Découverte - (Sold by Richelieu Art Gallery Inc) (2011) Painting by Charles Carson

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  • Original Artwork Painting, Oil
  • Dimensions Height 60in, Width 24in
  • Categories Paintings from $20,000
Master Charles Carson, creator of the "CARSONISME" movement Diptych work - Source: Revue Parcours, l'informateur des arts – winter 2004 – vol. 9, no 41- Parcours couverture 2004 ok 2004 – Extract from the 16-page analysis report on the work of Charles Carson. Robert Bernier, art historian 2004 – “Curiously, you may think, Charles Carson[...]
Master Charles Carson, creator of the "CARSONISME" movement Diptych work - Source: Revue Parcours, l'informateur des arts – winter 2004 – vol. 9, no 41- Parcours couverture 2004 ok 2004 – Extract from the 16-page analysis report on the work of Charles Carson. Robert Bernier, art historian 2004 – “Curiously, you may think, Charles Carson first became known in South America, and more particularly in Colombia where he lived and worked for several years. The artist also maintains close ties with this country, even though he has been back in Quebec since 2000. In his adopted country, the artist has caused much ink to flow, both literally and figuratively ; he left and still leaves his mark and his colors there, so much so that, in 1997, to underline his contribution to the culture of Cartagena, a life-size statue in his effigy was erected in the city. The artist also signed a monumental mural that adorns the hall of the city's main airport. He knew and rubbed shoulders with several major Colombian artists, notably Botero, to name only him. Charles Carson's painting is divided into two approaches that are both distinct and complementary. One of them has even been baptized by certain experts and art historians as “carsonism*”. This approach is not easy to describe "by speaking of carsonism", but in general we can speak of an infinite succession of slightly oblique touches which on the surface energize the perception of the material and the subject to the maximum, the whole coming to life on the canvas in quite sensational subtle transparencies, giving an impression of depth to the color. It looks like an incessant flow of particles – all the same quite large – sweeping the material with a fascinating, even disconcerting regularity. The second approach, Carson simply calls it “mosaic”. As its name suggests, the latter suggests the fragmentation of form and surface that characterizes mosaics. In either case, the creator has to energize the surface to give it a different state in which a powerfully metaphorical suggestive universe comes to life. This can be seen in particular with the theme of the seabed, which the artist exploits with great accuracy and visual and narrative relevance. Two approaches, therefore, two explorations, to be scrutinized carefully for the pleasure of surprise and astonishment. * Notably by Louis Bruens, Guy Robert and Jacques de Roussan. OVER THE LAST 25 YEARS MANY INTERNATIONAL ART HISTORIANS, EXPERTS, ANALYSTS AND HISTORIANS STUDY THE WORK OF CHARLES CARSON, CREATOR OF THE “CARSONISM & MOSAICM” MOVEMENT HERE IS WHAT THEY HAVE SAYED ABOUT IT: CHRISTIAN SORRIANO – PARIS Charles Carson dug his furrow towards artistic posterity, because today we say he is a Carson, as we say he is a Picasso, a Matisse, a Warhol, a Basquiat and all the other immortal artists. BÉATRICE SZEPERTYSKI – BORDEAUX “Charles Carson is a great designer. His work is inimitable, personal, spontaneous. I don't know of any work that looks like him. She is halfway between abstract art and figurative art, she does not participate in any movement, in any trend. VICTOR BENNETT FORBES – NEW YORK As Hemingway developed a new style of writing that is oftimitated, never attained, Carson has created a new way of painting that takes a similar heightened position in the mainstream of contemporary art, a form that is universally accessible but impossible to be duplicated by another. A language all his own forever to be known as “Carsonism.” DEBRA USHER – CANADA "He is considered by critics as one of the greatest contemporary artists of this century, Master Carson having grasped the pictorial language once spoken by Mondrian, Riopelle, Jackson Pollock, Sam Francis and Wassily Kandinsky, the artist knew how to take the lead – for creating and updating his utterly unique and original movement, performed in such theatrical and masterful fashion, that none of those great masters or geniuses of the art of the past , had not been able to imagine or even think until now. » CHAMPLAIN CHAREST – CANADA « Not only is he skilful in the arrangement of colors, but his paintings tell me something. Among other things, I like the balance of the masses, the transparency in juxtaposition, his chromatic research, the evocative force that gives off meaning makes all the uniqueness of Carson's