Not For Sale
Seller Carson Collins
We are sorry, the image file we have for this artwork is too small.
Please contact us with all your project's details and we will find a solution with you.
Contact Us
Purchase a license to use this image for your website, communications or to sell merchandise.
Usage: Web Licence
427 px | ||
650 px |
Dimensions of the file (px) | 427x650 |
Use worldwide | Yes |
Use on multi-support | Yes |
Use on any type of media | Yes |
Right of reselling | No |
Max number of prints | 0 (Zero) |
Products intended for sale | No |
Download immediately upon purchase
This image is available for download with a licence: you can download them at anytime.
Restrictions
All images on Artmajeur are original works of art created by artists, all rights are strictly reserved. The acquisition of a license gives the right to use or exploit the image under the terms of the license. It is possible to make minor modifications such as reframing, or refocusing the image so that it fits perfectly to a project, however, it is forbidden to make any modification that would be likely to harm the original work In its integrity (modification of shapes, distortions, cutting, change of colors, addition of elements etc ...), unless a written authorization is obtained beforehand from the artist.
Custom licences
If your usage is not covered by our standard licences, please contact us for a custom licence.
Art image bank-
Original Artwork
Painting,
Oil
- Dimensions Height 17in, Width 11in
- Categories Paintings under $500
If you'd like to see the rest of it, or buy one, here's the link: oceanseries.168974018
Related themes
I was introduced to Carson Collins over a year ago while observing art online. Mr. Collins is a very devoted painter and he has many interesting stories.
Carson has been working on The Ocean Series for more than a quarter of a century. This body of work reveals the work ethic of Mr. Collins. It is rare to find an artist so devoted to a theme.
Brian Sherwin: Carson, the subject of your art is the four elements in their most majestic setting - the shoreline. Your images have captured aspects of earth, air, fire, and water. Why have you had such a strong focus on these themes? Do you feel that painters should share this same focus in their work or is it more of an issue of personal choice?
Carson Collins: I guess you could say that this conflation of a traditional marine sunset with a color-field painting, something that originally crossed my mind sometime back in 1977, has turned out to be a fairly fertile idea for me. Call it a Remodernist approach to the color-field tradition if you like, but I'm not trying to deconstruct anything, fit into any category, or prove any theories.
BS: Do you plan to work on the Ocean Series until the day you die?
CC: I don't make any plans to speak of; I kicked the hope habit long ago. There's no tomorrow. So far, the motif continues to fascinate me, as it has for the past thirty years.
BS: I understand that you have traveled the world and that you have lived in many places. How do the customs and experiences you have faced during your travels influenced your painting? Do you consider yourself a vagabond? If so, is that reflected in your work? It seems, based on your work, that you are a man who seeks new horizons- both physically and mentally.
CC: I've lived and worked, for a year or more, in 7 of the USA States and 6 other countries, not to mention the ones I've visited. In my experience, the problems for an artist are the same in any country: poverty, and the fact that very few people are ever going to understand or appreciate what you're doing.
Am I a "vagabond"? I've done a fair amount of traveling without ever having had any capital to speak of, if that's what you mean. But I'm past my prime. That sort of thing was a lot easier for me at 25 than it was at 52. I was born in 1953.
I confess that I am much inclined to travel. "No horizon too far." It’s arguably the best form of education. I intend to go to Tierra del Fuego some day soon. The atmospheric light and the ocean wave forms there must be something truly amazing. There's a legend about an ancient stone ruin down there that glows in the dark, and my friend (physician and poet) Chris Horak and I intend (in the usual way of aging adventurers) to find it.
BS: Carson, one of your major influences has been the art of Claude Monet. What connections to his work have you striven to create within the context of your own work. Do you share some of his philosophy about artistic creation? If so, can you go into further detail about tha...
- Nationality: UNITED STATES
- Date of birth : 1953
- Artistic domains:
- Groups: Contemporary American Artists