Interview with Joshua Petker
Jolene
Torr: You reference 18th and 19th Century artists with your
historic themes of decadence and eccentricity and your impressionist
style. How is your work commenting on modern life in L.A.?
JT: You credit Klimt as being a major influence to you stylistically. Do
you use symbols in your work similar to the way he did? Are they
graphics and ornament for you or something more?
JT: Who are your subjects? Drop some names.
JT: What story are the subjects in your paintings telling?
JT: What was your first love and did it in any way inspire your art?
JP: Well, my first love happened sort of late in life, in my early twenties. The relationship lasted a few years but was doomed to fail and gladly it did. If anything, I learned that my mouth cannot articulate what my heart wants to get out, so I best keep painting.
JT: Have you ever seen a dead body?
JT: What connections do you make between sex and death in your work?
JP: Some of the strongest yet most simple paintings that had an effect on me were Klimt's “The Three Stages of Women” which I think he did a few times. There is one painting in particular called just that...but he painted the idea a few times. I could go on and on about it but, really, it's just a romantic look at the simple fact that we all want to have sex and procreate, how seductive sex is, but that in reality as soon as you have a child your own youth dies and you've just escorted yourself to the second part of life - caring for a new life and eventual death. It's the sad truth behind every seductive glance - and thus, hopefully in all my paintings: "I hate to remind you but you're going to die."
JT: What are you afraid of?
JP: I'm afraid of a long, long death. A long sickness. I'd like to die quickly and ideally with a great sense of humor. Vainly, I'm afraid I'll pass away before my art gets to the point I envision it getting too. I’m afraid of that but hope it won't happen, and I live under the assumption that I’ll live to be 103.
JT: Generally, your work is often about those two bookends of life:
sex and death. Is there anything more specific you can tell me? Any
secret meanings to any particular paintings?
JT: Tell us please about what you see happening with pop art or define an art movement, hot shot.
--Jolene Torr (*Image: Joshua Petker, Lady in Hat, courtesy of Joshua Petker.) |
QUICK LINKS
ACTIONS
FORMER RACKROOMERS
Kamau Patton
Matt Stolle
Marc Ganzglass
Emilie Halpern
Kori Newkirk
Daniel Dove
Antoine Béchara
Pinar Yolacan
Kathy Kelley
Tillman Kaiser
Philippe Gronon
Eric May
Benoit Grimbert
Louise Bourgeois
Jimmy Baker
Georganne Deen
Deric Carner
Jeff McLane
Nick De Pirro
Alison Miller
Ruben Ochoa
Pablo Helguera
Mark Dutcher
David Ostrowski
Alexandra Grant
Jen DeNike
Lisa Sigal
Justin Francavilla
Michele O'Marah
Erica Eyres
Tomas Lemarquis
Camilla Newhagen
Casey Ruble
Tony Feher
Dean Sameshima
Louise Lincoln
Julie Heffernan
Rosson Crow
Susannah Bettag
Chris Ballantyne
Birta Gudjonsdottir
Servane Mary
Go Sugimoto
Nicholas Grider
Amy Bessone
Bill Gross
Joshua Field
Theodora Varnay Jones
Deborah Lader
Bruce Tomb
Chantel Foretich
Margarita Cabrera
Diego Medina
Nicolas Lampert
Lecia Dole-Recio
Mario Ybarra Jr.
Anthony Torres
Matt Gil
Mierle Laderman Ukeles
Lida Abdul
Dona Nelson
Kristi Kent
Josephine Haden
Kristina Newhouse
Preemptive Media
Allison Miller
Neighborhood Public Radio
Max Presneill
Hudson
Dana Frankfort
Matt Leines
Hope Atherton
Michael Smoler (High Energy Constructs)
Ryan Taber
Allison Cortson
Gregory Euclide
Iole de Freitas
Armory Fellows & Mentors
Liz Young
Philosophy of Time Travel
|
|||||||||||||
Copyright © 2006-2008 by ArtSlant, inc. All images and content remain the © of their rightful owners.
























email
print
add to del.icio.us
digg this
stumble it!