Sunday, April 22, 2018

Martin Bourbeau In Art Walk

From the Capital-Journal:

After competing with a growing number of events in August, the Jackson County Art Walk has decided to move its annual art walk up a few months to next weekend.
From 4 to 7 p.m. Friday, April 27, guests are invited to visit the art walk in Holton to see local artists’ works, sit in on demonstrations and create their own art.
This year’s featured artist is Martin Bourbeau, a Rossville artist with a peculiar painting style. Bourbeau doesn’t use paint brushes, referring to his pieces as “paint sculptures.”
“I use a palette knife on the background and what I do is I start on the very furthest point back on the canvas and I just start building out,” he said. “I’ll build out with these pastry bags. ... And the paint comes out of the canvas anywhere from 2 to 3 to 4 inches off the canvas.”
Bourbeau will be featured at More than Lemons, a gallery and studio at 424 Pennsylvania Ave. After the art walk, he will host his class, “Sip and Squeeze,” where guests can bring beverages and learn his painting technique.
Starting out, Bourbeau said, he never believed he could sell his art. He began creating in high school. His wife, Mary Bourbeau, said she remembers the intricate wooden sculptures he used to make. While attending boarding school in Michigan, Bourbeau learned about glass blowing, sculpture, sketching and painting.
After moving to the Rossville and St. Marys area, Bourbeau began considering being a full-time artist. He was working as a surgical orthopedic technician, and after realizing it was possible to make a living selling his pieces, he began weighing the possibilities. It has been about six years since he made the transition, and he now says he could never go back.
“We had a little rough patch, so I did a short two-month stint at a factory,” Bourbeau said. “I can work 12 hours a day with a big giant smile on my face out here (in my studio), as opposed to working eight hours in a factory. It was just miserable.”
Many of Bourbeau’s early works were more abstract floral pieces, but as he expanded his customer base, he needed to expand his body of work. Bourbeau’s collection includes animal paint sculptures, city skylines, nature pieces and a line of desert pieces.
“He does a 10-week art expo in Scottsdale, Ariz., and I think that more than anything else has really influenced his work,” said Mary Bourbeau. “There’s a huge demand for desert life paintings in the Scottsdale area, and to meet that demand he really opened up into that new desert area. Without it, I don’t think he would have ever gone down that route.”
Bourbeau will oversee and instruct 10 students at his class after the art walk and will provide a pre-painted background for students to build upon. The class costs $110. To register, call Mary Bourbeau at (586) 453-8942.
Other featured artists at the Jackson County Art Walk are Joshua Cochran with his fantasy-style artwork; Chuck Watson, who specializes in glass and ceramics; Lea Heryford, displaying acrylic abstracts and watercolor landscapes; and Kathleen Cobb, showing oil and watercolor landscapes and cityscapes.
For more information, visit the Jackson County Art Walk Facebook page.

No comments:

Post a Comment