Quasi-Architectural Lyric Latticework, Integrating Certain Cloistered Aspects (No. 1) by Kevin Fletcher

Quasi-Architectural Lyric Latticework, Integrating Certain Cloistered Aspects (No. 1) by Kevin Fletcher

Quasi-Architectural Lyric Latticework, Integrating Certain Cloistered Aspects (No. 1)

Kevin Fletcher

Please call us at 707-546-7352 or email artannex@aol.com to purchase this item.
Title

Quasi-Architectural Lyric Latticework, Integrating Certain Cloistered Aspects (No. 1)

 
Artist

Kevin Fletcher

  1956 - PRESENT (biography)
Year
2022  
Technique
color monotype 
Image Size
12 x 16" platemark 
Signature
pencil, lower right 
Edition Size
I/I 
Annotations
pencil titled, dated, and editioned; annotated "monoptype (I/I) / unique print or impression in 3 passes from plexiglas, worked reductively, 3 versions exist, on Magnani Pescia" 
Reference
 
Paper
ivory wove Magnani Pescia 
State
published 
Publisher
artist 
Inventory ID
KEFL341 
Price
$900.00 
Description

Fletcher creates a world of architectural jetsum; an aerial map with villages or structures joined by streets and alleys - or an abstract musical score, all surrounded by a moat of color. It is as if the viewer is glancing through a plane's window at night as the lights of the city pass by. His title, as usual, opens up its own possibilities.

When asked to explain his monotype techniques, Fletcher wrote:

“Making monotypes allows for a fairly rapid turnover of ideas since the ink is applied to the matrix directly as in painting, but more diluted down. So, it’s somewhere in consistency of pigment between oil paint and watercolor paint, but is also oil based, so it doesn’t set-up, can be worked with rags, rollers, chips or spatulas. When I work with the ink, I may have some kind of contextual intention, but it is not typically specific. I often have less grasp of particulars and just carry an emotive condition, often driven by some news items or social observation.

My training in drawing and painting has always encouraged an indulgence of Abstract Expressionism principles of “automatic writing” and imagery that arises from the subconscious. Monotype and mark making can be liberating that way so I dig about and layer up treatments with an open vision, hoping the field, the picture plane itself, yields an opportunity, a foothold.

The color prints I’ve been doing have called on different pacing to some degree, as they are tight in registration and the marks repeated, but they have aimed at a mostly hushed interiority—are approximations of my concern over events around us. I will only say that these prints are a way of my sending out some kind of well-wishing, quiet and modest thought, support for possible good. It sounds a bit naïve and soft boiled, but that’s how it is.”

 

Please call us at 707-546-7352 or email artannex@aol.com to purchase this item.