Saturday, October 23, 2010

In His Own Words

James D. Dean

"At times there seem to be a million ideas worth painting. However, there are days when it’s a challenge to have the drive, the strength, the inspiration to pull any ideas together. On these days I go to my studio, leaf through an art history book, and tell myself that I am part of this great tradition. An hour or two of learning from the masters is usually enough to recharge my artistic batteries.

"At other times I crave a trip to a museum. Standing in front of a Rembrandt at about the distance he stood while painting makes the hair on the nape of my neck stand on end. I walk through the museum with my sketchbook, making thumbnail drawings of the paintings I like. I fill my pages with notes of all kinds — both words and pictures — about color, brush technique, paper, feelings, and my own observations. When I leave the museum, I’m excited and inspired and thinking productively about my own art."

— James Dean

A Colleague’s View

“I like Dean’s work because he doesn’t shout at me; neither does he put all his cards on the table at once. I’ve had one of his watercolors for three years, hanging where I can see it every day, and I don’t get tired of it. There’s always something I hadn’t quite appreciated before. Dean doesn’t paint an oak tree; he paints a portrait of a particular oak tree — or a particular plank of wood, or even a particular clump of grass. I like that. I have seen more interest and beauty in the commonplace since I’ve owned his paintings and I thank him for opening my eyes.”

H. Lester Cooke

Curator of Painting

National Gallery of Art · Washington, DC

© 1964–2024 James D. Dean. All Rights Reserved.

Site maintained by Steve Dean