Archive for the Jason Gray Category

City-Wide Open Studios

Posted in 35mm, abstract, Art, art fair, awareness, Drawing, Jason Gray, Painting with tags on July 15, 2011 by Jason Gray

Every year, the Contemporary Art Museum, St. Louis sponsors an event that brings the art viewing public directly to local artists. The premise behind City-Wide Open Studios is for St. Louis’ artists to open their studio doors in an organized fashion, choreographed by CAMSTL, so that art viewers, art buyers and art interlopers have the chance to peruse the local talent at hand.

This is the first year that I will be participating, so come out and show me some support. I will have dozens of paintings, drawings, and photographs on display. I will be showing on Saturday, July 30th, and my studio is located at 3434 Magnolia Avenue in Tower Grove East.

The event kicks off with a reception for the artists at “the Contemporary” (information from CAMSTL’s site below).

JULY 26TH. 6:00-9:00 PM.

FREE AND OPEN TO THE PUBLIC, NO RSVP REQUIRED. CASH BAR. 3750 WASHINGTON BLVD.

To kick-off the week-long celebration of local art, CAM will be hosting an Open Studios Preview Party where visitors can visit CAM’s Main Galleries to see one piece of artwork by each participating artist. For that night, and the entire following week, each piece of art will be displayed with a label of the artists name and number that corresponds with the printed map – allowing the public to see the artwork beforehand and map out their weekend studio visits. Join CAM and over one hundred local artists for a night of celebrating the local art scene and all that it has to offer. Pi on the Spot – Pi’s mobile pizza truck – will be selling mini pizzas all night!

July

Posted in abstract, Art, Jason Gray, Photography with tags , , , on July 8, 2011 by Jason Gray

Here in the midwest, July brings with it scorching temperatures combined with stifling humidity. Here are a few of my offerings to this special time of year.

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Atmosphere Part Two

Posted in 35mm, abstract, Art, Jason Gray with tags , on June 23, 2011 by Jason Gray

Part two of my recent series extension.

More after the jump–> Read more »

Atmosphere Part One

Posted in 35mm, abstract, Art, Jason Gray, landscape, Photo-Impressionism, Photography with tags , , on June 17, 2011 by Jason Gray

Some of you might recall a series that I started several years ago, and that was somewhat erroneously referred to as “Photo-Impressionism”. In any case, here is a slight expansion on that old, abandoned project; picked back up in the city where it began. Enjoy.

All Nikon D50 with Nikkor 35mm f/1.8G lens.

More after the jump–> Read more »

Bird Series Revisted

Posted in abstract, Jason Gray, Photography with tags on June 3, 2011 by Jason Gray

I am experimenting with trying to get a look that is close to the film series that I posted several weeks ago using digital equipment. The film prints were all hand-toned to get the color, which has been more difficult to match digitally than I would have expected.

What do you guys think; if you squint, can you tell the difference? I will be working a bit to try and get this closer (including trying to work in the film grain and getting rid of the bad, specular highlights which are a digital token).

Nikon D50 with Nikkor 35mm f/1.8G lens.

Duane Michals

Posted in Interview, Jason Gray with tags , on May 20, 2011 by Jason Gray

Please enjoy this interview with the inimitable Duane Michals.

Heavy Metal!!

Posted in 35mm, abstract, Art, Jason Gray, Photography with tags on May 6, 2011 by Jason Gray

Well, maybe not quite, but I did use copper to tone these. This is a short series (meaning these may be it; let me know what you think) in which I attempted to reduce real birds to 2D “cutouts”. I have been playing with the illusion of the real lately, in my photography, and I think that these are a good example of that.

“In painting, the curve is a hill; in photography, the hill is a curve.” -Arnaud Claass

All Nikon N80 with Nikkor 50mm f/1.8D lens and Kodak T-Max 3200 BW film.

