June 4, 2009

Mandolin


20" x 30" — Oil/Canvas — 2009
• Sold

This mandolin was made in the 1890s in Sicily by Luigi Fenga. I posted a picture of me working on this painting in April here.

In 1919 a young man named Robert McPherson was serving as a medic in the Canadian 29th Infantry Battalion during WWI. He picked up this mandolin second hand in Belgium before he returned home. In 1965, as an elderly man, Mr. McPerhson befriended a young man and his family who were renting a cabin on the same property he lived on and eventually gave them the mandolin as a gift. My connection... I know the sister-in-law to the once young man in the 60s who received the mandolin from Mr. McPherson. He was kind enough to lend me it as a subject for painting.

I'm fascinated by the lineage and connected stories objects can have. It's easy to conjure up visions of a young soldier playing the mandolin, likely one of few momentary escapes in what would have been an unimaginable time.

I did some research and found these two photographs of the 29th Battalion. There's no way of knowing if Mr. McPherson is in these photos or knew these fellows, but they give perspective to the time, place and atmosphere.

June 3, 2009

Southwest Art Magazine - June 2009

I finally got my hands on the June 2009 issue of Southwest Art magazine... where I'm referred to as Christopher Scott. Still, I must say it is really an honor to be in the magazine! Click on the image to see it large and give it a read.

June 2, 2009

"Thank You" - Bubblegum Machine


40" x 30" — Oil/Canvas — 2009
• SOLD

Hanging for the month of June at the Elliott Fouts Gallery in Sacramento is my two-man show with Manuel Nunes.

This large bubble gum machine is in the show. I did this several months and it'll be nice to see it again during the reception for the show, during Sacramento's Second Saturday on June 13th. It's been some time since I have seen my work together hanging in a space. You get such a different perspective for paintings when you see them properly lit... and not in a messy studio.