Sunday, November 25, 2007
RANDOMLY GENERATED INTERVIEW
Q: If you could change your name, what would you change it to?
A: My name's Counsel Langley. I'll keep it.
Q: In what hour of the day do you function best?
A: The Eleventh. a.m., p.m. and the proverbial...
Q: What inspires your color choices?
A: Unnatural lighting, urban sunsets, asphalt and concrete grey juxtaposed with neon signs and garish advertisement, safety indicators, warnings, decay, shining steel and reflective windows, rock-n-roll, glaciers, liz taylor eyes, that bathing suit i had when i was 12, bardot hair, 70s auto interiors, james bond movies, inclement weather, japanese anime and japanese folk tale illustrations, our digital world of little blinking lights, pinball, roller rinks, casinos, outdoor stadium events at night . . . I enjoy and deliver beauty, but not easy beauty. My colors reflect this--I seek combinations that are unexpected, yet hold some sort of meaning to me. Through these imposed meanings I've developed a code with which I can tell a story. My colors choices reflect moods, atmosphere, and my own personal little rules about what a color "feels" like. Some are"on" others are "off," this one is "full" that one is "void," hot and cold, dirty and pristine, bossy and submissive, floating and dense . . .
Q: What is your favorite aroma?
A: Vanilla.
Q: If you could have lunch with any artist, alive or dead, who would it be and why?
A: Leonardo DaVinci. Hands down. I mean he is the man isn't he? He did it all and did it well. I love people who have many interests and skills--specialization is for insects; passionate curiosity is magnificent. No one epitomizes this type of life like DaVinci. My only concern is that he'd be one of those "We should get together sometime!" -but-always-just-too-much-on-his-plate-to-ever-pin-him-down-for-a-date-people. So, since Leonardo can't commit I'd go with Albrecht Durer. He is sheer brilliant talent in a meticulous way that appeals to me. Also, he's, like I am, a painter whose early training was in metalsmithing. Plus, I have this idea that he'd be real chatty.
Q: When you went to school you did mainly metalsmithing. How did you end up painting?
A: I was drawn to metalsmithing, and repelled from the painting department, because of the seriousness of the metals students. You can't bs your way through a metalsmithing curriculum. Also, I was attracted to the wealth of tools available to students of metals. Aspects of working with metal that I embraced include the attention to small-scale detail, the rigor required in terms of proper use of tools and respect for your medium, the rich finish of surfaces. However, as graduation approached I began to find that patterns and plans I was drawing for objects I would later build were more intriguing, more beautiful and mysterious to me than the completed 3d object. So, I began to paint the 2D plans and haven't looked back. The work I am doing now evolved directly from this.
Q: Do you have any plans/ideas about expressing your style through other mediums?
A: I'm so glad you asked! Yes! I am very excited about three things: 1) Going back to my metals/3D roots I want to begin creating relief works using various rigid materials, such as sheet and wire metal and foam core. The basic visual language will be the same as that I have been developing in paint, but the effect will be more sculptural. 2) One of my best friends, brilliant fashion designer Erin Sherry, and I have begun a collaboration. We are developing one-of-a-kind clothing and housewares based on my visual imagery and her clothing designs. The items we are creating include, but are not limited to dresses, pants, skirts, shirts, bags, bedding and throw pillows.
3) Electricity! Light and movement! I plan to create paintings using my existing visual language, but in place of painted dots there will be actual switches and knobs. These will be linked to lights and motors. The circuitry will be both functional and arranged so that it will be visual pleasing in the same way that I arrange paint.
Q: What word in the English Language do you wish you had invented?
A: Serendipity.
Q: Do you generally plan out your works ahead of time or do you let them evolve organically as you work?
