Logo
Lovejoy Surgicenter
ISSUE #31.26 • VISUAL ARTS • Q&A

Flaying Faces


Painter Joe Thurston peels off layers of skin to find what's underneath.

Social bookmarking | Permalink
Email | Print | Rate It! | 1 comment
Recently in "Visual Arts"

November 26th, 2008
Dark Corners: Dan Gilsdorf/Horia Boboia | Two installations explore the spooky corridors of the creative mind.0 comments

November 12th, 2008
Q & A • Jeanine Jablonski | Economy be damned, Fourteen30’s got bold ideas for our art scene.4 comments

October 29th, 2008
The Nines | Don’t just look at local art—sleep with it.0 comments

October 22nd, 2008
Brenden Clenaghen at Pulliam Deffenbaugh | Portrait of an artist—in search of a new style.0 comments

October 15th, 2008
Juri Morioka At Butters | The New York painter transcends the prosaic.2 comments

October 1st, 2008
Bruce Conkle at Rocksbox0 comments

October 1st, 2008
Gate Closing | Why is Jennifer Gately leaving the Portland Art Museum?3 comments

September 17th, 2008
Volume at Worksound | Portland artists explore space in curator-about-town Jeff Jahn’s latest show. 0 comments

September 3rd, 2008
Ed Ruscha at the Portland Art Museum | An edgy elegy to youth from a pop art original.0 comments

August 13th, 2008
History Versus Nostalgia | Two shows offer differing takes on the swingin’ ’60s, ’70s, and ’80s.0 comments


BY RICHARD SPEER | rspeer at wweek dot com

[May 4th, 2005] Painter Joe Thurston's style is shocking, even off-putting: portraits of women whose faces are, as he says, "flayed." Flayed as in "stripped of skin." His paintings are many things-confrontational, creepy, haunting-but one thing they aren't, mercifully, is "pretty." Depending on your point of view, his stark, emotionally complex psycho-portraits are either misogyny made manifest or woman-worship in the highest. Maybe they're both.

What the Portland native's current show at Mark Woolley accomplishes is the difficult task of maintaining a recognizable style while the underlying vision evolves.

Over a tumbler or two of Knob Creek in his industrial Northwest Portland studio, Thurston spoke about the confluence of Eugène Delacroix's clouds, Wallace Stevens' poetry and the curious, enduring mystique of women.

WW: You only paint women. Why no men?

Joe Thurston: Men are a fuckin' sideshow. Too much testosterone, too many walls, too much of a pissing match. Women models open up quicker; they're more interesting quicker. One thing I offer here in my studio is the opportunity for the models to open up in a way they normally can't about how they feel, how they want to travel, how they don't want to have babies, whatever. And I'm fascinated by women's ability to create things. The womb is magic to me; it's a matrix where meaning forms. So women do magic; the best I can do as a man is to make a painting of it.

If you're so in love with women, why do you paint them without skin on their faces?

There's nothing interesting about your real skin. To truly explore something, any living thing, you have to explore it deeper than its surface level. A model's personality is like a building: I'm interested in the girders, the layers of internal structure. It's as if each muscle I draw, each line, represents an idea.

Do you worry that imagery this radical will hurt your sales?

At the Cascade AIDS Project's auction preview, a guy went up to my painting, and I heard him say, "Well, at least the frame's nice." I realized right there, this isn't the kind of art that sells itself. Someone has to be touched by it.













icon Story continues below

advertisement
OMSI
advertisement

You're a self-taught artist, right?

Right, I didn't go to art school. I learned out of artist's dumpsters, looked inside them to see how they made their work archival. When I was 21-I'm 35 now-I went out to Pendleton, and Jim Lavadour taught me about oil paint. He looked through my portfolio and said, "In eight or 10 years, approach a dealer." What he really meant was, "Quit, you suck." And I did suck. I was this young kid with long, curly hair-I looked like an Irish terrorist from Limerick. In 1997, I got this studio, and I've been at it ever since.

In the new work, you contextualize the models more; you've given them backgrounds, archways, rolling hills....

Well, I'd been reading Wallace Stevens' The Necessary Angel, where he says, "The imagination loses vitality as it ceases to adhere to what is real." It made me think about the women in my pictures. They'd become iconic-how could I make them real again? I wanted to bring them into the world, give them some play. So I got out of the box of this studio and did a lot of walking-Mount Tabor, Laurelhurst Park-went kayaking at Sauvie Island, and really looked around. Then I printed out images from the Internet of paintings by Delacroix and Caravaggio. I looked at Delacroix's clouds and stole them, stole the position of his models, put them in a new context, and just extrapolated forever.

I like the new painting with the girl with the pigtails, in front of the clouds, looking totally blissed out.

So many people look at her and think, "She's stoned, she's got this whole Burning Man thing going on!" But look at her: She's a Renaissance Madonna. She's not stoned, she's stoned on Jesus!

Do your spiritual beliefs, or lack thereof, impact your art in any way?

Not having any set spiritual views leaves me pretty open to whatever walks through the door.

How about intellectually? What are you interested in these days?

I'm not. I'm more interested in interpersonal relationships: the information you get from somebody. I'm on hiatus from intellectual things.

Mark Woolley Gallery, 120 NW 9th Ave., Suite 210, 224-5475. Closes May 28.

 

Rate This Story
5 average/1 vote

 
read all 1 comments | add your comment
 

RECENT COMMENTS ON “Flaying Faces”

1

Flaying Faces

Painter Joe ThurstonI remember seeing Joe Thurston's work for the first time a few weeks ago on a postcard. My first impression was UGH!! YUCK! WHAT WERE YOU TH...

Story Forum Archive, Jul 20th, 2005 12:00am
 
 
 





Recently in Willamette Week
December 3rd 2008The Naked And The Dread | The Recession has knocked everything but our socks off.
December 3rd 2008Paulson’s Pitch | Why does Hank Paulson’s son want $85 million of your money?
December 3rd 2008House Of Gain | Aleksey Kalenichenko’s real-estate schemes cost banks hundreds of thousands of dollars. It’s still a mystery how he pulled it off.
December 3rd 2008Just Add Milk | Director Gus Van Sant delivers the story of the gay-rights movement’s patron saint in his most political film to date.
December 3rd 2008Core Issue | Barack Obama says the way we pay teachers is rotten. Does Bill Sizemore (Bill Sizemore?!) have the answer?
December 3rd 2008Ad Nauseam | Do TV ads about hot dogs, golf clubs and rape work? We bring in the experts.
December 3rd 2008WW Voters’ Guide, November 2008 | Tough choices, no brainers: Our endorsements for the general election.
December 3rd 2008Unlucky Strike | The Oregon lottery is going into detox—and our state budget is along for the smoke-free ride.
December 3rd 2008Jail Junkies | Who knows more about stopping property crime: Kevin Mannix or an ex-addict who stole 1,000 cars?