work. I particularly appreciate his Carsonist works, a way of painting that will go very far…” CAROLINE BRUENS – MONTREAL Charles never ceases to amaze me. A real magician. He could have rested on his laurels, "surfing" on the wave of success which is hitting him head-on; he has rather continued for many years to seek new tracks, rather to create "off track", pure abstract works, abstract mosaics, figurative mosaics, feathers, abstracts with nets, new figuration in addition to create a school with his "carsonism" which inspires more and more painters from here and elsewhere. JEAN PAUL TROTTIER – QUÉBEC “I really like mosaics for the bright colors, their transparency and also the overall chromatic effect, it almost looks like stained glass. Although some figurative element is recognizable, fish, wheat fields, we are still at the limit of the abstract, but what an abstract! In carsonism, what appeals to us the most is not only the colors in a flattened tube, but their relief, their vibratory quality, the flowers are flared, not static but overall what a joy for the eye, it is a seabed more beautiful than real, embellished, but of a different beauty, of a creative beauty.» HILDEBRANDO MEJIA – COLOMBIA “… all my expectations that I had for him on discovering his work, this sound confirmed, so I organized a Solo exhibition, which had an extraordinary success, which caused an enthusiasm phenomenon of carsonism, which still today is studied by expert analysts and art historians. » « …in the history of the Arte Autopista Gallery, and to tell the heir of the heir Charles Carson is one of the great artists who is part of the most important exhibitions of the Arte Autopista calendar, for his notoriety in South America and the Republic of Colombia, this marvelous country that we must absolutely discover. » JAMIE ELLIN FORBES – NEW YORK Q. You wrote about Carson that he could be compared to Kandinsky, Mondrian, Picasso, Van Gogh, Pollock, but why Carson? A. Because it has this incredible clarity in color. And then, it's not all about painting! You can't extrapolate if you don't master the form. To extrapolate, you must master the form, know how to paint! He applies the paint with a sense of rhythm, a sense of color that gives the impression that light emerges from it. This canvas is very energetic, almost kinetic. It is energy, but there is a formal structure that governs the application of colors. COLETTE RICHELIEU – MONTREAL “The Carsonism movement translates into an unbreakable succession of slightly oblique touches that give life to the material and the subject. Colors, subtle transparencies are juxtaposed or collide like sea waves, sweeping the canvas with a constant and regular movement. The mosaic technique is based on the fragmentation of form and surface which gives a particular style. By applying the mosaic effect to his painting, Charles Carson energizes the surface, investing it with a new state and creating a highly suggestive universe.” ROBERTO CHIAVARINO – ITALY Another page in the history of World Modern Art could be written. "The painting developed by Charles Carson has completely acquitted itself of the traditional currents of the informal, to which, however, it could be associated, to present itself, then, as a visual communicative element, essential to impose its coded essence: "Carsonism » «The genius of Carson manifests itself when the creator suddenly interrupts his writing, composed of an acultural pictorial grammar (writing which brings back to the most noble roots of the History of European Art)…» LAURA MARBOT – FRANCE «… I was immediately struck by a very singular touch, but no doubt also by professional deformation, by the beauty of the material itself since in the laboratory where we work, the only material constitutes, in fact, the pivot central to our investigations during expert appraisals and analyzes of pigments. “…Ultimately, Charles Carson’s talent lies in his ability to masterfully dramatize both material and colors.” DENISE DI CANDIDO – MONTREAL Charles presents strong and luminous works that transcend the warm personality of the artist. A proliferation of warm and cold colors which overlap happily on the canvas in a harmonious and subtle amalgam. The artist has a perfect mastery of his work, he knows what he wants to translate. Carson's paintings attract the eye and always arouse a lot of interest among art lovers. It must be recognized that he is unquestionably a master in his field. » MICHELE MIULI – ITALY With originality and passion, the brilliant Charles Carson sets the canons of a new aesthetic standard: a revolutionary artistic phenomenology imbued with physiognomic and semi-abstract expressiveness, with an interpretation converging on the search for concrete sublimation, to rediscover the soul of nature and its creatures in the world. DOMINIQUE STAL – PARIS Expert graduate of the Ecole du Louvre Ancient and Contemporary Painting D'Icart from the Faculty of Law of Amiens, according to *Dominique STAL; “The real value of the works of Charles Carson would be much higher than its current value in practice on the market. An estimate which was confirmed very recently during an auction of a work by the artist, in Metz in France. PIERETTE LABONTÉ – MONTREAL “Reading CARSON's works is contemplating, discovering figuration through abstraction in a chromatic explosion that brings joy and happiness to life. They are good for the heart. Their quality, their originality and their dynamism lead us, carry us away, delight us.” MICHEL ARSENEAU – CALGARY “I think that an artist like Carson, a past master in his art, is so because he succeeds in discovering, seeing, capturing, transcribing, then communicating his vision of beauty with a rare sensitivity, an almost epidermal, skin-deep sensation. His sense of beauty, his ability to be moved by simple things, sometimes invisible to others, make Charles Carson perceive life with such acuity and intensity that he can then embellish our vision of the world. LOUIS LEFÈVRE – FRANCE “With an oh-so-controlled style that belongs only to the artist. To achieve a different painting. A dazzling painting of strength and luminosity. The work of a genius that we must not be afraid to install in the very closed circle of great, very great artists, who indelibly mark their passage in the world of art and the arts. ALAIN COUDERT – FRANCE “Pure moments of color… Carsonism” or “mosaic effect”, these two approaches are not simple creative artifices. “…at the time of globalization which standardizes everything, even in the arts. Essential to do so in order to testify to a versatile era which, as Cocteau said, “must be admired all the more because everything is ephemeral”? Difficult, but possible for Charles Carson. “Charles Carson's painting necessarily emanates from the world. Its strength – its difference too – is to transform the vision we have of this world, to bring us back, by showing the indistinct, to essential things, those that detach us from everyday life. ANNE-MARIE LAURÈS – PARIS “Carson's art is dual: on the one hand, he translates his love of sublimated nature, evoking the burning of a sunset or moments of animal and plant life; on the other hand his own inner landscape brilliantly revealed in his mosaic works.» JACQUELINE DE TORRES – FRANCE “On land, at sea or as the crow flies, the undisputed master of colors and creator of Carsonism: Charles Carson, takes us on a journey through a captivating universe of multiple and varied dimensions. Charles Carson makes us discover, by his unique palette and his particular way of doing things, a fauna or wild life, was born from his dreams and his thoughts. The artist remarkably dematerializes the forms with an exceptional talent and transports us to an exciting world to discover the subtleties of Carsonism. To discover Charles Carson is to find the missing link in the encyclopedia of contemporary art. LÉONEL JULES – CANADA “Carson starts from a pictorial “Zero degree of writing” to move towards a device that progresses in harmony with the major concerns of our time. It is in particular by the multiple presence of the various processes (decalcomania, automatism, Action Painting -Abstract Expressionism stencil, critical paranoia -Dali), that we are allowed to evoke excess when speaking of his overall Work. YVES BOENING, Boening Fine Arts, Frankfurt, Germany Charles Carson´s Werken liegen zwei Ansätze zugrunde. Zum Einen das „Mosaic“ und zum Anderen einem Stil, welcher von Kunstkritikern und Kunsthistorikern sogar als „Carsonismus“ bezeichnet wurde. Der Künstler ist international bekannt und hat eine vielzahl von Ausstellungen in vielen Ländern der Erde gehabt, wie den USA, Kanada, Europa, England, Kolumbien, den Philipinen und Hong Kong. FRÉDÉRIC BONET – FRANCE “If his work strikes so hard, it's also because it corresponds to notions that reveal or are still unconscious that haunt our sensibility. A born creator, Carson brings a new factor into his pictorial area, a unique form of pictorial writing, which gives rise to a new technique: “Carsonism” This new genre has already earned him an extraordinary reputation. To see and know Carson's art is to relearn how to rediscover the nuances, the intensity and the luminosity of the colors, by its dematerialization of the forms, it transmits to us an emotional source which makes us vibrate, Carson gives to see in all the dignity of art.” PAOLA TREVISAN – ITALY “We've been fascinated by your stunning and powerful abstract art research where forms and colors create such an intense and emotional results.” “…your works reveal their power through the force and the brightness of colors, through the different effects of forms, the textures, the pictorial matter, the magnetic energy from the pictorial sign which