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Entries tagged as ‘Ed Trask’

Inspiration Found!

May 5, 2009 · 2 Comments

img_5795A Does this look familiar? It does if you read my post a few months back about Ed Trask’s show at Farmville’s J. Fergeson Gallery. On Friday I was driving in the East End of Richmond going to Rockett’s Landing, a new waterfront condo development, when I spotted this odd tower and was lucky enough to catch it just as graffiti-strewn cars were rolling by.

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I like Ed’s interpretation a lot better. Here he is with “Flowers and Bones” his six-panel painting that goes for $12,000. He told Juxtapose magazine: “The bones are the old buildings and trains, the areas around the city that are forgotten. … The flowers are the graffiti on the train, any light that’s brought to this is through the graffiti. This is an old area and one of the most exciting things to watch here is a train full of graffiti go past.”

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This was a cool shot, too, maybe he’ll paint this next. What do you think, Ed? Maybe we should lobby him a la Colbert.

For more on Ed’s work, check out his new site. Or read the Juxtapose piece.

Categories: Art
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Ed Trask Shows Graffiti and Grit in Farmville

February 17, 2009 · 2 Comments

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Deep tones, conflicted skylines, graffiti and grit play into the paintings of prolific Richmond artist, Ed Trask. We caught up with Trask while he installed his current show at Farmville, Va.’s j fergeson Gallery. Here he is with the largest piece in the show: a six-panel painting (depicting Route 5 near Rockett’s Landing in Richmond) that he originally made for an exhibit in L.A.

He broke it down for us:

If you’re familiar with Ed’s work you might notice that he’s been doing something interesting to with his skies and telephone wires lately. He says he’s felt re-energized about painting now that he’s experimenting with these linear elements. 

angel“I just feel like for every man made right angle, nature has a reaction,” he says.

This is where the painting began. Ed started by painting this angel-like figure, a Buddhist symbol which is said to lead believers to the next life. But something about that didn’t feel right.

“I realized I’m not Buddhist,” he says. And changed direction.

So back to the art around him: trainsThe work is set less than a mile from Millie’s Diner, where Trask works on and off, and depicts the coal-carrying trains that run through Richmond. He painted the tags of famous graffiti artists on the train cars. The small box on the yellow car is in the style of international tagger Space Invader.

 If you can’t swing the $12,000 for this 96-by-180-inch “Flowers and Bones,” there’s more to choose from.

These were two of my favorites in the show. LEFT is a long-gone Dairy King and RIGHT the Lucky Strike tower (now condos) behind Millie’s on the James River downtown.
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And this one, “Trapt in Pursuit,” has a particularly awesome sky.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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While we were at the gallery, Trask was preparing a paint-by-numbers drawing for visitors to participate in during the show’s opening. Fun idea. 

 

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And here it is in action at the opening. Trask has experience with the format: He often teaches mural painting to kids in much the same way.

 

 
If you miss this show at j fergeson gallery, smaller works by Trask will be on view at Richmond’s Quirk Gallery in March.

Categories: Art · Travel
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