Artist Danae Anderson allows her subconscious mind to leave its residue on her art before lettting her consciousness mind take over in Girl Looking/Not Looking.
Artist Danae Anderson allows her subconscious mind to leave its residue on her art before lettting her consciousness mind take over in Girl Looking/Not Looking.

โ€œI donโ€™t make any plans,โ€ says Danae Anderson, from her studio in Truckee. Any artist with gallery representation in San Francisco and an upcoming exhibit in Sweden has to make a lot of them, but Andersonโ€™s not talking about the business side of art. Sheโ€™s talking about her process of getting ideas onto paper.

โ€œI just get in [the studio] and get in a meditative mode and allow it to take me where it will,โ€ she explains. โ€œMy works are narratives. Theyโ€™re visual narratives, rather than verbal.โ€

She might start with a few pencil marks that refer to her children, her family, or some detail from everyday life. She might add a rust-colored outline of a foot, a few graphite-colored dots that connect into amorphous shapes and comfortably imprecise sketches of something that looks like a physics experiment. Theyโ€™re almost like the kind of doodles youโ€™d draw while waiting on hold or ignoring your professor, but Anderson ushers them through a long, thoughtful process of becoming a finished, balanced artwork.

She builds layers on top of layers of acrylics, incising marks into the wet paint.

โ€œIโ€™m not actually seeing what Iโ€™m doing at that point,โ€ she says.

At the end, she rubs off some of the paint to expose what sheโ€™s made.

She ends up with larger-than-life paintings made of marks so free theyโ€™re almost childlike, arranged in blank outer space with cartographic precision. Wavering shapes and lines float in darkness, where thereโ€™s just enough spatial perspective to keep from feeling lost. They read like maps of someoneโ€™s life or constellations of a moment. Anderson says she likes to honor the interconnectedness of things.

She often refers to other mediums when talking about her work. She comes at the creative process from a lot of different perspectives. Sheโ€™s studied sculpture, been a dancer, worked on stage sets and owned a textile-printing business. When sheโ€™s painting, these past experiences all come into play.

โ€œWhen I begin a series of paintings, I work on a responsive level to my own conscious and subconscious. The marks are a residue of my action,โ€ Anderson says. โ€œItโ€™s a way for me to just sort of loosen up, like a singer would warm up her voice.โ€

โ€œI think I got to this point, to this process from being a dancer,โ€ she adds, referring to the Merce Cunningham technique she used to study. โ€œHe was working with random association. His choreography is completely connected to how Iโ€™m working now.โ€

Itโ€™s not unusual for an artist to follow a complex process of getting from idea to finished work, but most of the time, viewers only have access to the end product. Andersonโ€™s exhibit at the Oats Park Art Center, Girl Looking / Not Looking, is something of a tour through her painting process. The show includes a selection of barely-started sketches, from square-foot-sized pieces laid out like a mosaic, to larger-than-life canvasses marked with just the beginnings of a piece of art.

The arrangement is partially inspired by Oats Parkโ€™s โ€œreveal-the-man-behind-the-curtainโ€ curatorial approach and partially by Andersonโ€™s reflections on how art, in many traditional cultures, is less separated from everyday life than it would be in a commercial gallery, where convention dictates that artists donโ€™t show their tracks.

Here, Anderson gets to present the visual equivalent of an expertly researched field guide to her own artwork.

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *