q)Introduce yourself, name,age, location.
a)Hello, my name is Mason Saltarrelli, I'm 33. I grew up in New Orleans , Louisiana
and in 1997 I moved to New York .
I now live and work in Brooklyn ,
New York .
q) Can you describe your path to being an artist? When
did you really get into it?
a)Growing up in New Orleans
I started photographing jazz musicians at the Palm Court Jazz Cafe and at local
festivals. I was 12 years old. I met Doc Cheatham, and started traveling to New York to photograph him at Sweet Basil in Greenwich Village and we became good friends. As a
teenager I would leave the Palm
Court at 11pm and meet up with friends in the
French Quarter where there was no shortage of characters to document through
out the rest of the weekend nights. As my visits to New York increased, so did my understanding
of Henri
Cartier-Bresson's "Decisive Moment" theory. Photojournalism became my
obsession. I was the photo editor of Fordham
University 's new paper
for two years and had a mentorship with the photo director of the NY Times for
a year. My senior project was an exhibition of my travels in New
Orleans , New York , Prague , and Zurich .
At this time everything was switching over to digital photography. It seemed to
me that the photojournalists were spending more time on their computers and
less time shooting. That broke my desire to be a photojournalist. I knew I
wouldn't keep up shooting film and I was just finishing college, so I stayed in
NY and kept my part time job as a binocular renter at Madison Square
Garden . I didn't stop
shooting, but I also realized I didn't know what I was going to do. A roommate
offered me two weeks of work as an artist's assistant for a world-renowed
artist. I had no idea what that meant, and as long as it didn't require
computer skills, I figured I could do it. Slowly but surely I began to realize
that painting offered a gift of expression that photography did not. When I
came to realize that, that's when I really got into it.
q) Describe your ideals and how they manifest in your
work.
a)My approach to art is through philosophy. That idea leads people to
ask, "ok then, what is your philosophy?"
To that question I have no concrete answer because just as often as life
changes, so can one's ideas about it. I do however believe that our spirits are
our strength if we allow them to be. Much of my work is about dying. That's
sounds morbid, but it's not meant to be. I believe that the departure from the
human form is the greatest gift one will ever receive if they lead a good life.
I make paintings and drawings that symbolize paths of the spirits of people and
animals and nature that I admire. The Hopi Indian's Kachina doll is a very
important aspect of my work. Initially I painted the same doll over and over. I
did that so I could teach myself how to paint in the conventional sense. I then
began to break the doll apart in my work, I let it explode basically. This to
me is a symbol of how powerful the spirit of a person can be. I believe being
in the human form is an opportunity to expand your spirit or compromise your
spirit. I make work that I need to make to remind myself of that message,
because in this world that's an easy one to forget. And hopefully in reminding
myself of that message, when my art leaves my studio, I can share that message
with others. My work is very personal. I use it as a way to pay respect to
people who have passed before me. Most of my work is simply my way of saying
thank you, both to people I have known such as my father and to people I have
never met such as prisoners of war.
q) Is music a part of your studio time? What do you
listen to?
a)Sometimes I use music as white noise if I'm painting in my studio in Brooklyn and need to drown outside noises out. Sometimes
I actively listen to the music that my mood dictates. That allows for a broad
spectrum: Al Green, Coco Rosie, Otis Redding,
Waylon Jennings, TV on the Radio, Wild Tchoupitoulas, Frank Sinatra.
If I'm working in Montauk, NY outside. I might play some of the same
music, but there I prefer to channel the energy and hear nature, so often in
Montauk, music is too distracting.
q) How would you describe your work to someone?
a)It's a type of harmony by way of chaos. Each one is it's own spirit
map. That's why you see some re-occurring images in the work yet each one is
unique.
q) Influences?
a)Visually: Walker Evans and Philip Guston.
Far more important, mentally: My Dad, my Aunt, and my Dog, Bird. All
free to roam.
q) Describe your process for creating new work.
a)All my paper work begins by tinting the paper and giving it a patina
of undetermined age. The more broken down, the better. Most of my canvases are
left outdoors to be exposed to the elements in places I consider special in
Montauk. I like to let the earth and it's inhabitants help play a role in my
decisions of where marks will go and what colors they will be made with. My
work is often a response to what nature has created on the paper or canvas. It's
a conversation between the two of us. This is fun for me because it gives the
work a life of it's own, it becomes less mine, which I appreciate. It makes me
more just part of the process rather than the ruler. Once the proper marination
of nature is set in the material, that's when I get down. I don't like to get
too set up to paint, I let my intuition do most of the work. When all cylinders
are firing, I use my last name. It's an Italian word for a type of jumping
dance. I love to dance on my paintings. I'll even kick them, they kick back.
q) What advice do you have for artists looking to show
their work?
a)It's hard. The art world is full of people in clicks patting each
other on the back. Staying in their boring comfort zones. First and foremost,
remember, if it's your art you love, be true to it. The "art world"
is a business honest art making is not, it's a form of mental science given
life by human skills and limitations. If it's your art you love make it,
believe it, know it, and love it. Be patient, try to find the right people for
it, dealer and audience. Rushing it will just waste your time. My work is not
currently exposed on the level I would like, but that's something I've learned
to accept through trial and error. If there will be a time for some commercial
success, it will come when that time is right. If not, I will keep working and
pushing myself to explore what and who I am. Haste makes waste.
q) What are you really excited about right now?
a)I'm currently in New Orleans ,
so I am excited that I am in a beautiful city that moves at a far slower pace
from NY and has Po-Boys. They say NY has everything, not true. I've never had a
good Po-Boy there.
q) What do you love most about where you live?
a)I love Prospect
Park . Nature is the
greatest artist. No human will ever come close to creating what nature has
given us. The park helps me remember that.
q) Best way to spend a day off?
a)My friend has a great Italian restaurant, Scalino in Park Slope, Brooklyn . I could sit there all day.
q) Upcoming shows/ projects?
a)I'm currently in a group show at Tripoli Gallery in South
Hampton with a great group of artists:
And something's in the works in Washington
DC with:
q) Where can people see more of your work on the
internet?
Update coming
soon.
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