ARTIST STATEMENT:
Nathan Durfee was born in the small town of Bethel, Vermont on June 26, 1983. Nathan's artistic aspirations first showed themselves in the classroom: a self-described "doodler," moments of boredom became sketches and designs in notebook margins. After spending his high school years in Nevada, he migrated South to attend the Savannah College of Art and Design to become a traditional portrait artist. As his current work boldly exhibits, Nathan instead decided to take his art in a unique, wholly personalized, direction. "I thought I would be a traditional, realistic painter…but then, if I'm able to create a reality, why do I need to have it adhere to the one we live in now?” This ability to create both conventional and alternative realities allows him to push and pull his work from the realistic to the abstract with imaginative skill.
His fanciful, often abstract, subjects share an organic connection with his informal school-day sketching. While working, he says, "I try to keep that wandering state of mind—as I start laying down brush strokes, a narrative begins to develop. I keep molding and polishing the story until I'm happy with it, and in most cases it's something completely different than what I started out with.”
Despite his uncanny subjects, his paint application is studious and technically informed. How he paints, he says, is more important than what he paints. The relation of emotions to brushstrokes is keen: anger will produce a harsher, quicker stroke than a feeling of calm or contentment. Durfee likes to get his work done in as few sittings as possible, for the less time there is between work periods, the less likely emotions and brushstrokes will vary. Durfee's academic side carries over into other parts of his artistic process as well. An avid chess player, he likes to play before painting; it serves as "a mental warm-up." While painting, Durfee listens to lectures on a multitude of diverse subjects, such as philosophy, history, and quantum physics. It is important to him that his painting (the verb, not the noun) stay as "academic and sophisticated as possible."
Nathan arrived in Charleston on January 1, 2005, brought here by a job with the Ben Silver Corporation as a color specialist. He works with them still, happy that it allows him to be a part of projects that wouldn’t be available to a solely independent artist. He also works as a freelance illustrator; his illustrations and paintings have appeared in national publications, art journals, and galleries, and his book Hello My Name is Bernard won an international award at the Associazione Culturale Teatrio in Italy.
When he's not at work or at his studio, Nathan is busy riding his bike and sketching people and scenes in his Moleskine notebooks. He's taken great advantage of Charleston's picturesque downtown area, with its coffee shops, restaurants, and parks, life-watching with the same sort of constant curiosity as last-century Parisian artists sketching at their sidewalk cafes. Nathan has also become quite busy with digital art, using the computer to combine his paintings, drawings, and photography into new works of art. It allows a blurring together, a creation of things that "look natural, but achieve textures and details that exceed the limitations of a paintbrush.”
That certainly doesn't mean that his work in oils, acrylics, or ink will subside: luckily for Charleston's artistic community, "I have to paint—I can't go a day without it." And that means that we will be seeing Nathan Durfee and his canvas dreams for a good long time.
Exhibitions/Awards:
November, 2007: Storehouse Row, 'Kulture Klash' Live painting performance
November, 2007: Modernisme Gallery, 'Celebrations of Stems and Clouds' solo exhibition
October, 2007: Robert Lange Studios, ‘The Other Side’ group exhibition
September, 2007: Modernisme Gallery, ‘iShow’ group exhibition
May, 2007: Redux Studios: ‘Exquisite Corpse’ group exhibition
December, 2006: Modernisme Gallery, ‘The Little Things’ group exhibition
October, 2006: Modernisme Gallery, ‘Meet the Artists’ group exhibition
2006-2007: Associazione Cultureal Teatrio, illustrated book project show
June, 2005: Starlight Gallery. Senior SCAD Society of Illustrators show
February, 2005: Savannah College of Art and Design, illustration department show
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