Music to listen to, music to be painted, and now music to be played, on the piano, the alto saxophone, the violin, and the blues guitar.

The violin  is new to me, this last spring. I eventually see it playing Classical music.  The alto saxophone, also new a month or so ago, it is my Jazz instrument.  The blues guitar, came out of nowhere when I heard of the death of B. B. King.  I did play the folk guitar in college, so I have some history with the guitar, but playing the Blues, where all American music begins, will be my newest experience with music. The Last instrument is the piano. I have played a little keyboard, on an off for years, starting at the age of 7 years with the accordion.  My thinking is the piano is to key to understanding music theory, and is the instrument that, for me, brings everything about music together. The piano plays it all from B. B. King to Vivaldi.

Fine and Mellow is near completion, for I really do not know what else I can do with this painting. I would like to do more with it, but I am not sure what.  That means, pretty much as is,  I will have a final image out in a couple of days.

Scott Von Holzen