In giving my current body of work the title, “A Destiny of Our Own Making”, I am both quoting a great modern orator (President Obama heralding the passage of his Stimulus Package), and also making reference to Manifest Destiny, along with its visual component, The American Sublime.
Which is not to say all American Sublime painters supported the doctrine of Manifest Destiny, because they did not, but they did very much address and respond to it, which is the potent point I'm getting at.
Today our nation has aged enough to be at a crossroads in our country's history, and for us the question of our national identity is a renewed question. Who are we? Who are we not?See the Work
By today’s standards, the views of the American Sublime painters would strike one as benignly sentimental on one hand, to uncomfortably politically incorrect on the other, less benign hand. Their views belong to their time.
What I admire about them, and what I am inspired by, is their level of involvement in the discourse of the day—that being, the formation of an American national identity. For the Sublime painters, who were very much influenced by and in communication with the writers, poets and philosophers of the day (Emerson, Whitman, Thoreau) the question of national identity was as new as the nation was young.
Having been born in the 60's, I am a child of the Postmodern era. But as such, I have always felt estranged from Postmodernism, with its disillusionment and cynicism and its persistent dismantling of values— values that I happen to believe in. This used to worry me. What did it say about me as an artist to admit that I felt detached from the prevailing art movement of my time?
The victory of Barack Obama in November 2008 signaled to me that I had not been alone in my estrangement. Others too had languished and yearned as I did for political and cultural renewal. His victory was a harbinger that the country was in the process of a major paradigm shift. How else could one interpret the victory of a political candidate who ran his campaign built on the foundation of that most anti-postmodern notion—Hope.
It has been said that a people cannot survive and prosper without a unified national mythology. I agree with this position with the added assertion that if a mythology exists by consensus, it ceases to be myth and becomes instead a reality.
If I am reading the signs correctly, and it is indeed time to reconsider the question of our national identity, then I feel compelled as an artist, and as a citizen, to participate in that discourse. The work on view for this show is the visual manifestation of how I see my fellow Americans—it is the beginning rather than the summation of my vision of who we are.
Most of the photographs used as reference material for the paintings in this show are my own, but many are not. Those that are not mine are in the public domain, but credit needs to be given to these talented photographers nonetheless. The photos of the Obamas were taken by official White House photographer Pete Souza. The photos of road and bridge construction were taken by Minnesota Department of Transportation staff photographer David Gonzalez.
The reference photo for biomass transportation was taken by Jim Meisenheimer of the Farm Service Agency, United States Department of Agriculture. Without their work, I couldn’t have done my work.
The frames for this show were designed by me, but based heavily on frames from the American Sublime movement. Specifically one used to surround Emanuel Gottlieb Leutze’s work, “Westward the Course of Empire Takes Its Way”, 1861. The frames are all hand made by master frame workers right here in St. Paul Minnesota.