Monthly Archives: November 2015

Gregory Mortenson: Narrative

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Gregory Mortenson is an incredible painter who will be opening a new show with a reception tonight at the Arcadia Contemporary Gallery in New York City. The show will run from November 5-15 and includes 17 original paintings from his Haiti series that was previously profiled at The Krakens. (One of the new paintings is shown below.) According to American Artist Mortenson, “Embraced the rigors of training in the atelier tradition. This prowess is most evident in his portraiture, where the precision of description and delicate paint handling give a quite breathtaking sense of presence to the subject.” He  lives and works in New York City.

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Explain the atelier tradition. The 17th, 18th, and 19th century artists were tremendous draftsmen that continue to inspire today’s artists. They were all trained in the atelier system which involved a master artist that trained apprentices. It involved a lot of drawing and painting the figure from life, as well as drawing and painting casts from Greek and Roman statues. These systems eventually evolved to the prestigious 19th century French Academies. The method of training faded away in the twentieth century as representational art fell out of fashion. I studied at a four-year-school modeled after this method.

Visit Gregory Mortenson’s website.

Follow Gregory Mortenson on Instagram.

Donate to Zion’s Children of Haiti.

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Angel Moroni: Creating an Icon

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Guest Post: Brian Olson

Easily recognizable to a worldwide audience, a neo-classical statue with a trumpet stands atop the tallest spire of one of the oldest structures in Salt Lake City, Utah. This Angel Moroni Statue and its various versions instantly denote a temple of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. The now familiar icon was not the first form of ornamentation for the spires of Mormon temples; it would be many years before it would become a cherished and almost essential part of the temple standard.

The first temple of the Church was dedicated in 1836 in Kirtland, Ohio. The temple was three stories and covered in sparkling white stucco. On top of the tower stood, not a statue, but a weathervane (below). At the time, weathervanes were often placed on the tallest buildings in a community, churches, and civic buildings alike, and were of great use to communities whose industries were often dependent upon the weather for survival.

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For the first few temples built, weathervanes, not statues, were the norm. The Nauvoo Temple would be given a 3-dimensional figure made of tin and gilded in gold (shown at top). It was fashioned in the likeness of a man, holding a book raised in one hand and a trumpet to his lips in the other, laying horizontal as if flying. It was a representation of the angel described in the verse in Revelation 14:6 “And I saw another angel fly in the midst of heaven, having the everlasting gospel to preach unto them that dwell on the earth, and to every nation, and kindred, and tongue, and people.”

After the Mormon Church’s move to Utah, the first temples built in their new home would also have weathervanes. The Saint George temple had a weathervane on its original short tower and on its newer taller tower as well (below left). The Logan Temple was built with two weathervanes, one each on its twin east and west towers (below right). So common was the practice of weathervanes that it was not until the fifth temple was built in Manti, Utah that the Saints would break with the tradition by having neither weathervane nor statue. Weathervanes were even considered for the Salt Lake Temple. Some of the early drawings depicting what the Salt Lake Temple would look like feature the Nauvoo weathervane on both the east and west center towers.

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However, fashions change. So it was that President Wilford Woodruff approached Cyrus Dallin with a commission, not for the weathervanes, but a single standing statue more in the modern style. Initially, Dallin declined the commission for the statue, saying he did not believe in angels. President Woodruff persisted and asked Cyrus to consult with his mother about taking the project. Upon telling his mother that he did not wish to take the commission and his reason why, she replied “Why do you say that? You call me your ‘angel mother.’ ” Dallin accepted the commission, and it was Dallin himself who chose Moroni for the subject and inspiration of the angel (below).

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While it was Dallin’s statue that firmly linked the angel icon with the prophet Moroni in the minds of the members of the church, it was not the start of the tradition of an angel on nearly every temple. In fact, another six temples would be built and another 62 years would pass before another Angel Moroni statue would be placed on a temple.

This month we are featuring a four-part series on the Angel Moroni sculptures atop most of the Mormon temples around the world. These guest posts come from Brian Olson who has spent more than 10,000 hours modeling, digitizing, and photographing Mormon temples. His free PDF entitled Know Your Moroni can be found at Photogent.com. Part Two will profile Sculpting Angel Moroni, Part Three will profile the Legacy of Sculpture, and Part Four will look at Rendering Angel Moroni.

Download the free PDF entitled Know Your Moroni.

Visit Brian Olson’s YouTube page.

Images courtesy LDS.org and Brian Olson.

Justin Wheatley: Suburbia

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Justin Wheatley is a deep-thinking painter and teacher. His piece Prodigal Son (above) was selected for the LDS International Art Competition. He holds a BFA from Utah State University and a Masters in Education from National University. His website explains, “His work is influenced by his love for nature and architecture.” Wheatley lives in Utah.

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Tell us a little about where you grew up and how your career got started. I grew up a half hour north of Salt Lake City in Clinton, Utah. I have wanted to be an art teacher and artist ever since junior high, so I did everything to make that happen. I now teach high school art and have been participating in the Salt Lake art scene for just under ten years.

You once said, ‘No matter what we make, construct, or destroy, we are still surrounded by the presence of what has existed since long before our time.’ During college I studied abroad in Germany and a considerable amount of our coursework was based around drawing and painting architecture. I quickly became fascinated at the amount of thought and work that goes into constructing the buildings we work and dwell in and their relatively short lifespan. Buildings come and go. Cities come and go. From there I began thinking of the relationship that architecture has with its surroundings, and it’s pretty clear that nature always has the upper hand.

You also once said, ‘Suburbia is loaded with kitsch, we’re all living in this kitschy world where we try to make things look nice or beautiful or wonderful, but in reality, a lot of the times, its fake. It’s not always fake, but a lot of the times it’s just a facade.’ How does social media fit into your view of Suburbia? I have long considered the houses I paint to be representations of people. In that sense, many of my paintings could be a critique on social media as well as suburbia. The paintings are relatively simple, but they address complicated issues. I hope that even though there is a dark side to some of my work, it can be viewed in a humorous way. I think it would be nice to give all the people on social media who paint the impression of a perfect life a big hug, and say “I know you’re not as cool as your profile makes you look, but I still love you.”

What’s next for you? I’m not through with suburbia yet, but I’m taking a break and returning to a series on the Great Salt Lake that I started about ten years ago. It’s been enlightening to explore my relationship with the lake. It has been a source of comfort and awe for as long as I can remember. As far as shows go, right now I’ve got a piece in the LDS Church’s International Art Competition which just opened. I’ll be part of a couple of shows next year at the Springville Art Museum that open in January and July. Both shows have work by artists I have looked up to for a long time and I’m thrilled to be a part. I’ll also be doing Art and Soup in February and a September show at 15th Street Gallery.

Visit Justin Wheatley’s website.

Follow Justin Wheatley on Instagram.

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