I was asked to return to augment the murals I did between 2010-2014. I will be painting a frieze that is, well, more than 50' wide, plus columns and connecting architectural features (here shown below the red line). The basic color scheme will remain similar to the larger panels here slightly visible to the extreme right, which is to say vermilion reds at the base to ochres at the level of the upper windows. The actual figurative imagery is still only known to my unconscious at this point. Stay tuned!
~ Ron Mills de Pinyas, painter, muralist
Contact the artist for prices. Commissions accepted.
Sunday, August 2, 2015
Wednesday, January 21, 2015
Saturday, January 17, 2015
Friday, January 16, 2015
Wednesday, January 14, 2015
New website:
www.mills-pinyas.com is up and running.
This post now automatically becomes part of my site.
This post now automatically becomes part of my site.
Saturday, January 10, 2015
"Entopic" watercolor series
6 x 9" watercolor from the "Ectopics" series |
I created the 24 6" x 9" watercolor series “Entopics” in Barcelona and later Mallorca between December 12, 2014 and January 9th The work started with assertions about the inner eye, the optical phenomenon of gazing into the perceptual space between the optical cortex and the back of the eyelid. While reading from Helmoltz and others inspired the work, there was not intent to naturalistically represent what is frankly too ephemeral to depict and also far from my interests. I was and remain inspired by dynamic passages of colors, floaters, blushes of passing hues, etc. that are neither entirely “out there” or “in here" but rather in-between. What I find fascinating is the organic geometry that emerges then fades into the background field. In trying to focus with my eyes closed I realized any attempt to fix the image would be silly as it would be to assign a field a single identity (blue, red, orange, etc) even microsecond by microsecond as the shifts and passages are subject to eye pressure, light and shadow and no doubt bio-chemistry. In any case, once again nature gives me more interesting imagery than I could ever invent conceptually. So what do I mean by saying the work is "inspired" by gazing into the entropic field? I suppose in part it is in noticing the layered complexity, the transient beauty...and trying to translate that into watercolor by characterization, abstraction per se, looking and working with the natural flow of the medium while checking once in a while, eyes closed, in order to see "better". To see the entire portfolio click here.
Friday, December 26, 2014
Saturday, September 6, 2014
Goethe's "subjective halos", phosphenes, entoptics, photopsia, awe and wonder. Toward a new series of paintings.
Inspired by optical research by Hermann Ludwig Ferdinand Von Helmholtz. |
One of the Ovato Tando pieces from over a year ago that I am looking at toward a new series. The format might be apt for this new interest. |
Paul Gauguin
While teaching concrete/non-objective forms of painting this week I realized that more than play, per se, more than conceptualism, historicism or ideology (all given due attention), my personal efforts in the studio—while informed by all of this—are at this stage in my career more toward a renewed experience of awe, wonder, aesthetic arrest, a peculiar form of ecstatic sensory experience that makes me feel most alive and present in the world—with a brush in my hand. I return to painting for such moments of grace, moments in which I realize the limits of mind and intention, when I suspend mental chatter and reconnect to the primacy of perception in gratitude; the art as a vehicle, a meditation, a prayer that grounds me--and I hope others.