A: A little of both. Generally I'll have a mood, color pallette and subject matter in mind at the outset of a painting. Along the way I allow the unexpected to occur and make adjustments in reaction. Sometimes this can dramatically alter my intended course, other times the finished work is quite close to my original conception. You know, when you decide to climb a mountain the eventual goal is the top. You plan ahead, choosing the day, reacting to the weather, planning your ascent via a particular trail. However, it would be insane to plan each individual step of your foot, intake of breath, gaze at tree or beast. If you were not flexible and open to react to the unforeseen and make adjustments based on new information you would not only make for a dangerous hiker you'd also miss out on the major reason for embarking on the climb at all. When all is said and done you, like me and my paintings, might still make it to your intended goal of the summit despite all the meandering and unplanned details navigated along the way. Or you might be rained out, or come across a something so wonderful that the original plan no longer holds sway.
Q: What is your favorite flower?
A: The one which is given unexpectedly.
Q: What or who inspires you to be your best self in any situation?
A: I believe that there is always room for improvement and that it is honorable to be doing your best to be your best self, so the answer used to be myself, but now that I am a parent my kids motivate me far more than I was able to on my own.
Q: What affect has having children had on your art?
A: Having children was the final straw that moved me from cool chick talking art in the bar to someone who makes art every single day. They taught me the meaning of discipline and the value of five minutes. I have my family to thank for the progress I've made in the past few years.
Q: What do you miss about your childhood?
A: Magic.
Q: Are you ever influenced in your work by mythology or legend?
A: Hm. Yeah, i think I am, but it is buried pretty deep down. There's a part of me that wants to say 'we are all influenced by our myths and legends and this comes across in what we produce,' but to avoid a cop out I'll try to answer in terms of my work specifically. Looking at my general approach to making paintings I think my sense of story telling via metaphor and codes is a mode of communication absorbed from reading myths and folktales. I feel the desire to make my own. I have begun a series I'm calling Captivity/Captivate. This series is more openly inspired by myth. It is about mythical creatures and how they represent pieces of our psyches; our urge to examine and define The Other; why it both fascinates and frightens; how we cage and are caged by that which we deem to be oddities.
Q: What's the biggest mental hangup you've had to overcome as an artist?
A: That I need to live in a big city and have a cool hair cut to get my art seen.
Q: What do you listen to when you work?
A: MUSIC. I CAN NOT OVERSTATE THE IMPORTANCE OF MUSIC TO MY WORK, HELL TO THE CONTINUED PUMPING OF MY HEART. I am indebted to musicians. I consider the immediate emotional response that music produces to be among the essential tools that I employ to do what I do. Music aids my memory, my ability to focus, reminds of what I love best about being alive, and creates a direct route to my sense of self worth.
Q: What is the main fault in your character?
A: I take stuff too personally. (Sadly, this, in my view, breaks down into a whopping THREE faults: egocentricity, paranoia, and a tendency to get bummed out for no real reason.)
Q: When was it that you first realized that art was taking a hold of you in a way that you could no longer ignore?
A: Honestly that realization came somewhat recently, sometime in the past few years, long after art had already taken hold. Probably came during some quiet moment while the coffee was brewing, the weather was calm, and my mood was serene. The realization would have just floated up into view and poof there was awareness where a moment before there was none. I was already a ways down the road and chose not to turn back. I'm certain it was a supremely satisfying realization.
Q: What is the first quote that comes to your mind?
A: "Success is loving what you do." So says my coffee mug.
Q: Where and what do you see yourself doing 10 years from now?
A: Further along the same road. Painting and parenting . . . my kids will be older and my paintings will be better.
Q: Finish this sentence with one word: "Happiness is ......
A: Self-actualization.
Q: Are you happy?
A: Very.
###
How this came about:
I wanted to try a new approach to the bio/artist statement. So, I asked friends and family for a question with the plan of answering with spontaneity and then putting it altogether in interview format. The volume responses made this very fun and challenging! Thanks to everyone who participated in my Randomly Generated Interview. Although, in order to avoid repetition and preserve a certain tone, I did not end up using all of them I appreciate all of your questions.
Friday, November 2, 2007
SWEET 100
November and December, Suite 100 Gallery exhibits 100 works of art by 36 artists (including me), perfect for the gift-giving season. This eclectic salon-style show has something for everyone, from oils and acrylics to gouache and ink, from photography to screen prints. SWEET 100 draws from the best in a variety of mediums.
