Author: echarlesrolwing3
Chicago artist April 4, 2016 E. Charles Rolwing Statement Don't bend; don't water it down; don't try to make it logical; don't edit your own soul according to the fashion. Rather, follow your most intense obsessions mercilessly. Franz Kafka The making of art is for me a journey of construction and destruction. Each brush stroke comes out of my very soul, a place deep in my subconscious. I paint with my heart on my sleeve. The most I can offer that is unique is honesty to my emotions, to lay out that which makes me human. My imagery comes from working in my sketchbooks. That is where I work out the intellectual aspects, symbols and the problems of composition and color theory. There is a place between the intellectual (classic problems of composition and content), and the ethereal (subconscious) where true meaning emerges. It is here that new ideas emerge. I work an idea in dozens of studies before I begin a he painting. Then, when I begin the painting I have a library of ideas and a basic idea of where to start. From that point the painting becomes an idea in itself. It is a reaction to a self contained idea of itself. Each movement follows another, each a reaction to the previous stroke. It is here that the image begins to emerge. I am careful to allow the subconscious to breathe freely, to be open and honest to what is happening, to be in the moment. It happens sometimes to destroy the painting in the process. I wipe out, scrape, repaint, and over paint the image. No painting in my studio is safe. The finished painting is that idea in itself, something to be experienced as a self-contained entity. The viewing of a painting physically changes the chemistry of the brain, and it lives with the viewer in memory. It is the private language of the artist and the viewer. We share that time together.
At the Tavern, 2017, oil on canvas, 36″ x 48″
Man with Ghost, oil on canvas, 48″ x 60″
Untitled, 2017, oil on canvas , 36″ x 48″
Untitled, 2017, oil on canvas, 36″ x 48″
Ringmaster 4, oil on canvas, 36″ x 48″
Sky Blue Cage, 2017, acrylic on paper, 19 x 24″
Ringmaster 3, 2017, acrylic on paper, 19″ x 24″
Ringmaster, 2017, oil on canvas, 36″ x 48″
Self Portrait, 2017, oil on canvas, 36″ x 48″
The Woodsman, 2017, oil on canvas, 36″ x 48″
Ten Haiku
1.She is like a crime She is cumulative she Horizontal storm 2. Invisible storm A landscape view in total A mayhem of leaves 3. I am electric Static shoots from my fingers Small super powers 4. I’m a bag of bones The best years have caught me up Spine is slipped up 5. I am … More Ten Haiku
Man with Cage, 2017, oil on canvas, 36″ x 48″
No-No, 2017, acrylic on paper, 14″ x 17″
Study, 2017, acrylic on paper, 19″ x 24″
The Prisoner Dreams, 2017, acrylic on paper, 19 x 24″
Figure with Red Hat, 2017, oil on canvas, 36″ x 48″
Small Bets (poem)
1.Hedging my small bets A true patriot game stands Flag wavering shade 2. Happy as a pig In shit snuffing out the roots Veins of plants are laws 3. Perfect climbing vine Lines of shadow on the grass Quiet garden tending 4. Rumors of traffic The rubber hits the wide world Silence in the grove … More Small Bets (poem)
The Oiler, 2017, oil on canvas, 36″ x 48″
Untitled, oil on canvas, 36″ x 48″
Untitled, 2017, oil on canvas, 36″ x 48″
Man in Red Hat 2, 2017, acrylic on paper, 19″ x 24″
Man in Red Hat, 2017, acrylic on paper, 14″ x 17″
In the studio, 4/17
Spring Haiku
1. The elephant dreams Buddha sits beside the road We are a river 2. Seen in a mirror The new endless procession A reflection of me 3. The river reflects The passing clouds of a storm The drops hold a ghost 4. Clouds tethered to … More Spring Haiku






















