Ten-year-painting veteran Ryan Ostler is a nice guy who seems too normal to be an artist โฆ 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.
โThe thing about artistsโculturally, theyโre always the ones that are on the forefront of change and progress,โ says the 34-year-old sculptor-turned-painter. โThe ones that are trying to express life.
โYou 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 โฆ [it] very much [needs] to continue to support local artists.โ
Ostlerโs 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 Ostlerโs colorful paintings.
โI love color, I love color,โ Ostler says. โSometimes 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. Iโm 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.
โOne of the things people like about my paintings: Itโs tough to look at one of my paintings, look away from it, and remember exactly what it looks like,โ Ostler says. โRather like a child would look at clouds and decide what shapes are in it. โฆ The more you look at my pieces, the more you will find that there is structure.โ
He turns the conversation toward religion.
โYouโll find that thereโs a lot of shapes that would represent Ganesha and Shiva.โ
There are also hidden representations of trees.
โUnless you knew that there was a tree there, you probably wouldnโt see it,โ Ostler says, pointing at one painting as an example. โI donโt want to sound crazy, but I do see spirits in trees โฆ and I try to see them in my paintings. Itโs very, sort of, spiritual themed. And nature is definitely a part of that.โ
Ostlerโs 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, itโs more about the journey than the destination.
โWith ceramics, you need to follow a certain process to get a certain result,โ says the formally trained ceramicist. โWith painting, I was able to let that process go. And thatโs really reflected in my paintings.
โIโll just very randomly put colors on a board or canvas โฆ 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.
โIโll put a price on something, of what I think it might be worth, but my prices are always negotiable,โ he says. โIf somebody likes one of my paintings but doesnโt have enough, Iโll ask them โHey, how much do you have?โ Generally, thatโll be enough for me.โ