Additionally, 10% of Suite 100 Gallery's proceeds will be donated to the Child's Play Charity.
Thursday, October 18, 2007
Best of Show
Rock-n-roll!
Cityscape #14 (Resources) was awarded Best of Show at Northwind Arts Center's Annual Northwest juried art exhibition.
Thank you to juror Lisa Van Doren and all the fine folks at NAC.
REVIEW
URBANITY: Opening night
OCTOBER 12th 2007
DJ Noisemaker, BEATCON
Wednesday, October 3, 2007
URBANITY
"Suite 100 Gallery is proud to announce a show dedicated to Counsel Langley's urban obsession.
'Urbanity' features works inspired by memories of urban spaces and the effects they have had on the artist. In this show, Counsel Langley experiments with new perspectives -- from a airplane, amid skyscrapers, particular districts, exposure of a vast underground upon which the city is built, along with others. Regardless of the perspective, there is always an element of these contrived environments interacting with the natural world, whether in antagonistic tension or pristine balance.
Counsel Langley also presents a suite of bridges, illustrating a fascination of the impudent will to conquer natural barriers; the metaphor of the ambivalent, suspended state of mind; and the level of trust required to cross bridges one didn't build.
Together, this body of work illustrates the complexity, intricacy and magnitude of urban life."Friday, September 21, 2007
GOING GOING GONE
The 4th Annual Art Auction & Cocktail Party
To support the Seattle Men's Chorus & Seattle Women's Chorus
Jonas Jensen Fremont Studios
155 North 35th Street, Seattle, WA 98103
Friday, September 28, 2007, 6 to 10 pm
Fun night, great art, good cause! This piece is up for grabs:
Cityscape #19: Floating
2007 · acrylic, ink, glitter · 12 x 12
Tuesday, September 11, 2007
ART PORT TOWNSEND 2007
Show runs October 13-28.
Juror, Lisa Van Doren, who is a freelance arts consultant in Bellingham, WA and served as Curator of Art at the Whatcom Museum of History & Art, from 2002-2005, selected 80 pieces from 514 works of art submitted from Washington, Alaska, Oregon, British Columbia, Idaho, and Montana. Further info at www.northwindarts.org OR artporttownsend.org.
Thursday, August 16, 2007
URBANITY at Suite100Gallery
October 12th thru November 2nd
Featuring TONS OF NEW WORK!!!
[we have pretty picture now....see above]
Suite100gallery ROCKS and is located in Downtown Seattle
2222 2nd Ave Suite 100
Seattle, WA 98121
206.956.3900
Thursday, June 28, 2007
My Kid's an Artist Too
video by Jeane Myers
music by Emerald
"I'm not finished...JUST GETTING STARTED!!"
Friday, April 27, 2007
LIFEDOTDOTDOT
OPENING RECEPTION
SATURDAY, MAY 5TH, FROM 5 TO 8PM
Life Dot Dot Dot. As in Life etc. As in life and all the rest of it. That and there will truly be a veritable smorgasbord of dots to feast your eyes upon when Artisans on Taylor brings together Tom DeGroot, Zach Hixson, Counsel Langley, and Eric Olson, four abstract painters whose work captures and encodes nothing less than the stuff of life.
LIFEDOTDOTDOT is an opportunity to see work by three artists,
Tom, Eric and I, whose work is included in
Visual Codec's One Shot (see previous post)!
AOT is located in downtown Port Townsend at 236 Taylor Street.
p.s. I designed the announcement . . .
if you want one email me with your mailing address.
Wednesday, April 25, 2007
Visual Codec's ONE SHOT
THIS BOOK RULZ!
Jim Demetre
Artdish Editor
Visual Codec’s One Shot–-a locally published book featuring work by 100 regional artists working in the visual arts. Visual Codec, published a monthly online magazine from February 2006 to February 2007. Its core focus was in-depth coverage of the vibrant regional contemporary visual arts scene showcased by three pivotal Pacific Coast cities: Portland, Oregon, Seattle, Washington, and Vancouver, British Columbia. Online archives of the magazine can be found at: www.visualcodec.com.
