Monthly Archives: August 2015

Patrick Kramer: Hyper Realistic Painter

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Patrick Kramer is a stunning oil painter often called a ‘hyper realistic painter’. I assure you that each of these are oil paintings–not photographs. Kramer was born in Utah to German immigrants and studied at BYU.  Kramer explains his artistic style, “I came to realize that the appeal of representational painting since the advent of photography is due in a large part to the painting process. Although the image itself may come to resemble an ordinary photograph, a psychological intensity can be felt in the handmade work, as the artist’s laboriously slow method, intense concentration, and myriad of artistic decisions lie behind the creation of the image. In my work, I hope the viewer senses this tension between photography and the handmade — the instantaneous and the prolonged, the ubiquitous and the unique, the impartial and the personal.”

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What was the evolution that led to your current style? I think my current style is evolving, often the only continuity between pieces being a very detailed, hyperrealistic aesthetic. This aspect of my work started in college, where I did a lot of pencil drawings. It’s a simple medium that I felt would allow me to push the limit,  to see how detailed and realistic I could render my subjects. I never really intended to pursue a hyper/photorealistic style, I just wanted to see how far I could take it. I’m a bit of a perfectionist though, and it suited my personality, so I kept it up.
A lot of my earlier work had a more photographic/snapshot quality.  I work pretty closely from photos and so I spent a good deal of time with a camera, going on walks, trying to find imagery that interested me for one reason or another. It was very challenging, however, to just stumble upon things that I thought would make a great painting, then manage to get a photo that I could work with.  The composition would be off, the lighting wouldn’t be great…. I was rarely happy with the results. I do more still life work now, where I have a lot more control. I can really exercise my creativity and explore ideas that interest me, as I gather the appropriate props, and carefully arrange my compositions. It can be gratifying to create paintings that have more personal meaning.
 What has your career been like on the commercial side? It can be difficult to make a living as an artist, especially when you’re starting out. I graduated in 2008 from Brigham Young University, and have been lucky enough to paint pretty much full time since then, but it’s been tough. My paintings can be extremely time consuming, and when you are starting out,  the prices don’t really match the time investment required. It’s pretty frustrating when you’re trying to earn a livable wage. I did a fair amount of commissions to help pay the bills, and taught some drawing lessons, but as I’m becoming a little more established as an artist, I’m able to focus more on my personal work.
You spend 50-300 hours on each painting. How do you choose what image you are going to spend that much time with? Honestly, I just paint whatever interests me at the time. I try to be sincere, to create paintings that truly appeal to something inside me, but my work is pretty diverse and my motivations vary from piece to piece. Some of my paintings are just imagery that I find mesmerizing – the play of light and shadows, dramatic architecture, glass reflections and refractions. Simple things that I find visually captivating, but don’t have any real message other that being aesthetically pleasing. Other pieces are more personal and expressive. These are frequently still lifes where I combine or juxtapose imagery in a way that I find compelling.  Flowers, old letters, butterflies, paintbrushes — I really don’t limit myself to any single subject matter. I’ve also done a few pieces that explore my sense of humor as well. The art world can be so serious and pretentious, it’s fun to make a painting that just makes someone smile.

Visit Patrick Kramer’s website.

Follow Patrick Kramer on Instagram.

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Katrina Berg: Sweet Times

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Katrina Berg is the most calorie-rich Mormon painter since Wayne Thiebaud. Berg lives in Utah with her husband and five kids.

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You paint a lot of cakes and cupcakes. Tell us about it.A bite or taste is much like a memory: frozen in time and cataloged with those things we whole most dear.” Most of the cakes have a story, or represent experiences of friends and loved ones. One portrayed the cheesecake I craved incessantly when I was pregnant with our twin boys. Another represents a friend who would make us a Bundt just to keep us going when she knew we were simply surviving. Still another depicts the wise mother who told her son to bring home flowers to his wife and to not give up on their marriage. Most celebrate sweet moments or things others have taught me. Sometimes they are not always happy memories…but a sweet learning experience none-the-less. Life isn’t always yummy, but there is always that gesture or a sweet bite that lifts our spirits and makes us smile…at times it’s just what we need to endure one more moment. Do you have a favorite restaurant you frequent on vacation or return to for a special event? Maybe the food is not the best, but the people or celebration made the food that much sweeter? These cakes are meant to encapsulate these types of experiences…and to welcome new ones.

You studied at UNLV and BYU, studied abroad in France and Italy, and studied landscape architecture among other things. How do these disparate parts shape your art? One of my best friends in architecture school, and later roommates while we studied Italian gardens and hill towns, gave me my first set of paints for my birthday. I was 25. Like many artists, I was a compulsive doodler (is that even a word?!). Traveling and living abroad changed my perspective so very much and the only way I knew to express what was radiating from within was to paint. I’ve always been interested in so many things, searching for beauty as my personal quest. Painting has helped make sense of my journey and helped me express these discoveries. In most pieces you’ll find  natural elements within the wallpaper or textiles in the backgrounds of my still life and interiors. The desire to bring the outside in began with my landscape architecture studies. Living in Northern Utah changed that desire to a need…as we’re blanketed in Winter-white goodness, I love to enjoy a bit of “green” in my art.

