Sunday 25 September 2016


Black Boot Art  

• minimal portraits
• simple color palettes
• familiar yet ambiguous scenarios 


 The 3 Formats:

Marker & Acrylic on Carton -
In this format the artist uses a heavy black outline over a pencil sketch to 
form the figure and the background details. The supporting elements are 
then colored in with acrylics leaving a small space between the edge of 
the color and their black outline.
The body or skintone is purposely left in the raw state giving it the neutral 
color of the carton. A color that is representative of the figure's unspecific 
ethnicity - an every-man.
Carton is deliberately chosen as the canvas for the art because it is a 
universally recognized material - man made, non precious, disposable, 
yet durable material. Everyone has seen it, used it and disposed of it 
without much thought and these characters stand as a strong comparative 
statement as to how we sometimes treat our fellow man. Also, with the 
majority of the color being applied to the background and clothing to create 
the scenario, the human figure itself thus becomes the negative space in 
the piece.  Is it a dream or memory of what has happened, or in it's natural 
untinted state has the figure transcended its negativity to become the focal 
point of the composition which symbolizes man's inherent struggle for 
survival ? 
Lastly, the entire image is coated with a heavy acrylic glaze to 
give it a shine or wet look that once again transforms the original matte 
surface of the carton emulating other materials such as ceramic or
cloisonné. 

Marker & Acrylic on Collage on Wood Panel -
The pencil sketch and the heavy outline remain the same, but in this format 
the figure is painted in with a solid color along with articles of clothing that 
add elements of description to the piece.  This placement of color leaves 
the collage background visible to reveal more clues as to what the full story 
of the image could be. 
Just as in the first format the stage is set but in a minimal way and 
the viewer is free to create their own narrative to complete the story. 


'16 MM' -
Here in this newest format, the black and white image is usually a still from 
a porn printed on paper and torn into 16 equal segments. The 16 smaller 
pieces or frames represent the 16 mm film that pre-digital porns were 
filmed on. These are collage onto a wood panel and a select number of 
areas are painted over in acrylic. The figure is partially covered with color 
giving the fugure a hybrid look of half human and half superhero, such as 
porn actors are sometime looked upon. Again the image is covered in a 
gloss acrylic referencing the glamour and slickness of the porn film industry. 


*Most Black Boot pieces are in done in standard sizes of DIN A4 and 
DIN A5 with a few exceptions in quadrat. 

information updates: blackboot46.blogspot.de 
email: blackboot46@yahoo.de

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