Rick Beerhorst, an interesting figurative painter in Michigan, has run a short interview, The Visual World of Ward Schumaker, on his blog studiobeerhorst. We found a lot of enjoyment in visiting his site, his paintings have a sweet, surreal quality to them, and his upcoming Beerhorst Family Spring Art Show is an event we'd be attending if we lived near enough. Please check it out.
Here's a copy of his posting:
Probe, acrylic and photo transfer on wood, 14” x 11” (2012)
The Landing, acrylic and photo transfer on wood, 14” x 11” (2012)
Balkan, acrylic on wood, 8” x 6” (2012)
Afternoon, acrylic and gesso on wood, 7” x 7” x 14” (2012)
Big Heaven, acrylic and gesso on wood, 7” x 7” x 14” (2012)
Throne for a New Ubu, acrylic and gesso on wood, 14” x 14” x 7” (2012)
Here's a copy of his posting:
The Visual World Of Ward Schumaker
Saturday, April 20, 2013 at 7:11AM
The Landing, acrylic and photo transfer on wood, 14” x 11” (2012)
Balkan, acrylic on wood, 8” x 6” (2012)
Afternoon, acrylic and gesso on wood, 7” x 7” x 14” (2012)
Big Heaven, acrylic and gesso on wood, 7” x 7” x 14” (2012)
Throne for a New Ubu, acrylic and gesso on wood, 14” x 14” x 7” (2012)
Introducing the work of Ward Schumaker who is an artist, living and working in San Francisco and showing with Zeitgiest Gallery in Nashville TN. He is married to artist Vivienne Flesher.
Ward and Vivienne just spent a year living and working in New York City
and was strongly affected by his time there. He is a restless artist,
creating both in fine art and commercial art. He makes sculpture,
paintings, drawings and aritst books. He is an inspiration to me for the
way he continues to explore his world and expand and deepen his body of
work at the same time. Ward was kind enough to do an interview with me
and send along some images of his new work. Welcome to his world!
1. Ward, what are the earliest memories you have of drawing or making things?
2. Are there other creatives running through your family history? If so what did they do?
I come from a creative family.
My
father’s artistry consisted of drawings; he worked as a civil engineer
for the railroad. The high point of his life arrived when he directed
the erection of a trio of bridges he designed, for trains, over the
Snake River. For three years he lived in one room of a hotel in Weiser,
Idaho. In the summer, I would travel there to live with him. Most often
he was a stern and sour parent, but perhaps because he was finally and
for once, happy,
he played frivolous and each morning allowed me to push down the handle
that detonated the dynamite that blew holes in the canyon walls. After
the dust had more-or-less settled, I would run to the rubble and search
for geodes. At night, in the hotel room’s one big bed, I would break
open the geodes and admire the crystals inside, sparkling beneath the
reading lamp; across the room, my father smoked at a small table,
listing how many rivets had been used that week, how many pounds of
steel, how many injuries.
At
separate times, both my mother and my Aunt Helen acted as sole teacher
of a one-room schoolhouse near Cozad, Nebraska. They were artists, and
their medium was crêpe paper. They could make anything from crêpe paper,
but their gloire derived
from the costumes they created: Uncle Sam with stripes and tall hat,
Abraham Lincoln with beard and tall hat, Ben Franklin with wig and no
hat. By time I was born, my family had moved to the city (Omaha) but
weekends we’d return to the country to be with family––and to attend the
school’s performances: 20 Polish-speaking kids, 5-8 years old, 19 of
them dressed as paper onions; the one non-onion dressed in pink, as a
petunia, singing in newly-learned English, “I’m a little, lone petunia
in an onion patch and all I do is cry all day.”
So my early life was filled with wonder and culture.
Naturally, I wanted to become an artist. But there was stiff competition: sibling competition.
My brother Moishe-Millard constructed highly detailed HO gauge model
trains, set in a countryside filled with forests made of lichen and
toothpicks, villages of balsa and papier-mâché.
My brothers Rand and Roger were dancers, one with snakes in his mouth,
the other jumping in and out of fire hoops: each intent on keeping alive
native-American culture (though they, themselves, were blond as corn
silk). With all this competition, I had to work hard forge a unique
identity. Luckily, I chanced upon a Life Magazine article on Jackson
Pollack, the article with the famous photos of him dripping paint on a
canvas on the floor, and I knew: this is what I have to do to be somebody, to matter.
Through Pollack’s aesthetic, I felt I could include it all: bridges,
geodes, onions and petunias, and a hundred-fifty bull snakes, dancing
through hoops.
4.
I know your wife is also a very gifted artist as well. Do you give
each other suggestions or critiques or do you just keep out of the way
of each other’s creative process?
If
either of us even looks in the direction of a piece of art while the
other is creating it, the work must be destroyed; that’s the rule. There
can be no exceptions. So we are careful while crossing each other’s
territory. Which for her is upstairs, for me, down. But every once in a
while, one comes crying to the other: help, I’ve fallen and I can’t get up.
Then one consoles the other. And advises. Unfortunately, the advice
never seems to work, not even from such a loving source. But soon after,
inexplicably, the unfortunate one finds he’s back at work, a bit
further from failure, a bit closer to success. Perhaps the advice did
work? Nevertheless in no time the sign is re-hung on the studio door: do not enter, on pain of death.
My
wife is the most talented person I’ve ever met (and I’ve known some
very talented people); just living with her, day to day, provides me
with guidance and instruction. But face it: when you are working on a
piece of art, the only answer lies someplace deep inside, with a voice
that says: do this, not that.
5.
When I spend time with your work I pick up on a spiritual vibe. Can
you say anything about that? Is there a spiritual dimension to your work
or am I just projecting that on it?
Most of my work begins with the inquiry: where can I get help on this? And most of the work I prize seems to include the answer: from someplace inside, who knows where.
So, though I am totally inept at it, I have meditated 20 minutes a day
for 40 years, in hopes of gaining help. But in truth, after all this
time, I have little faith in anything except unhappiness and suffering.
Still, it’s hard to imagine facing a blank piece of paper without some
hope that there is something else out there somewhere.
6. Can you talk a little bit about your year in NYC?
I
may live in San Francisco, but I left my heart in New York City. And
I’ll be damned if I can explain what happened while living there last
year––is there something in the water? All I know is that after many
years of painting in the Bay Area, making paintings which all seemed to
be done by the same hand, the work I did in New York exploded in three
or four directions, an exhilarating if bewildering event for me. It
wasn’t the proximity of the million galleries––frankly, I didn’t see
much in the galleries that I liked. And it wasn’t the influence of all
the artists we met––my wife and I are pretty much loners and we only met
a handful of artists. But something happened there and now that we’ve
returned to San Francisco, it’s become my job to try to understand that,
and to discover anew what to do, how to paint, and why. I’ve just hit
my 70th birthday (or did it hit me?) and I find myself a
beginner again. I consider that New York’s fault, and I’m truly grateful
for that.