Issue No. 20 | Spring 2019
The Awakening of the Child from a Dream State
Madeline Rupard
“I grew up moving frequently around different parts of the U.S. and traveling across long distances. Looking at the American landscape, often quickly and through the backseat window of a car, became a tool of understanding the world since I was a child. This sense of transient observation is present in my work; my paintings are journalistic and have a snapshot quality of subjects that I encounter and places that I move through in my daily life in New York. Armed simply with my iPhone camera, I quietly take photos in public areas ranging from museums to parks to grocery stores. Back in the studio, I carefully select those photos whose lighting, composition, and characters particularly strike me for painting reference. The transformation in the studio from photo to painting becomes a very thorough and egalitarian way of studying the image. By slowly breaking it down into formal elements by hand, the everyday subject such as a store can slip out of its practical meaning as a place to shop and be contemplated purely for its visual phenomena. My marks reveal a history of liquid movement on the surface, betrayed by the lines of bristles and texture of marks. Rich colors, loose painterly brushstrokes, and an approach that aims to paint the air around objects, is how I try to make sense of a space in its dimension, floors, ceilings, and skies. My work is about sentience, wakefulness, presentness, and grace. In other words, my paintings are about looking at things.”