George Lawson Gallery: Donald Martiny Selected Paintings

George Lawson Gallery: Donald Martiny Selected Paintings
Donald Martliny Selected paintings George Lawson Gallery LA

Monday, July 1, 2013

Studio Critical Interview Monday July 1, 2013


Monday, July 1, 2013

DONALD MARTINY

Burnt Hills, 2012, 81 x 42.5",
polymers and dispersed pigment
 
 




What are you working on in your studio right now?

  
I recently received a commission to make paintings for the lobby of a new building in mid-town Manhattan by the Durst Organization. I am also preparing for a solo show of my work that will be in the lobby of the Conde Nast building at 4 West Times Square in New York from November 2013 to January 2014.



Can you describe your working routine?

 

I am usually in the studio between 8:30 and 9AM and work until around 7:30 PM.  I work seven days a week.  There is no set routine other than that. One day may be spent working on paintings, while the next day may be spent building shipping creates and ordering materials.





 
 
 
 
 


Can you describe your studio space and how, if at all, that affects your work?


I have had many different kinds of spaces. The large works that were exhibited last January at George Lawson Gallery, LA were all made on the cement floor of a converted tobacco factory in Durham. That space was extremely tight and challenging to move around in.  I had a wonderful large space in Philadelphia when I lived there.  I could leave things up on the wall to consider over a period of time. My current studio space is the main part of the house.  It consists of two large rooms, an office and a workshop. The painting studio has an abundance of natural light and big double doors to move large works in and out. In the morning and evening hours I often see deer, eagles and owls. These natural surroundings provide a stimulus for my work. I am certainly affected and inspired by the movement, rhythm, time, changing light, color, and mood.
 
 
 
 
 
 Installation at George Lawson Gallery, 2012
 


 

 

Tell me about your process, where things begin, how they evolve etc.

 
My process has evolved quite a bit.  When I first considered the idea of working freely with forms in my paintings, I tried to use epoxy resins. I had experience working with fiberglass and resins from when I built boats as a summer job while I was in school near Lake Michigan.   But the resins didn’t work. The paintings were prohibitively heavy and brittle and I couldn’t control the color.  Additionally, the materials were hazardous.  I nearly set my studio on fire once when I put too much catalyst (MEK) into the mixture. In terms of process, I draw and sketch all the time.  I am constantly experimenting with gestures and forms, relationships and color. I usually make small paintings first.  I think of them as finished paintings but they also inform the larger works. My large paintings are a huge investment in time, effort and materials.  Some of them consist of 10 to15 gallons of paint. One part of my studio is set up much like an arena. I paint on the floor walking around the work. I often make brushes out of large floor mops or brooms. The act of painting is much like a dance. While creating a large painting, I am stretched to the limits of my physicality. The act of painting records my reach at a specific time and place. I suppose one could say in this way that my paintings are self-portraits.
 
 
 
 
 
Installation at Marlboro Gallery at  Prince George Community College 
 
 
 
 
 
What are you having the most trouble resolving?
 
 
I would like to spend more time making paintings and less time dealing with the business aspects of running a busy studio e.g.,  making schedules, shipping, building boxes, ordering materials, etc. 
 

 

Do you experiment with different materials a lot or do you prefer to work within certain parameters?

  
I truly enjoy working with traditional oil painting methods but once my concept or idea of what a painting could be changed, my materials had to change too.  I’ve spent several years talking with chemists all over the world and am on a first name basis with virtually every art materials manufacturer in trying to perfect my paint and process. I can finally say that I am happy with the materials I am using now.  They are safe, odorless, water based, light-weight, and I can do just about anything I want in terms of painting. Because I mix micro bubbles into my paint I suppose one could say I am using nanotechnology in my painting process.
 
 
 
What does the future hold for this work?


The conceptual area I am working in opens up so many possibilities in painting. I haven’t even scratched the surface.  I have numerous sketches and prototypes of new directions I am interested to explore. Each direction could keep me busy for years. 
 
 
 
 
Pigeon Lake, 2012, 83 x 45",
polymers and dispersed pigment


 




Sunday, April 7, 2013

My work will be shown at the 2013 Dallas Art Fair by Galleri Urbane, Marfa+Dallas.
The 2013 Dallas Art Fair will be held Friday, April 12 through Sunday, April 14. Preview Gala, April 11.