In conjunction with the magazine, Visual Codec spearheaded One Shot, a book project intended to showcase both emerging and established regional visual arts talent drawn from Oregon, Washington, and British Columbia.
One Shot features work by 100 regional artists selected in a blind jury process. Each artist/team was allowed to submit only one work of art, and, while up for review by the jury, each entry was presented with only the medium it was created in, the title of the work, and the general knowledge that it was created somewhere in the region. No artist names, gallery affiliations, cities, resumes, or artistic statements were presented to the jury.
One Shot Book Specifications
- Custom cover foil-pressed on cardstock
- Internal pages laser CMYK on 28lb Bright White
- Dimensions approx. 5.5"w x 5.5"h x .5"d
- Locally conceived, designed, compiled, printed and bound
One Shot Online Availability
The One Shot book is now available, to Washington, Oregon and Vancouver BC residents, direct from Visual Codec to OR, WA, and BC residents via PayPal. Books run below cost at $20USD plus any applicable tax and shipping/handling. No PayPal account is needed to purchase via PayPal. Please allow 1-2 weeks for shipping. All sales are final; no returns or refunds.
BUY NOW
One Shot In-Store Availability
In conjunction with the release events we are also working hard to make the book available via select retailers in PortlandOR, SeattleWA, and VancouverBC.
Powell's City of Books has confirmed status as our Portland retailer, Wall of Sound will be handling Seattle in-store sales, and we are still working on confirmation with our Vancouver retailer.
Monday, April 2, 2007
Featured on JUXTAPOZ.com!
Cityscape 12 (Bright Night)
Archival inkjet print
2006
Cityscape 15 (Leaving Town)
acrylic, ink, glitter
12 x 12"
2007
Go see: JUXTAPOZ.com
Thursday, February 22, 2007
Trade with Matt Hooker
Acrylic, ink, glitter
12 x 12"
2007
i'll give this to Matt Hooker when he makes me a triptych based on this list:
rock-n-roll
glacier
unicorn
clipper ship
swords
red
sparkler
gin
city
tiger
cranes
map
flourescent
eyes
big hair
sugar
control panel
poker
CD design almost done...
MAZEWAYS: Original music composed by Larry Thomas
Last year Larry and I collaborated to good effect for Interactions: Art & Art, an annual event--part of Art Port Townsend--performers select visual art pieces that resonate what they do. Larry chose my work. We put together 4 presentations. Went over so well that he was inspired to press a cd and let me design the packaging. The cd will be available for purchase at AOT in Port Townsend during my show May and June 2007.
HEARTBREAKER is history
HEARTBREAKER press release:
Ever lost in love?! Betrayal, jealousy, unrequited, love/lust, unattainable, unapproachable, unresponsive objects of love/lust, tainted, tortured, led-on, let down . . . . it’s a HEARTBREAKER.
Read on for a taste of what’s on the menu this January through February 15th:
“The pleasure of putting together a themed group show is asking the question. In this case the question was ‘Dear Artist, What is Heartbreak?’ It is interesting not because you know what you’re going to get, but because you don’t know how they will answer, how they will interpret the theme,” says Langley. “The diversity of response to the HEARTBREAKER call for artists goes far to prove that the human heart aches in many ways.”
There is the deep ache of childhood lost as reflected in an intimate ink and watercolor by Mike Biskup. “My Two older brothers moved out & away when I was about 17. I lost my nice country home in Fresno to smoggy air & suburban sprawl. My dog, Misty, got hit by a car. My brother permanently “loaned” my skateboard to one of his stupid friends. I lost religion. I lost my dream of being a bird flying. I lost the moon & stars.”
Heartbreak is also to be found in the claustrophobia of roles assigned by society. One of a handful of HEARTBREAKER jewelry pieces, Ring of Heartbreak by Brooklyn-based filmmaker and activist Corey Tatarczuk, depicts a woman trapped in the heartbreaking world of the Victorian daguerreotype. “She is sewn into her elaborate, uncomfortable clothing, doing needlepoint—thankless work. The film is mounted on mother of pearl, allowing light through. Mother of pearl also alludes to some of the classic materials of ‘women's work’ and attire.”
