Audubon Jesus
posted:
Lies About my Grandmother: Louisa Wolf 1902
I began the series of six small images [ from the same source, a photocopy of an Ellis Island immigrant that I’d found in an old book ] in a step-by-step fashion. Contextually, my grandmother had immigrated from what was then Hungary in 1902. I thought of her when I saw the photo and so concocted the notion that it in fact was her and called the project “Lies About My Grandmother; Louisa Wolf 1902”, the lie of course being that it really was NOT her, but linguistically it also alludes to some sort of disingenuousness or intrigue, which I felt might be engaging. I expanded the size to two 30”X40” [the crow was about six or seven feet across] canvases in the hope that the students might see how liberating and fun it is to work large. I think that my little experiment was a pretty big success because lots of folks [even from other departments] started stopping by to watch AND the students started to work larger themselves, slowly at first and then it became almost like a wildfire. I had fun too! It’s pretty thrilling to see your influence have such an impact so quickly and you get to build a body of work by integrating your day job with your ”art”.
Once, I actually did a job right in class. I had three classes back to back, 9 am straight through till 10 pm. In the am class I got a call from the Wall Street Journal [Can I do a piece for tomorrow?]! I brainstormed with the students and made sketches during class one. I sent a fax at lunch and got approval during class two. I made the painting in class three and emailed it the next morning. I hope that they remember that for awhile. I will.
