While laying in the sun with Isabel recently at Salishan on the Siletz Bay I enjoyed the flow of color on the back of my eyelids, the flow, intricate luminosity and floaters witnessed as a phenomenon worth noticing. Of course everyone has done so for fun, pressing here and there to create blushes and swells of color: orange, yellow, hot pinks, deep purple, etc... in fact Goethe wrote about it and other aspects of color theory in a work published in 1810. It occurred to me that it might be interesting to engage such optical phenomena as a point of departure, much as I did the water in the bay, toward a new palette with new inspiration, flow, luminosity...about the liminal visual realm between interior and exterior sight, possibly even bioluminescent biophotons, the leaky boundary that blurs what we normally consider distinctly different interior visual stuff and the visible exterior world.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18358594 http://5mp.eu/fajlok/bokkon-brain-imagery/phosphene_phenomenon_a_new_concept_www.5mp.eu_.pdf
Phosphenes, entopics |
Since there is a limited set of such configurations, some have speculated about its influence on early petroglyphs and pictographs. Jungians especially are always looking for support for the idea of the "collective unconscious" that animates archetypal imagery. I suspect most of this is what people call "seeing stars" after a trauma, a fall, light-headedness, drinking too much, drugs, sexual orgasm, etc. Indeed. While it is easy to attribute phosphenes to retinal nervous discharges, they nevertheless they give us insight into structures that are part of our shared makeup. (See this link for information about the science of entoptics, including muscae voliantes, photopsia and other related optical phenomena by Gauri Shankar Shrestha, Opthomologist.
http://www.slideshare.net/GauriSShrestha/entopic-phenomenon-13491554)
Perkinje Tree |
From Suzanne Carr, citing Oster and others: http://www.oubliette.org.uk/Three.html
Because these form constants and phosphenes are derived from the human nervous system, "all people who entertain altered states of consciousness, no matter what their cultural background, are liable to perceive them"
(Eichmeier and Höfer 1974; Reichel-Dolmatoff 1978)."As Knoll varied the frequency of the pulses the patterns changed, and by altering the frequency Knoll's group identified 15 classes of figures and a number of variations within each class. For each person tested the spectrum of phosphenes (the kind of pattern at each frequency) was repeatable, even after six months"(Oster 1970:85).
17th Century Tantric paintings |
I also am inspired by my old friend from graduate school, the German thinker Hermann Ludwig Ferdinand von Helmholtz (August 31, 1821 – September 8, 1894) who wrote: "Under suitable conditions light falling on the eye may render visible certain objects within the eye itself. These perceptions are called entoptical."
An additional reference from painter and former student Zach Mitlas:
"I’ve been reading your recent painter’s blog and I find your reference to phosphene phenomenon a very rich resource for your own continued painting project. It reminds me much of J.W. Goethe’s Treatise on Colour, (https://archive.org/details/goethestheoryco01goetgoog) especially his section on “Pathological Colour” (pg. 45 or so). Goethe makes references to various ways one’s color vision is affected in sickness or in altered states. I think you may find it interesting."
Thanks Zach! To me, a somewhat better citation would be Goethe's previous section in the same treatise on what he calls "subjective halos", adding to Descartes' description of objective halos:
Wednesday, July 30, 2014
On the Bracken Line work to be shown in Costa Rica during August
While in residence giving workshops in Figure studies and a Master's class at the EMAI, the Santa Ana School of the Integrated Arts, I will be showing work from the Along the Bracken Line series shown in the posts below. Artist Statement (English and Spanish versions):
Along the Bracken Line
This series of painting was inspired by the waters of Siletz Bay along the Oregon coast. More specifically, it was inspired by the ebb and flow of salt water from the ocean and fresh river water as they ebb and flow transparently; as they mix in layers with subtle transitions in hue and intensity. Sometimes, the ever moving fringe between the waters appears as a meandering texture on the surface of the bay, known as a bracken line.
The currents and layers of salt water and fresh water go one direction and yet the waves go in another, leading me to regard the visual complexity of this natural phenomenon as metaphor, as an analog of consciousness itself, of the flow of the mind with the subtlety suggested by nature itself; how states of consciousness and memory overlap and are sometimes transparent, sometimes opaque, often intersecting and sometimes entirely independent; how they overlap and co-exist, shift and merge, separate, how the mind coalesces and connects what it perceives to be immutable forms just before they again dissolve without a trace; my brush lightly touching, sometimes not touching at all as I wave it in motions above the surface. Tentative assertions, more found than posited are yielded in transparent flux. The mind not capturing, per se, not asserting but rather glimpsing what is held and released, like a fish, delicate and transient qualities that converge, for me, the physical and metaphysical worlds.
