1 minute read
James Lavadour
Lavadour describes his process of painting as akin to the natural processes that shape the earth: “I realized that what I was looking at and what I was doing were the same thing.... As a physical being, I was an event of nature myself. I could become a conduit for making art, a conduit of nature, a conduit of the extraordinary event.” In Untitled and Deep Moon, each composed of nine abstract oil paintings informed by landscapes, the implications of people and their actions as “events of nature” are mediated through paint and brush strokes. Every painting forms a unique portrait of the environment: the calm of a pale blue sky, the power and destruction of lava and fire, the ephemeral light between dusk and night. With the varied images assembled into grids, there emerges a syncopated rhythm between earthly molten explosions and the more bucolic, quiet moments of light and land, echoing the human capacity to act as changing weather, with multiple modes of being in the world.