More after the jump–> Read more »

It’s Good Friday!! (if you like Black and White photos)

Posted in 35mm, Art, Jason Gray with tags on April 22, 2011 by Jason Gray

The Armour Meatpacking Plant in National City, Illinois rests its hulking, decayed mass on the former site of the National Stockyards. This complex, formerly consisting of crisscrossing train tracks, bellowing pigs, and the rhythmic clang of industrial machinery, represented the second largest hog processing center in the world (behind Chicago’s Union Stockyards). If you were wondering, it was Chicago’s Armour Meatpacking Plant location that inspired the colorful tale, “The Jungle”, by Upton Sinclair; one can only surmise that the conditions probably weren’t much different at this location.

In any case, the plant was abandoned in the 1950′s and it certainly looks that way. More information on this site can be read at Built St. Louis and at my friend’s site St. Louis Patina (if you haven’t checked out his site, definitely do!).

All shot with Nikon N80 and Nikkor 50mm f/1.8D lens on Ilford HP5+ 400 ISO film.

More after the jump–> Read more »

Somone You Might Know

Posted in Interview, Jason Gray, Toni Tiller with tags , , , , on April 15, 2011 by Jason Gray

pink, © Toni Tiller

(click on the pic to go to interview)

My new interview with East Coast artist (and Wednesday contributor to Darteboard), Toni Tiller, is up over on One Round Jack. If you haven’t been to the site yet, it is a new blog devoted exclusively to the short-form interviews of interesting and intriguing people from around the country. Now, get on over there and read!

Back in Black (and White)

Posted in 35mm, Art, Jason Gray, landscape with tags , on April 1, 2011 by Jason Gray

Here are my latest scans from my explorations around the STL of long ago. Enjoy!

All Nikon N80 with Nikkor 50mm f/1.8D lens and Ilford HP5+ 400 Film.

More after the jump–> Read more »

Black and White Part Two

Posted in 35mm, abstract, Art, art school, Jason Gray, landscape, St. Louis with tags , , , on March 11, 2011 by Jason Gray

In the last two weeks, I have switched from focusing on the small patch of woods in the urban park where I work to the more industrial side of St. Louis. My city is a strange place that still makes things, all kinds of things, from chemicals to jet planes. This reality means that there is a lot of space (most manufacturing centers stopped building up and started building out at least by the 1940′s), and since most of my city’s population had left for the suburbs by the end of the 1970′s, that means a lot of empty space. So “space” is what I have been concentrating on lately (with a few exceptions). Enjoy!

All Nikon N80 or Nikon n8008s with Nikkor 50mm f/1.8D or Nikkor 105mm f/2.8G lenses.

More after the jump–> Read more »

New Photographs

Posted in 35mm, abstract, art school, Jason Gray with tags , , on March 4, 2011 by Jason Gray

As promised, here is the first round of work that I have been producing on 35mm, black and white film. Last January, I enrolled in courses at the St. Louis Community College at Forest Park, which gave me access to a great, black and white film lab. Since then, I have been working on a group of pictures that centers around a wooded area in Forest Park (the urban park of St. Louis). I have made a few exceptions to that, as you will see. Enjoy.

All Nikon N80 or N8008s with Nikkor 50mm f/1.8D or Nikkor 105mm f/2.8G lenses.

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Friday Night Music Video

Posted in Jason Gray on February 25, 2011 by Jason Gray

I have been shooting a lot of black and white film, developing, and printing it by hand. Soon, I’ll have a bit to share; enjoying the process.

Friday Night Music Videos

Posted in Jason Gray on February 19, 2011 by Jason Gray

Some more music from the Gateway City…

Friday Night Video

Posted in Jason Gray on February 11, 2011 by Jason Gray

Memory Project

Posted in abstract, Art, Jason Gray, Painting, Photography with tags , , on January 16, 2011 by Jason Gray

I know that you all have already seen the two paintings below, but I am still in the process of completing new companions, so they are getting shown again. This post is more about presenting my concept, then it is about presenting new art. The Memory Project:

We are at a point in human history wherein it has never been easier to overindulge our memories. The constant flood of images so far inspires a mood of nostalgia that it is sometimes difficult to extrapolate our own present from culture’s storytelling of it. It is in our public profiles, Facebook, etcetera, which exist at the intersection of our own, full, nostalgic memorization and the demands of a cultural fascination with what the present should be, where our immediate past becomes the present we ourselves missed when we passed through it. Our obsession with documentation is an obvious extension of our intension to live the fullest moment possible, precipitated by the demands of cultural melodramas, which we are all familiar to. A life with a soundtrack, so to speak.

