Picasso said, “It took me four years to paint like Raphael, but a lifetime to paint like a child.”
Truth or Consequences Middle School art teacher Kim Artman obviously gets what Picasso meant, somehow encouraging and eliciting the powerful personal expression of her students, strengthening their inner gyroscope before they are tossed about by the world. Artman, like other gifted teachers, brings out the individual, and as a result we get to really connect with these kids.
MainStreet of Truth or Consequences showcased the middle-school students’ art during the July 11 Art Hop, photos of which can be found on its Facebook page.
It appears Artman told them to paint landscapes or flowers or a still life, and handed out tempura paint with medium-sized brushes. This ensured the children couldn’t get too fussy and lost in detail. Bold colors, brazen brush strokes, big compositional forms make each work exciting.
They look like they were painted with their whole heart and mind, letting us feel the child’s aliveness and wonder at the natural world.
In the first photo grouping of four, I can’t see the student’s name, but the artwork is titled “The desert river.” What an ambitious landscape! Rolling land masses and rising mesas and a swish of desert cut by a blue swirl curving out of sight, shaping and being shaped by each other. This child felt and expressed geological forces.
Look how he or she mixed two shades of green, giving us new growth on the river’s left bank. On the right side of the river the texture and brushwork make us feel the shelving of the land, each terrace holding the water, the valley bottom left dry.
The two clouds at the top are so symmetrical they act as eyes and almost turn the landscape into a face, adding a weird tension to the viewer’s experience as perception flips between apprehending the painting as a face or landscape or both.
The child gets extra points for mixing a mysterious gray and a taupe-beige for rocky, sandy formations. The scratchy white edges between land forms and the paper left blank and untouched to form the white swish of desert also show a fine discernment; letting the composition breathe, not suffocate.
The rose,” by Lilly, in the same photo, is a marvelous deconstructed view of a flower that lets us see her looking at its parts with wonder. I love how she gets lost in drawing (with the brush tip) the fragile contours of the petals and the rose’s center whorl. Then she switches from contour drawing and uses the flat side of the brush to express the velvety whole petal. She mixes bright, dull and dark colors to give us the bulge in the bulb shape. This girl thinks in form and edge while working on a flat surface, showing a sculptor’s mind.
In the second photo, Pedro’s “Winter solstice” has verve, vivacity and quickness. The pattering of brush strokes that create snow and give structure to the tree line hit the eye like strong drum beats. The blue-curve-river breaks up the composition, saving it from the deadly-dull three-band landscape composition. It’s just the right side of simplistic, making it fresh and bright.
“Purple mountain” by Marianne, in the same photo, has the same fresh simplicity that lets you see each nuance. The green conifers, if she had added even one more stroke, would have too much. She shows an innate sense of color weight, the smaller portion of bright green not overtaking the larger fields of duller purple. I love how she made the sky a slightly different shade of purple from the mountain instead of introducing another player on the field, again showing simplistic elegance.
In the third photo, the artist’s name is cut off, but it’s titled “Oceanside.” I was fascinated by its strong and complex composition. The dark gray and black shapes and lines tied down and arrested the strange forms in this landscape. It has movement and stillness. I think the artist was thinking in positive and negative space, light and shadow, as well as color and pattern, creating a mélange. I can’t enter and wander around in the depicted space or leave it alone. I think this person has a unique view of the world.
“Blue lagoon,” also with the artist’s name obscured and in the next photo, also has strange gray and black forms, without which the landscape would lose all tension and interest, like a watch without a spring. The artist mixed blue-greens, greens and blues of various shades that perfectly express the lushness of a lagoon. The pinky-beige for the sand also show a real sensitivity. This work was easier to enter than “Oceanside,” but both works are wonderfully challenging.
Great work students. And thank you Kim Artman for giving children the time and space to access their inner selves, refining their judgement and aesthetic. I have no doubt it is needed for self-actualizing and becoming strong and true to their own nature and to feeling at one with nature.