Alberto Giacometti
Alberto Giacometti

Alberto Giacometti

During my first semester of art school, I was part of a school group that visited a Giacometti retrospective in Chicago. Spending all of 15 minutes in the exhibition, I left saying “if you have seen one Giacometti, you’ve seen them all”. A year later, two different instructors said that my drawings had a strong similarity to this artist’s work. Feeling quite incredulous toward this suggestion, I none the less gave his work a second look…

WAM-BANG, ZIPPITY-DO-DA...my response was strong and immediate. Working from his sculpture while being influenced by his painting, I quickly produced drawings that were the beginning of a very positive awakening in my work. Opening time next morning found me at the library’s front door, ready to check–out every Giacometti book I could find. For the next 1½ years, it could be said that Alberto (we had become quite close during this period) was my instructor. Incidentally; this was not the first, nor would it be the last time an entity I initially responded to in a negative way, eventually played an important role in my life.

What first attracted me to this work was his use of enormous scale contrast: seeming immensity in opposition to compressed elongation. Also, while the form seemed consumed by an almost chaotic surface texture, there was the hint of an underlying 1-point perspective that served as a web, holding everything together. Referencing a pictorial devise used in landscape and architectural renderings increased the sense of scale by association