The currents and layers of salt water and fresh water go one direction and yet the waves go in another, leading me to regard the visual complexity of this natural phenomenon as metaphor, as an analog of consciousness itself, of the flow of the mind with the subtlety suggested by nature itself; how states of consciousness and memory overlap and are sometimes transparent, sometimes opaque, often intersecting and sometimes entirely independent; how they overlap and co-exist, shift and merge, separate, how the mind coalesces and connects what it perceives to be immutable forms just before they again dissolve without a trace; my brush lightly touching, sometimes not touching at all as I wave it in motions above the surface. Tentative assertions, more found than posited are yielded in transparent flux. The mind not capturing, per se, not asserting but rather glimpsing what is held and released, like a fish, delicate and transient qualities that converge, for me, the physical and metaphysical worlds.
Aguas Salobres; confluencias
Esta serie de pinturas fueron inspiradas por las aguas de la Bahía de Siletz a lo largo de la costa de Oregon. Más específicamente, se inspiró en el flujo y reflujo del agua salada del mar y el agua dulce de los ríos que desembocan en forma rítmica ondulante, ya que sube y baja de manera transparente y mezcla en capas con sutiles diferencias en el color y densidad. A veces la franja siempre en movimiento entre las aguas aparece como un serpenteo de texturas en la superficie de la bahía, conocida como una línea salobre.
A veces, las corrientes y las capas de agua salada y agua dulce van en varias direcciones, las olas van en otras. Me conduce a considerar la complejidad visual y física de este fenómeno natural como metáfora, como un análogo de la conciencia misma, de los movimientos de la mente con la sutileza sugerida por la propia naturaleza, como los estados de la conciencia y la memoria se superponen y son a veces transparentes, a veces opacas, a veces se cruzan, a veces, aparentemente en forma independiente si no es ajeno el uno del otro; la forma en que se superponen y coexisten, cómo cambian y se fusionan, aparte, cómo la mente se une y conecta a lo que percibe como formas inmutables justo antes de que de nuevo se disuelvan sin dejar rastros; mi pincel tocando suavemente la superficie; arrastrando la pintura, sometiendo un pasaje mientras ilumina otra; algo hecho de varios naderías, ya en proceso, con lo que parecen afirmaciones como tentativas; cedido en flujo transparente. La mente no captura en si misma sino más bien que vislumbra y libera e inmediatamente su transitoria belleza, la pintura es una mera transcripción visual de lo inefable.
Thursday, July 24, 2014
Including a couple more pieces from last year in the Bracken Line series
Saturday, July 19, 2014
On the Bracken Line (third set) inspired by Siletz Bay, Oregon
LINK to collaborative music video with Ruben Mills: Non-Duality of Sight and Sound
I am in the midst of painting a rather large series of work inspired by the Siletz Bay. The following eight are small 11" x 14" canvases done at Salishan, Oregon during the past week. There is a bracken line, the constantly moving boundary between ocean salt water and Siletz River fresh water, in front of our cabin on the bay. It is often visible as it forms, slides along outside our window, then recedes and grows placid or turbulent, waves on ripples, currents going one way, wind waves the other; brackish waters.
I am not illustrating, per se, and so in what sense is this natural ebb and flow inspirational? On a formal level it is about layers and counterflow. That is enough I suppose but I do think about all of this metaphorically, perhaps more specifically metaphysically: how states of consciousness and memory overlap and are sometimes transparent, often not; how they overlap and co-exist, how they shift and merge, separate and exist at times independent, other times inter-dependent of one another; how the mind coalesces and connects what it perceives to be forms from the soup of experience even as it dissolves. Visual poetics that defy naming; flux and swell and illumination, obfuscation and elucidation, my brush tracing in process what appear as assertions ,more found than posited.
Friday, July 18, 2014
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