EARLY WORK:
A
MAN MADE WORLD
For
a decade I painted an urban, man-made world, where man, mysteriously,
did not appear.
Spring 1976
"A
painting in which there are humans is a temporary vision. In
the next moment anything is possible for the individual, but
not for the solid objects."

THE
MORNING AFTER WAS ALSO THE MORNING BEFORE
acrylic on canvas 1975
"Human
beings are not solid and permanent as a cup, or a piece of wood.
They are free and changing. How, then, can they ever be pinned
down and represented? I represent humans one way, and the objects
of their situation in another. The objects may be known. I render
them with care and detail. The human cannot be known, and must
be abstracted.
I
want everything to be a solid object. I paint buildings. Bricks
are heavy, really heavy. There are no human beings present.
The isolated building becomes a kind of inner self. Who lives
there? I guess. I make up stories.
I
write. I use words to delineate my experience. I consciously
act out various roles and play out my life as theater. This
opens possibilities. I watch from across the room."

URBAN
NEW JERSEY / SPAIN

with Velasquez at the Prado
Painting
from experience results in a mix of these two places. Applying
American style to Spanish sensibility I attempt to enclose
the paradox into one body of work, one personality.
BIOGRAPHICAL
BACKDROP

with my self-portrait, 1974
I
was born in New York City.
Both
sets of grandparents were from Santander, Spain, but lived
most of their lives in the USA. My father's parents retired
and returned. Twice, at ages 2 and 6, my parents and I set
sail with the big black trunks to spend a year in Spain.

Often
I had been lonely there, listening for the gate. Sometimes
it would be Joseline, a child midget, to play and sing a Spanish
ballad with a big voice and dramatic gestures.
I
attended the one-room school for a while, where I mostly learned
math, requiring little knowledge of the language. I would
only speak Spanish to children, behind the playroom door.

my American-style
Halloween party in Spain
URBAN
NEW JERSEY
When
we returned to the USA my parents and I lived in an attic
apartment in East Orange, New Jersey. My father worked in
Newark as a mechanical designer. After the second trip, we
moved into an apartment above the barbershop on the same block
as before.
All
my rich experiences traveling around Spain, France and Portugal
were kept almost as private secrets-inexplicable on the playground
to my city friends. Agatha had gotten tight with Rita in my
absence. They had Nifty notebooks and hoola hoops-items I'd
missed out on during my year away.

with
Buddy Leber
I
still played with Buddy, but he was a boy, went to Catholic
school, and didn't exactly agree that cleaning his grandfather's
hardware store sidewalk cracks with a nail borrowed from the
bins was valuable civic service.
So
I was back to amusing myself.
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