DRAWING STYLE DEVELOPED IN FACTORY GETS ATTENTION OF CURATOR FROM METROPOLITAN MUSEUM OF ART
Released on = August 24, 2006, 7:11 am
Press Release Author = Larry Estes
Industry = Entertainment
Press Release Summary = Fast-paced drawing style developed in factory in-between running widgets on the assembly-line is getting the attention of top museum curators
Press Release Body = Larry Samuel Estes August 21, 2006 720 East Little Creek Road Norfolk, VA. 23518
757-636-5466 artes@cool.hrcoxmail.com/www.drawingmyshipin.com For Immediate Release
DRAWING STYLE DEVELOPED IN FACTORY GETS ATTENTION OF CURATOR FROM METROPOLITAN MUSEUM OF ART
It was nearly 20 years ago that local artist, Larry Estes, unable to afford a studio, personalized his work station with a drawing board. The fast-paced drawing style he developed in-between running widgets on the assembly line, is starting to pay off.
Larry was selected to exhibit in a juried art show on Long Island, New York, opening August 26, at the Mills Pond House Gallery. The juror is Colta Ives, Curator, Department of Prints & Drawings, Metropolitan Museum of Art. "It's a big honor to be among those selected by Mrs. Ives. She's one of the most respected curators and authors in her field," Larry said. He was one of four winners chosen from 137 artists nationwide, receiving an Honorable Mention (There was one First Place and three Honorable Mentions).
While at the factory, Larry vowed to win an exhibit in New York without a studio. After leaving that job, he maintained his goal by drawing at fast-food restaurants. In 2003, that dream came true. While drawing at McDonald's, Larry got a call from Soho announcing that he had won 2nd Place (out of over 500 entries) in a National Juried Competition, awarding him an exhibit. The juror was an assistant curator from the Museum of Modern Art, and it didn't hurt that she was from the Department of Paintings and Sculpture. "My drawings are paintings, in the sense that I visualize my pen as a large brush and my paper as a wall. That's how I coped with limited space," Larry explained. When enlarged, as in the reviewing of slides, his work resembles large wire sculptures. Later that same year, Larry was a semi-finalist in another New York competition, juried by Guggenheim Museum curator, Robert Rosenblum.
Larry's drawing style has evolved into a single-line orchestration on paper that has a build-up of tension ending in a high-spirited release, denoted by a controlled rip. He calls them pen katas, after the Japanese word for form. His drawings, with their inherent sense of urgency, are representative of the times in general. Reflecting back on the days on the assembly line, Larry recalls, "Adaptation became my subject matter. On the line, I nurtured my dream in literally, seconds-long installments."
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Web Site = http://www.drawingmyshipin.com
Contact Details = Larry Samuel Estes 720 east little creek road norfolk, VA. 23518 757-636-5466 artes@cool.hrcoxmail.com/www.drawingmyshipin.com