However, the further that we zoom out from the people we are immediately affiliated with, the less interested we are in scrutinizing the pictorial details of those persons’ public profiles (that is, until we zoom out far enough that the people we see entice our sense of exoticism). In other words, the pictures that other people paste up for all the world to see, which are equal in significance to the ones we ourselves paste, lose their value for us the more unfamiliar they become. Once the people become fully unfamiliar to us, we have no choice but to evaluate the pictures that they populate based upon their compositional merit or design, and generally speaking, most of the pictures resulting from people’s desire to capture their fleeting present are universally uninteresting, esthetically.

For ourselves, it is equally as difficult to recognize the banality of our own imagery as it is to harmonize our picture-taking with the expectations of photographic art. This is partially do to subject and partially due to conditions present at the time. Not to mention, we are generally more interested in proving that we, or our activities, are interesting then we are in taking interesting pictures. Nonetheless, even when we succeed in taking an “artistic” picture, the people who we intend to share the picture with have trouble seeing both the subject (ourselves) and the esthetics of the photograph; one or the other must take precedence.

It is this realization which led me to the Memory Project. I am interested in ways of making my own imagery unfamiliar even to me, so that I can look at it from the dual perspectives of active and passive participant. In order to achieve this, I have applied a series of steps in post-processing to photographs of important moments from the many years that my wife and I have been together. These steps reduce the images to abstract compositions, some of which retain a vague sense of the former photographs and some of which do not. As a painter, I am compelled to develop a new attachment to the images through the act of painting them, which reduces the capacity of the memory of the actual events. The new paintings share something with the original images (which will be shown alongside them), yet are also entirely their own. The result is a harmonization of documentation and artful presentation, which deepens the emotional/intellectual response of the viewer. Philip Guston once speculated upon “ the impossibility of living entirely in the moment without the tug of memory”. My hope is to simultaneously resolve that problem through my process, while supporting it in my presentation

See examples after the jump–>
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Winterized

Posted in Jason Gray with tags , on December 31, 2010 by Jason Gray

Holiday cheer aside, winter brings to mind harsh realities more vividly than any other season. The last couple of weeks have been representative of that for me since I went directly from having the flu to catching an infection and having to go on antibiotics, and then we had to put one of my sick kitties to sleep. On top of that, the weather in St. Louis has been completely insane, ranging from the heavy snow that resulted in the picture above, to the several tornados that touched down around the metro area today (in 60 degree weather no less!). Anyway, art production has been slow, so this is all I’ve got for today.

Just re-read this, and realized that I am being kind of a Debbie-downer on New Year’s Eve. Sorry guys; I truly hope you are all having a nice celebration tonight! Here’s to 2011.

The Cube

Posted in Jason Gray with tags , , , on December 17, 2010 by Jason Gray

Most of my work has been done in the office this week (big publication coming up). However, I do have five new paintings from the “Memory Series” going simultaneously; hopefully, I will have one or more to show next Friday.

My Best of 2010

Posted in 35mm, abstract, Art, Jason Gray, landscape with tags , , , , on December 10, 2010 by Jason Gray


2010 has been a looonnng year, or at least it’s sure seemed long. This year, I have experienced innumerable highs and lows, which is strange because the entire time while they were happening, I felt sort of distracted. Realizations in hindsight… Anyway, here are 25 of my favorite pictures that I took this year (kind of a tradition now for me). Enjoy!

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New Series

Posted in abstract, Art, Jason Gray with tags , , on December 4, 2010 by Jason Gray

Honeymoon 3; Oil on Canvas; 24″ x 36″

 

I am too tired tonight to introduce this series the way that I should.  It has to do with memory, and I will leave it at that (more to come later).  This week/month has been/will be a really challenging one, workwise.  On the upside, I did get to spend a morning with Richard Diebenkorn’s son-in-law photographing Richard Diebenkorns for the upcoming catalogue raisonné.  Pretty exciting!!

Anyway, more on my series later on…

AKiss; Oil on Canvas; 18″ x 24″

 

 

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