Several HEARTBREAKER artworks are intensely personal. These daringly place taboo private moments into the public sphere. One example is Amanda Marshall-Kapp’s unembellished self-portraits, photographs taken the morning that she “ingested an overdose of prescription drugs shortly after [her] son and his father left the house . . . .” Another is The Read Letter, an acrylic painting by David Nixon, Philosophy Doctorate cum Rock Star member of up-and-coming Seattle band “Awesome.” Nixon depicts himself sobbing as he reads a letter, a moment of emotional breakdown that is normally kept safely private.
Other works are more documentarian, but no less poignant. Photographer David Conklin presents sensitive images from his hospice project in which he has captured the moments at the end of a person’s life. “This [project] is through the local hospital. I am taking portraits of people in their last stages of life. I am trying to show people in an environment that is meaningful to them, in a positive light.”
Some HEARTBREAKER works, the photography of Bainbridge Island’s Harry Longstreet for example, verge on voyeurism. “I almost always shoot with available light and avoid staging or posing a shot.” Longstreet’s two HEARTBREAKER images are of couples he does not know in public places who, despite being in an embrace, are clearly and sadly no longer on the same page.
Heartbreak on a political level is acknowledged by painter Jason Gould. His peice, G.W. Love, is his “attempt to bring more love and compassion to [George W. Bush], to try and break his heart. Every time your heart breaks, it breaks open, allowing the love within to flow.”
Myth is rife with heartbreak, and is manifested here by Edmonds ceramist Pamela Mummy with her sculpture entitled Daphne “after the Greek goddess who was pursued by Apollo. He was frantically in lust with Daphne, due to an unfortunate arrow from Eros, but she would have nothing to do with him. To help her escape Apollo, her father turned her into a laurel so she would be protected from his embrace—a classic heartbreak.”
Of course, HEARTBREAKER would not be complete without the knuckle biting heartache of the pin-up. The I Heart Brooklyn Girls calendar fills this role by delivering twelve decades of heartbreaking beauty—at your fingertips, yet always beyond your grasp.
Finally, Brooklyn painter Jorden Haley goes straight to the human organ that has been deemed the seat of emotion. With In This Together he simply says that to be human, to have a beating heart, is to experience heartache.
Heartbreak is not comfortable and is mostly avoided by polite society. All of the HEARTBREAKER artists have shown a deep compassion for human nature with all its vulnerability. They have, as well, shown bravery in their enthusiastic willingness to work it out and show it off
HEARTBREAKER artist list:
Buick Audra New York NY
Mike Biskup Port Townsend WA
Stacey Bott Bellevue WA
Jane Champion Port Townsend WA
Rena Coen Boston MA
David Conklin Port Townsend WA
Dan Daniels Portland OR
Michael DeMeng Missoula MT
Nicole DePonte Revere MA
Lauretta Frost Port Townsend WA
Jason Gould Port Townsend WA
Jorden Haley New York NY
Zachary Hixson Salt Lake City UT
Newel Hunter Port Townsend WA
iheartbrooklyngirls New York NY
Andrea Lawson Port Hadlock WA
Harry Longstreet Bainbridge Island WA
Deedra Ludwig Port Townsend WA
Amanda Marshall-Kapp San Fran CA
Pamela Mummy Edmonds WA
David Nixon Seattle WA
Orpheus Chocolates Lopez Island WA
Jackie Pallister Port Townsend WA
Ken Parker Ireland
Sharon Pollard Bothell WA
Jonathan Safir Port Townsend WA
Joshua Sage Port Townsend WA
Erin Sherry San Diego CA
Corey Tatarczuk New York NY
AND MORE . . . .
Thursday, February 15, 2007
Cityscape #12 (Resources)
Acrylic, ink, glitter on board
36 x 36"
This is the sort of thing I'm working on lately.