Life has been a series of pretty remarkable challenges from ‘Forrest Gump’ leg braces, infertility, and severe allergies to abuse when you were a child. How did these experiences shape your faith and your creativity? The two greatest gifts that I have personally been given are the Lord’s Infinite Atonement and Empathy. There are so many that have suffered far more than I and I remember that often. Yet, I feel so very grateful to be able to help a friend through a similar challenge…it can be such a lonely road these trials of ours. I’m constantly reminded that these experiences come with obligations…to learn something, to become stronger in our faith and testimony, and to help others. This life was never meant to be faced alone, and sometimes the only people who truly understand what we are up against are our Savior and Redeemer, and those who’ve overcome. Without these challenges, how willing would I be to accept and better understand the gift of the Atonement? His grace is truly sufficient for all and covers all…knowing how much He loves us and the joy He and our Father in Heaven feel as we serve and lift one another brings me joy. Life is messy and life is hard. And yet, we as artists have the opportunity to serve, lift, teach, and offer beauty as we create. There is good all around and I feel it is my quest to celebrate this good as I paint.

You and your husband built a green home. What is your studio like? What is your work style? Concrete tilt up walls and floors act as a thermal mass to capture the heat, warming our home in the winter and cooling it in the summer, where floor-to ceiling windows provide passive solar heat. These large windows offer an abundance of natural, non-direct sunlight wherever I paint. I have a studio adjacent to our bedroom that I’m currently sharing with our twin babies. Getting twins to nap and sleep through the night has been a full-time job, so I’m currently painting in our dining room lol. Last summer I temporarily painted at a large table in our living room…they have all had great lighting, we just adapt, seeking what works best for our family. One day the twins will move in with their big brothers and we’ll finish the two-story greenhouse…and then I’ll be able to open the double glass doors from my 2nd story studio and let in the aroma from the plants and fruit trees growing within. One day… Till then, I consider myself a “dream painter”, primarily painting as the babies sleep. My husband and I schedule studio time for me a couple nights a week or weekends. I hire babysitters and have a dear friend who volunteers to take my 5 kiddos every so often so I can paint. During these studio sessions I make every moment count and don’t let anything like emails or my phone deter me from my precious painting time. I’m so thankful to all that help and support my passion.

Visit Katrina Berg’s website.

Follow Katrina Berg on Instagram.

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Nathan Cunliffe: Illustrator in Korea

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Nathan Cunliffe is a freelance editorial and children’s illustrator living in Jeju Island, South Korea. He graduated from Brigham Young University with a BFA in Illustration.

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Tell us about where you grew up and how you became an artist. So I grew up in Los Angeles, CA and my entire life I had planned on being either a paleontologist or a marine biologist. I was a very very young reader and would devour children’s books and young adult books; over time I fell in love with literature and so my aim is to be a children’s illustrator. I took my first art class when I was a junior in high school and it had never occurred to me that I might enjoy art. Thank goodness I did because my senior year I signed up for every art class available and headed off to Brigham Young University to study art. BYU was certainly a learning process for me because I wasn’t very successful in the beginning. I started in studio arts and was looking towards animation but ended up studying concept design and illustration. A beautiful hybrid major with a foot in both animation and illustration.

You graduated recently. After graduation I actually moved to South Korea, which is where I currently am! I am a teacher here and have been here since August 2014. I will be wrapping up my time in Korea by stopping in both China and Japan before heading back to Los Angeles, CA. I’ve always wanted to live abroad and really experience a different culture and become a part of it. I have certainly been able to experience a bit of Asian culture while living on Jeju Island, South Korea.

What tools–both traditional and digital–do you use regularly? While traveling I’ve had the incredible chance to observe and draw different things as I go. My favorite form of art making is sketch booking which can be tricky when trying to become a working artist; I have to make a very dedicated effort to make work that doesn’t just stay with me and actually goes out into the world.

In both illustration and animation Photoshop is a key element but I still prefer a touch of the traditional mediums so my favorite tools at the moment are watercolors, inks, pastel pencils, and color pencils. I’ll usually start with an red or blue sketch and then work on my contrasts and color before using Photoshop to tweak or touch up the final product.

What are you working on next? Currently I am mostly sketching and working on a side project or two but my next big project that I am really looking forward to working on is a redesign of some classic American games but with an Asian twist to them. I try to work on a variety of projects and really explore my options with mediums and such. I have also started to work on a couple of children’s books which I hope will be ready to publish by summer next year. Lots of projects in the early stages but looking forward to seeing where they take me over the next coming years!

Visit Nathan Cunliffe’s website.

Follow Nathan Cunliffe on Instagram.

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