An immersion in the creative process of the American painter.
With this publication, American artist Dan Walsh allows the reader to enter his studio and follow his idiosyncratic artistic process. By showing the different stages that a group of 12 recent works (2019–2022) navigated, he generously offers an insight into how a painting is built, how colors and forms merge together, how photography is a precious tool for painterly thinking, and how composition and structure are organic processes even if the result in his case is fundamentally geometrical and grid-based.
In his essay entitled "Ways of Seeing/Ways of Seeking," New York-based art critic and curator
Bob Nickas, a long-time connoisseur of Walsh's practice, traces the genealogy of such an unveiling of the painting process, from legendary examples like Willem de Kooning's
Woman 1 (1950–1952) to Walsh's contemporaries. Addressing the paintings reproduced in this volume, Nickas writes: "There are, on average, seven photographs that tell the story of how a painting emerged. The editing of them for publication, a necessary matter of concision in relating the image as it unfolded, may be related to the creation of the paintings themselves, the fine-tuning each requires. As Walsh pursues images, teasing them out, they begin to appear to him, a holistic coming together of elements, at times as alternating currents, compositionally, chromatically. Of this he has said, 'The logic of the painting reveals itself to me.' The artist's way of seeing is also a way of seeking. He might not have made any of these paintings if the process was predictable. In each instance, comparing the first photograph taken with the last, even with all those in-between, we are still left to wonder, 'How did he get from there to there?' Walsh very likely surprised himself as well."
Dan Walsh (born 1960 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania) is a painter, printmaker, bookmaker, and sculptor. Rooted in a meditative geometry, his work explores the boundaries of abstraction through subtly irregular shapes, inconstant lines, and a pervasive wit.