Wednesday, January 30, 2013

ArtScene / Visual Art Source

February 2013 Issue

Review of Donald Martiny exhibition at George Lawson Gallery, LA, written by Cathy Breslaw.

Donald Martiny's recent paintings are monochromatic works whose medium is a mixture of polymer and dispersed pigment.  Though he calls them paintings, they appear much like sculptures, as each one is a three dimensional, very physical representation of a brushstroke.  Here, painting is both the subject and content of the work, examining and exploring the anatomy of the size dimensions, and contours of an individual stroke of the brush.  Each work depicts a particular motion of the brush, giving each gesture an individual character, shape and identity.  Martiny's color palette is limited to the use of primary red, yellow, green or blue.  The sole variation on the theme of the brush stroke is size.  the works are either very large (83" x 45") or much smaller.  A large work like "Pigeon Lake" not only occupies much more space, but is more effective in portraying the visual detail, marks, and nuances that a brushstroke creates.  Te sum of the parts here is greater than the whole- echoing the manner in which each brushstroke has key significance in the developmnent of a painting.  And every painting is created with intention, one stroke at a time.
(George Lawson Gallery, Culver City).

Friday, January 25, 2013

Donald Martiny interviewed by Matt Schaefer      January 2013


MS:  So Donald, where was your last show?


DM:  I am showing currently in LA at the George Lawson Gallery.  Prior to that I showed at the Marlboro Gallery at Prince George Community College near Washington DC.

MS:  What are these made of?


DM:  They are a polymer mix and dispersed pigment.


MS:   How did you arrive at this point?  What was the "eureka" moment"?


DM:   I was struggling with my work.  I made a lot of de Kooning look-a-likes but got frustrated with the structure.  I would make grand gestures and then went back and tried to fix the edges and corners.  One day I just got rid of the ground (canvass). It took a while to figure out what I had done.  It freed the gesture to be what ever it wanted to be.   I think Ellsworth Kelly and Frank Stella were in the back of my mind.


MS:  Who else art historically were big influences?


DM:  I look at painting and sculpture a lot.  I used to travel quite a bit and whenever I did I always made time to visit museums and galleries.  I am a big fan of Velazquez.  I also looked a lot at the oil sketches by Rubens at the Alte Pinakothek in Munich.  Obviously I also admire de Kooning, Lynda Benglis Ellsworth Kelly and Frank Stella, among others.


MS:  So are these representations of actual markings in paint?


DM:  No, absolutely not.  They are my own honest gestures.  I am not representing the gestures of other artists.


MS:  Let me rephrase.  Do you build these after smaller scale models?


DM:  I usually begin by making many small studies on paper.  Then I make small works based on the sketches.  These are finished works but they also work as maquettes or prototypes for larger works. When I work large I have a basic idea of color, feeling and shape but they never end up finally exactly as I had planned.   


MS:  Pretend you are talking to someone who has no idea about how to understand abstraction. In a few sentences, how would you guide them into understanding your work?


DM:  I simply want to create my own images rather than use existing images that may have baggage.  I want the images to speak for themselves rather than paint an actor.  I know I can paint a figure or landscape that feels a certain way.  But why not be more direct.  Rather than use the landscape, let  the painting itself evoke the feeling or experience. 

Selected Work

Untitled 2012  
20Hx14W inches



Wren 2013   

Witbek  2009

Roland 2012


Arden 2012























Ellsworth 2012


George Lawson Gallery LA
Donald Martiny Selected Paintings
January 4-February 2, 2013
Donald Martiny makes single-color works in polymer medium and dispersed pigment that free themselves from the traditional painting support to form large brush strokes directly against the wall. They are paintings made exclusively out of paint. In many aspects they present a formal mix of Roy Lichtenstein’s brush stroke paintings, Lynda Benglis’ knotted wall pieces and Ellsworth Kelly’s shaped monochromes, but with an attenuated physical presence all their own. Martiny’s high relief flirts with sculpture, yet his working method and his conceptual focus ground these works firmly in the principles of fundamental painting. Martiny, who currently lives and works in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, studied at the School of the Visual Arts and The Art Students League in New York, New York University and the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts. His work is in private collections in Philadelphia, Washington DC, Amsterdam, San Francisco and Los Angeles.