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.) |
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