Biography
The path Ron Clark has traveled to arrive at his present position in the fine art world has been one relatively outside the more conventional routes taken by many artists working today. Instead of artist-in-residence programs, grants or awards, his evolvement is characterized by years in the performing and visual arts, unique relationships with renowned artists, a solid academic pedigree and almost instant success in the environment of retail art sales and patronage.
Ron Clark was born in 1948 in a small, agrarian community just north of the Oklahoma-Texas border in the lush and fertile Red River Valley. One summer morning during his childhood, he wandered into an artist's studio near his grandmother's house and discovered an artist on a ladder working a mural-sized canvas. The artist - still one of Clark's closest friends and confidantes - was Harold Stevenson, a Surrealist painter who rose to prominence in Paris during the mid 1950s and whose debut in the New York avant garde was alongside Andy Warhol, Roy Lichtenstein, Claes Oldenburg and others as part of Sidney Janis's legendary 1962 group exhibition, The New Realists. This chance encounter not only proved pivotal to Clark's multi-disciplinary future as an artist, but also established the foundations of a lifelong friendship with a master painter and an important figure in the history of American art.
Gifted with drawing skills as a child, Ron Clark was born into an environment of music; his father was an amateur jazz musician, his uncle a professional opera tenor. He studied and performed classical piano for ten years, was an All State concert trumpetist in high school, and later became an accomplished guitarist, performing onstage and in recording studios with working rock, blues and jazz groups.
As an undergraduate at the University of Oklahoma, Clark first studied architecture, then graphic design. After working several years in Houston as an Architectural Illustrator and in Dallas as a Graphic Designer, he moved to New York and spent two years in the rigorous and demanding BFA program at Parsons School of Design, with concentration in Visual Communication and Modern Art History (early 20th Century European painting and sculpture).
Submerged in the New York art and design world, Clark worked as a Graphic Designer in Manhattan design studios and as a gallery assistant on high-profile Park Avenue exhibitions. During the summers, he would frequently earn extra money doing pastel portraits from live sittings, working in a refined, almost photo-realism style. During this period, the frantic pace and intoxicating social realities of living, studying and working in New York profoundly redefined his aesthetic sensibilities and self-perception as an artist.
After returning to Dallas and working several years as a Designer and Art Director, in 1995 Clark began creating PITTURAS METAPHYSICA, a series of large oil paintings (up to 72" x 96") combining minimalist geometric imagery with expanses of radiant color and rendered in a complex technique of multiple layering and metallic oil underpainting. This body of work began exhibiting in 1997 with a one-man show at Southwest Gallery in Dallas and resulted in instant and sustained retail sales to private collectors and corporate buyers.
Clark's 2000 series, BODY OF THE DIAGRAM, drew from his attraction to early modernist painting, neoteric architectural design and forms from the human body. The work was realized through several compositional approaches; dramatic imagery, ambiguous relationships between form and space, sensuous shapes, and a lush, vibrant palette. These more painterly pictorial devices were employed to express the humanistic components of architectural formalism and the physical/emotional sensations they evince. Works from this series were critically well received and selected for inclusion in the prestigious Dallas Critics' Choice Exhibition at the Dallas Center for Contemporary Art.
IMPENDING PRESENCE, Clark's current body of work, is a cycle of paintings evoking primal chaos and human circumstance, then resolving with compositions of ethereal, Zen-like countenance. These paintings are characterized by mono- and poly-chromatic hues of saturated color emanating from highly textured layers of modeling paste and manifold coats of metallic and oil color.
To patrons familiar with the expanding ouvre of Ron Clark, IMPENDING PRESENCE is a compelling and edifying study of the artist's evolution. To those unfamiliar with his work, it is simply a dramatic and definitive introduction to an artist with established collectibility emerging into the broader domains of art criticism by virtue of a more scopic and visible U.S. exhibition presence.
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