Ryan Ostler paints in colors so bright, he has to wear shades.
Ryan Ostler paints in colors so bright, he has to wear shades.

Ten-year-painting veteran Ryan Ostler is a nice guy who seems too normal to be an artist โ€ฆ at first.

An hour-long interview at his home in Southwest Reno starts out as a conversation about painting and sculpture and then focuses on everything from spirituality to Communism.

โ€œThe thing about artistsโ€”culturally, theyโ€™re always the ones that are on the forefront of change and progress,โ€ says the 34-year-old sculptor-turned-painter. โ€œThe ones that are trying to express life.

โ€œYou look at the societies that suppress their artists, like the Soviet Union, and they fucking nosedive. If Reno expects to take itself to the next level โ€ฆ [it] very much [needs] to continue to support local artists.โ€

Ostlerโ€™s artwork goes on display June 13 at Red Rock bar and will be up for about a month. Red Rock bar, with its dim lighting, red walls and earth-colored bar top, is a good place for Ostlerโ€™s colorful paintings.

โ€œI love color, I love color,โ€ Ostler says. โ€œSometimes people dumb their paintings down, in terms of color. But I like to get every color I can and set them off against each other. Iโ€™m a pretty colorful person. It probably reflects my personality in a lot of ways.โ€

The paintings, which are scattered around his bedroom during the interview, are abstract.

โ€œOne of the things people like about my paintings: Itโ€™s tough to look at one of my paintings, look away from it, and remember exactly what it looks like,โ€ Ostler says. โ€œRather like a child would look at clouds and decide what shapes are in it. โ€ฆ The more you look at my pieces, the more you will find that there is structure.โ€

He turns the conversation toward religion.

โ€œYouโ€™ll find that thereโ€™s a lot of shapes that would represent Ganesha and Shiva.โ€

There are also hidden representations of trees.

โ€œUnless you knew that there was a tree there, you probably wouldnโ€™t see it,โ€ Ostler says, pointing at one painting as an example. โ€œI donโ€™t want to sound crazy, but I do see spirits in trees โ€ฆ and I try to see them in my paintings. Itโ€™s very, sort of, spiritual themed. And nature is definitely a part of that.โ€

Ostlerโ€™s paintings, whirlwinds of shape and color, are pleasant to look at. The work would be appropriate in a gallery setting, but will surely be enjoyed as much, if not more, in Red Rock, a watering hole popular among local artists.

For Ostler, itโ€™s more about the journey than the destination.

โ€œWith ceramics, you need to follow a certain process to get a certain result,โ€ says the formally trained ceramicist. โ€œWith painting, I was able to let that process go. And thatโ€™s really reflected in my paintings.

โ€œIโ€™ll just very randomly put colors on a board or canvas โ€ฆ through the process of looking at it over a period of time, I will see things in it that I want to flush out.โ€ He points at an unfinished painting he started four years ago and plans to have on display at Red Rock.

โ€œIโ€™ll put a price on something, of what I think it might be worth, but my prices are always negotiable,โ€ he says. โ€œIf somebody likes one of my paintings but doesnโ€™t have enough, Iโ€™ll ask them โ€˜Hey, how much do you have?โ€™ Generally, thatโ€™ll be enough for me.โ€

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