"A two week trip that I took to Italy in 1984 had a profound and
prolonged influence on my work. At that time I was involved in making a
series of aquarium images. I went to Italy to view the art
of the Renaissance, for it is my belief that all visual artists,
especially realists, should experience and study this work firsthand. I could not have predicted the dramatic impact, both direct and indirect, that this
journey of discovery would have on my ensuing work. I believe that in
our search for novelty in postmodernist art making, we often lose touch with certain basics: beauty, grace, harmony and visual poetry are nowadays rarely considered important criteria in evaluating contemporary works of art.
Since the Bauhaus, the term 'precious' has had a negative connotation in art schools. It was a term used derisively in the '60s to describe work that did not adhere to the fashionably pared-down kernels of conceptualism or minimalism. But after seeing the beauty, sensitivity, harmony--the 'preciousness'of Italian Renaissance painting--especially the Early Renaissance work of artists
such as Fra Angelico, Duccio and Simone Martini--I realize that, as artists,
we may have abandoned too much. The ever-changing inner light that
radiates from gold leaf used judiciously on the surface of a painting,
and the use of pockets of rich, intense colors that illuminate the picture's surface impressed me deeply. 'Preciousness' was elevated to grand
heights in their egg temperas: semi-precious gems such as lapis lazuli, malachite and azurite were ground up, mixed with egg yolk
and applied as paint pigments, producing dazzling, breathtaking colors! The surface of these colors forms a texture that sparkles and reflects light much like gold does, but in ways that are much more subtle than gold.
I look to the Early Renaissance as a source of inspiration that I can
use along with contemporary content and image making. I look to the
Renaissance as the artists of that time looked back to early Greek and
Roman art--not as a reactionary but as one who rediscovers and reapplies important but forgotten visual stimuli."
Fred Wessel
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