Changing Directions is an acrylic, charcoal, pencil, and collage work on canvas measuring 16 by 20 inches. Against a heavily worked white ground, a loose chain of hand-drawn rectangular forms tumbles diagonally across the lower half of the composition, anchored by passages of acid yellow-green, forest green, and deep teal. Flashes of fluorescent pink and warm rust appear higher on the canvas, partially veiled by overpainting, while fine pencil scribbles trace restless paths through the open field. The layering of opaque paint, raw mark-making, and collaged fragments creates a surface that rewards close looking. The work evokes a sense of motion interrupted, or a thought mid-revision, and would suit a collector drawn to process-oriented abstraction with an energetic, unresolved quality.
Changing Directions is an acrylic, charcoal, pencil, and collage work on canvas measuring 16 by 20 inches. Against a heavily worked white ground, a loose chain of hand-drawn rectangular forms tumbles diagonally across the lower half of the composition, anchored by passages of acid yellow-green, forest green, and deep teal. Flashes of fluorescent pink and warm rust appear higher on the canvas, partially veiled by overpainting, while fine pencil scribbles trace restless paths through the open field. The layering of opaque paint, raw mark-making, and collaged fragments creates a surface that rewards close looking. The work evokes a sense of motion interrupted, or a thought mid-revision, and would suit a collector drawn to process-oriented abstraction with an energetic, unresolved quality.