calling, j.f.m.

calling, j.f.m., 2023

GA unfired clay, burlap on wood

74” x 74”

  • Calling, j.f.m., was inspired by a book by JF Martel entitled Reclaiming Art in the Age of Artiface. I opened a recent exhibition with calling, j.f.m. as a way to introduce a concept that underpins my new work - the earth is your historian. I re-contextualized the material dirt by taking it out of its usual setting and literally framing it out. I presented calling, j.f.m. as a 2D painting, on the wall with the hope that it would call the viewer to ask - Why dirt as a material? Why this dirt? Why framed this way?

    The shaping of a vessel, the weaving of fibers and the turning of the earth. Those at the helm at such activities defined ‘maker’ for me as a child. These were the settlers of my hometown, historically known as Winston and Salem. Ideas about makers, their relationship with the land, and the differing characterizations of ‘work’ formed from an agrarian ethos, were illuminated by this place where industries of tobacco and textile dominated the cultural landscape of my youth.

    Land, from that day forward, has always been (and I borrow this phrase from Sally Mann), the begetter and existential crisis of my artistic soul. A sense of wonder and mystery is still present in me when I look at a vase expanse of land, a freshly plowed or fallow field, or the crop residue laying under shards of a harvested field. I feel a strong connection to this place of my childhood - the emotional connection is very powerful.

    It is my hope that the artifacts that I make with the land from a place that means something, is recognized for its value as a record, a document of one’s story that has been preserved and perpetuates the telling of the story. Not only is every human story valuable, but the telling of stories can give way to shared experiences and become a gateway to build community through recognizing our commonality rather than our differences.

    TS Elliot once said that the meaning of a poem exists somewhere between the poem and the reader. The color, texture, smell, and sediment of the GA red clay holds a piece of my life story, taken from an acre of land in North Georgia where I live with my family and work. Though I have only lived here a short time, I am connected to it and calling, j.f.m. is an artifact that I add to my collection to carry my story.

    Process:

    A bucket of Georgia Red Clay was harvested from an acre of land in North GA. Every southerner knows this clay. The clay is actually classified as a Ultisol - a product of the weathering of minerals in a humid, temperate climate without new soil formation. It gets its color from iron oxide. I took this Georgian red clay, mixed it with water, troweled it into a textile on wood and left it to dry. It is close to the purest form of holding a story I can imagine, with no imagery, just the marks made from my trowel. The sensory component, - the texture, smell and color stirs something in me. Calling, j.f.m. is presented in a rectangle, oriented vertically, and is at a scale that relates to and references the human body. The viewer completes the work.

    Resources:

    Reclaiming Art in the Age of Artifice: A Treatise, Critique, and Call to Action (Manifesto) by J.F. Martel (Author)

    “I believe that art is inherently spiritual and takes us beyond the pragmatic and calls us to consider the mysteries of the life.

    “Art is more than a mere ornament or entertainment, it is a way of leading to what is most profound in us.” -JF Martel.

    -JF Martel, Reclaiming Art in the Age of Artifice

    Artifacts, defined:

    1. objects made by a human being, typically of cultural or historical interest

    2. something observed in a scientific investigation or experiment that is not naturally present but occurs as a result of a preparative or investigative procedure.

    -Google’s English dictionary, provided by Oxford Languages.

3309 | 75 dirt books

3309 | 75 dirt books, 2023

Pike Road, AL | Blairsville, GA unfired clay and water on Moleskin watercolor album

12” x 33” (open book dimensions)

  • 3309 and 75 are “dirt books” created with clay from Pike Road Alabama (3309) and Blairsville, Georgia (75) layered on watercolor paper in a Moleskin album.

    These dirt paintings in book form carry story on its pages. The experience of the turning the page, the tactility of the material, the sedimentary layers of color, smell, and texture of a familiar land evoke memories of these two places. As remnants shift and fall away, each turn calls me to ‘remember the future’.

    The production process was not simple, which is appropriate. The books are not replicable.

    -‘remember the future’ references -Anslem Kiefer Remembering the Future, Art Documentary

route 1, the farm

route 1, the farm, 2023

Route 1, Bexer, AL unfired clay, text on wall | 72” x 48”

Route 1, Bexer, AL unfired clay, burlap, metal chain on wood | 72” x 48”

longing

longing, 2023

oil stick, finely processed dirt, clay, and ash on 300 lb. watercolor paper, book, mounted on wood

49” x 76”

  • Longing emerges on the canvas layer by layer like the layering of light, dust and matter. It is more than a yearning for places of my past - it is about the pain of loving a place, and a longing that is only satisfied by God.

8440

8440, 2023

Maison Baise, Lacoste France earth materials on linen

84” x 23.5”

  • Earth materials were taken from various places around Maison Baise in Southern France and returned to the states with me. I used this material to create a series of ‘swiped paintings’ called “two souths”. In this piece, 8440, the land materials were swiped on a linen textile with a trowel as a means to carry with me this fragment of time spent in Lacoste, finishing up my graduate work.

we carry the weight

we carry the weight, 2023

burlap, GA red raw clay on wood

72” x 48”

lay of the land

lay of the land, 2023

unfired clay, soil on burlap sourced from AL, GA, Portugal

8” x 16” x 2” each, footprint 67” x 75”

terroir

terroir, 2023

acrylic, NC dirt on watercolor paper

7.5’ x 12’7”