Peripheral ARTeries Art Review - FEBRUARY 2013

Page 18

Heidi Keyes

Heidi Keyes (USA)

An artist’s statement

“In

my past life as an artist, I was caught up in the excruciating details. I insisted on perfection; I obsessed over the unrealistic notion of how I was convinced things should be. I found that over time, this caused a loss of creativity. Art became hard. I have always loved blind contour drawing, and one day, in a fit of frustration, I began to draw wildly with a paintbrush, with an emphasis on technique rather than end result. I was pleased and surprised at the level of sophistication achieved through the use of simplistic lines and connected forms. The figures I created were uncertain, unsure, and often pensive, but my lines were confident and bold.

“While I do still work realistically at times, I now prefer to experiment with exaggeration of form and the superfluity of line. I have always been captivated by adventure and experienced an advanced degree of wanderlust, so several years ago I became a flight attendant for an international charter company. My profession allowed me to experience a wealth of different cities and cultures throughout the world, and as a result, I began painting landscapes as well as the human figure. I believe my sense of adventure and my free spirit are captured in the paintings that I create. The way I look at painting is the way I view my life– nothing is ever certain, and often the best results come from mistakes.

Where the train tracks go - Laramie, Wyoming

In my current work, I depict various situations and locations of the world’s landscape– bustling urban cities, jagged mountains, abandoned cemeteries in Europe, small Midwest homesteads on rolling plains. These images are selected to express the incompleteness of humanity, a continuous search for truer answers. I look to the moment when one finds oneself on the precipice of a life-altering decision, reluctant to continue, but too far gone to turn back– the past and the future expressed in a single brush stroke of delicious uncertainty.

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