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Our artist for the
month of August 2006
Terry Thompson
The California Museum
1020 O
Street (one block south of State Capitol)
SECOND SATURDAY
OPENING 6pm - 8pm
Upcoming Exhibition..... Roadside Art
at The California Museum for History, Women and the Arts
in Sacramento from Aug.12 through Sept. 14. This will be a solo
show including 15 paintings, 1 sculpture, 1 assemblage.
www.californiamuseum.org
Roadside Art will showcase the
work of contemporary artist and Silicon Valley native Terry Thompson.
Dramatically cropped, large-scale oil paintings document a visually
striking segment of California’s built environment, the neon signs that
once beckoned customers on every corner. Thompson’s highly detailed
realistic paintings capture the individuality and artistry of these
vanishing mid-century icons.
b. sakata
garo is Terry's gallery representation in the Sacramento / Davis
area, located at 923 20th St. Sacramento, CA. (916) 447-4276
bsakatagaro.com
Neon Notions
Valley artist Terry Thompson details the valley's sights and signs
By Michael S. Gant
ARTIST Terry Thompson and I are drinking coffee at Cafe Matisse on South
First Street in downtown San Jose; by all rights, however, this interview
should be taking place a few blocks away at the 5 Spot Drive In. One of
Thompson's most striking paintings depicts the diner's fabled neon sign: a
becircled blue numeral slashed through with a lozenge of
red--"Spot"--sitting atop a rectangular support reading "Drive In." The
angle of the sign's pole on the left is echoed by the street-sign
stanchion on the right showing where Sutter Street intersects South First.
The diner is deserted now, although the sign still stands, a beacon that
has outlived its function. These days, the 5 Spot sign is on its way to
becoming a purely aesthetic object, a process enhanced by Thompson's
precise, evocative rendering in his oil on canvas from 2001.
"I want to capture the light," says Thompson, a Mountain View native who
now lives in Milpitas. It's a way of "making the not beautiful pretty."
When he took up painting, in 1997, Thompson started with the traditionally
"pretty." His first works treat subjects familiar to Sunday painters: a
lighthouse on a rocky bluff, bougainvillea framing an adobe doorway. Soon,
however, Thompson found himself intrigued by more prosaic subjects:
especially the abundant examples of vernacular architecture and signage
that he could see every day commuting in the Bay Area or driving to his
art classes at San Jose State University: the neon lettering on the
marquees of the Jose Theater downtown and the Mexico Theater on Santa
Clara Street near 25th, the Fog City Diner in San Francisco.
The Plaza Hotel on Almaden Boulevard won't make anyone's architectural
walking tour of downtown San Jose. In his acrylic on panel from two years
ago, Thompson, however, discovers a dynamic nexus of roof lines centered
on the vertical stack of letters spelling "hotel"--alphabet blocks in
startling red next to a muted wall of perforated concrete blocks. This
structural tabula rasa contains hints of psychological drama: a lone
bicyclist, the tip of a car's front bumper.
Even blanker, harder to penetrate, are the flat, banded walls of San Jose
Apartments, another acrylic from 2000. The planes of the two units recede
to a vanishing point at the right of the frame. A horizontal thrust of
juniper bush demands your attention at the forefront of the scene--the
green highlights on top turning to dark shadow underneath.
Thompson's paintings are scrupulously accurate in their representation of
light and detail. When he was young, Thompson recalls, he made "meticulous
models" from kits. "They looked just like the cover of the box." For most
of his working life, Thompson, age 39, has applied that sense of
meticulousness as a thin-film equipment engineer.
Although he excelled at his art classes--and was a burgeoning musician--at
Milpitas High School, Thompson says that he "got the feeling that I should
get a real job." He has toiled in high tech for almost 20 years, long
enough to note, somewhat ruefully, that "two-thirds of the companies I
worked for are gone."
5 Numerology A detail of Thompson's 'The 5 Spot,' oil on canvas, 2001.
In the mid-'90s, Thompson began to realize that it was time for a serious
life-course correction--a switch that would take him back to his original
love: art. He had studied artworks and "mentally dissected them" for
years, but he was spurred to undertake his new vocation when he visited
the Milpitas Art and Wine Festival. An exhibit at the San José Museum of
Art of works by John Register, famed for his views of empty diners and
depopulated cityscapes, accelerated Thompson's decision to become a
full-time artist.
Thompson's learning curve proved to be startlingly steep as he
experimented with acrylics, then moved to oils because they allowed him to
"blend--paint one color into another." The sophistication of his technique
is married to a keen eye for striking crops and framings that let the
viewer "fill in the blanks."
Thompson's photo-realist style calls for an unusual working method. Rather
than painting from life, easel erected on the sidewalk, Thompson carries a
35 mm camera with him on his travels and takes pictures of his subjects
from a multitude of angles in varying light.
"It's not practical for me to be on-site. I'm not painting fast," he
explains. Working from photographs gives Thompson the chance to nail down
the details that the eye might miss at first glance.
Thompson has expanded his fascination with representations of neon signs
to assemblages incorporating neon (another technique Thompson taught
himself). Sign Abstraction (2001) features a found neon Martini glass that
Thompson has mounted onto the cut-out corner of an imagined sign. The
sliced-off corner of two letters entice the viewer to finish the message:
Live Nude Girls? Drinks?
Terry Thompson has not completely realized his dream yet. That real "job"
still has a hold on him for the time being. But Thompson has learned an
important lesson from the transition: "Doing something you love is truly
important."


Upcoming
Exhibition..... Roadside Art at The California
Museum for History, Women and the Arts in Sacramento from Aug.12
through Sept. 14. This will be a solo show including 15 paintings, 1
sculpture, 1 assemblage.
www.californiamuseum.org
b. sakata garo is my gallery representation in the
Sacramento / Davis area, located at 923 20th St. Sacramento, CA.
(916) 447-4276
bsakatagaro.com |