I follow quite a few artists through online and I really dig the work of John Piacquadio of The Twin Cities Urban Fly.
In this post, John provides some background on where his artwork is inspired from along with a few favorite originals that he was gracious to share.
John wrote... "I feel this body of work is a natural culmination of many aspects
of myself. Some background, I grew up in The Bronx when the only time
I'd fish would be once or twice a year with my father when we'd go visit
Uncle Marvin on the Jersey Shore. We'd fish for bluefish and shark.
These experiences have quite an impact on a 5 year old, and I would
spend the rest of the year fantasizing about fish and fishing. I had the
opportunity to start fishing more consistently when we moved to
Connecticut when I was 12. I picked up a fly rod somewhere along the
way, and taught myself how to use it by reading books.
In
college, I pursued one of my passions, art, at Connecticut College
where I would spend my time sneaking into the Arboretum at night to fish
the pond the biology department used for research. I was chased out by
security more than once. I also spent my time drinking and doing drugs.
I
barely graduated due to my chemical hobbies and mental health issues,
and after a stint at a mental institution and the discovery of AA, I
eventually embraced sobriety. Meditation was something else I learned to
help cope with depression and anxiety along the way.
Over
the years, I came to realize that the same state of being I felt in
meditation was pretty much how I felt when I was tying flies. It's
pretty difficult to focus on anything other than the present when tying a
size 18 anything!
I realized that the focus
utilized on fly tying had made me intimately aware of every aspect of
the fly, and I wondered if I could recreate this on paper without
sketching first. Rather, I would rely solely on the knowledge imbued
from repeated tying of a pattern. These ink drawing/paintings are
produced with minimal brush strokes and minimal thinking, in order to
challenge myself to move the process away from technique and mental
processes, to a process of intuition, heart, and spirit.
Today,
i am a drug counselor working with addicts who have traumatic brain injuries. I tie flies
with clients because it works wonders with brain injuries and the
therapeutic value is something all fly tiers are familiar. I volunteer
with Project Healing Waters and fish as much as I can."
3 comments:
Sweet art!!! I'd like to commission a wooly bugger.
Beautiful work. My favorite is actually that sketchy bad boy at the top if your post. Thx CM.
CCR...contact John through his website. I'm sure that that is possible.
Middlemac...one of my favorites as well.
Post a Comment