ARTIST
BIO Russ Pope has been an artist since
he was able to hold a pencil. He drew through many days at school when others
were doing schoolwork. He drew comic book superheroes at home and invented characters
that came to life with the touch of his pencil to paper. Art classes were the
best part of high school. As a teen, art and skateboarding first collided when
some of his art was used by skateboard companies. During these years, he worked
and rode for SmallRoom Skateboards, traveled to skate spots around the US and
worked in a skate shop in San Luis Obispo, California. Since then, skateboarding
and art have continued to sustain Russ's drive to create. During his college years,
he ran SMA Skateboards, started Creature Skateboards and took art classes at night.
Living in a redwood grove in a house heated only with a homemade wood-burning
stove, Russ set up an easel in the kitchen and, in the winter, often had to paint
by candle light when the power went out for days at a time. In 1995,
Russ moved back to San Luis Obispo and started Scarecrow Skateboards. The time
Russ was able to spend painting was limited by his new business and family. As
things settled, his garage was turned into an art studio and his paintings became
larger, more vibrant and more free flowing. The pieces Russ created during these
years show transition from a more controlled, symmetrical painting style to a
looser style expressing motion and music. Russ's commitment to skateboarding
has continued for 20 years, so has his dedication to his art. After a three year
stint at Black Label, Russ has recently taken a job as DuFFS VP of Marketing.
Russ?s studio is now a different garage in Orange County, California filled with
more cans of rejected Home Depot paint, huge canvases and canvases stuck together
to make mosaic-looking murals. This garage is most alive late at night after his
kids are in bed, when he puts on his headset and dances his paintbrush on the
canvases. It is common to find him on his knees hunkering over a canvas on the
floor while two dry simultaneously on easels and one is precariously balance against
a folding chair. Russ seems to work best when he is adding bits and pieces to
many canvases at one time. The movements of his body and his paintbrush show clearly
how he thrives in the chaos of multiple projects and mounds of paint cans creating
mazes on the floor. When one looks at Russ's art, it is easy to see that
his painting is as integral to his life and sanity as food, water, music, skateboarding
and family. The rawness of his work can be felt by viewing the large brush strokes,
thick lines and drippy backgrounds of many pieces. One senses music and movement
through the application of color, image and brush strokes. Elements of culture,
politics, animals and celebration pop out of the base of his art. It is easy to
feel freedom, chaos and release when one views Russ?s pieces as a body of work?these
feelings are fundamental to his life and work. --J. Bostwick Russ
has shown in: San Luis Obispo, Santa Cruz, Los Angeles, San Jose, Portland, Newport
Beach, Washington DC, Miami, Denver, San Francisco, Chicago, New York, Austin,
and London. Russ's shows for 2006 will include Paris, Los Angeles, London, and
Edinburgh. |
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