Difference between revisions of "Mark Ezra Merrill"
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| − | As an American, I hope to refine my critical awareness. Our Nation State is set on edge by the continual threat culture uncertainty. Our lives, night after night, day after day, are devalued by | + | As an American, I hope to refine my critical awareness. Our Nation State is set on edge by the continual threat culture uncertainty. Our lives, night after night, day after day, are devalued by a carefully commercialized and marketed identity of image, product, and entertainment distracting us from seeing what we could see if we truly wanted to. |
Revision as of 13:32, 8 July 2009
As an Artist, I look for what I cannot always see. I am interested in any available insight, as seen through an internal yet interpersonal individuality. I seek to understand intuition's influence on perception; how precepts of integrity, value, and meaning are in turn influenced by the emerging experiences of an ever changing bio-political, techno-ecological landscape.
As a Painter, I want to challenge my perception. What can be observed can also be manipulated. What is un-known sometimes becomes known, just as what has already been seen is often forgotten. Uncertainty is timeless and resolute. The most puerile act of the painter is an action of seeing and remembering. My process is deeply dependent on the sublimation of this value, this expanding or contracting of uncertainty.
As an American, I hope to refine my critical awareness. Our Nation State is set on edge by the continual threat culture uncertainty. Our lives, night after night, day after day, are devalued by a carefully commercialized and marketed identity of image, product, and entertainment distracting us from seeing what we could see if we truly wanted to.
Tip Top Studio
Thanksgiving Day November 27, 1997. The studio in the old Tip Top bakery, a prominent but dilapidated feature of downtown White River Junction is inherited, in a somewhat obscure linage, by the young painter Mark Ezra Merrill.
The 1600 sq ft studio, formerly the Muffin Room, included a leaking ceiling and a still dripping lard pipe. The building was purchased and renovated by Matt Bucy in 2000, currently known as the Tip Top Media & Arts Building, it serves as a vibrant example of ingenuity and a foreshadowing renaissance.