spring from the canvas. In your paintings imagination and creativity are released through the flow of the living and acting forces on the canvas, the interaction of spaces, forms and color connection, taking them beyond to their physical limits.” LISE GRONDINE – CANADA “I think everyone agrees that the abstract and semi-figurative works of Carson's Carsonism movement reveal a perfect mastery and that they can be considered as masterpieces in contemporary abstract art, in the world. They are refreshing, powerfully executed and of rare expression. I also think, without a doubt, that Charles Carson will be one of the greatest contemporary abstract painters of this century. This affirmation is the greatest mark of recognition to an exceptional talent, a testimony that I have never given to anyone to this day. Fine Art Magazine – New York City, USA – Winter 2012/2013 CHARLES CARSON 35 YEARS OF CREATIVITY CARSONISM MOVEMENT “As Hemingway developed a new style of writing that is oft-imitated, never attained, Carson has created a new way of painting that takes a similar heightened position in the mainstream of contemporary art, a form that is universally accessible but impossible to be duplicated by another. A language all his own forever to be known as ''Carsonism.'' “I will not paint if I have nothing to say.” No alt text for this image By VICTOR FORBES UP AND DOWN THE AVENUES, the buildings in New York City, (considered by many to still be the modern day capital of the art world) are decorated with the work of the world's best-known artists : Stella, Lichtenstein, Oldenberg, Picasso, Kline, Indiana and de Kooning to name but a few. There are massive paintings and sculptures by these and many other all-time greats housed in lobbies, entrances, boardrooms, parks and offices. Attaining the heights reached by such stalwarts would seem to be the goal of most every artist who sets brush to canvas, chisel to stone or ink to paper. So much art has been created over the centuries that to be merely recognized is an accomplishment; to sustain a life of creativity is a triumph. To be hailed as an all-time great and have your work sell in the millions of dollars while you are still alive—that does happen, even if only to a very select group. There are a myriad of factors that contribute to entering into that realm, no singular formula. Often greatness is in the eye of the beholder, embellished by simple twists of fate, connections and timing. Pure talent, originality and depth of message will only get you so far. Bob Guccione said that he took a great leap of faith to see his artistic dreams come to life. “There was a time,” said a well-known dealer who has placed works in major museums, “when you could just succeed on the quality of the art alone, but today you could be the greatest artist in the world and if you don 't know the right people and have the right friends, you often remain unknown. You have to be a showman and a promoter on a much bigger scale than even in the day of Dali and Warhol, plus you now have to be technically savvy to capture the world market. The world got smaller. You have to be popular everywhere, not just New York, Paris or Spain.” Art is a product now, not just a creation. It needs to be marketed, auctioned and accepted by the mass media. The factors that bring recognition to some and lack of same to others are not simply intangibles any more. Such elements are taught more in business and marketing programs than in art schools. People studying art today are told by their professors to prepare to starve, to find other ways to use their artistic talents so they can earn a living. But if anyone said this to Charles Carson, he certainly wasn't listening. CREATIVE GENIUS A language all his own forever to be known as “Carsonism.” No alt text for this image VIEWING A CHARLES CARSON painting is akin to reading a Hemingway short story. A Clean, Well-Lighted Place comes to mind. Both are exquisitely sparse, expertly rendered. Immersed in a collection of Carsons in a gallery or museum is like having a full-length novel unfold right before your eyes. Indeed, the artist himself notes, “My painting is a spontaneous projection of that which I feel. I stand before my canvas like an author before his blank page.” Hemingway, of course, is an undisputed giant of literature while Carson is peaking in mid-career success. The legendary author is known, perhaps to his detriment, as a “man's man” and the artist, in his way fits that mold. He is strong and confident, succinct in his manner on canvas and in person. Dedicated to his cause, he spares no effort to manifest brilliance in every brush stroke, describing his energy as emerging from an “unexplainable force, trance-like”, that causes one to surpass limitations. As Hemingway developed a new style of writing that is oft-imitated, never attained, Carson has created a new way of painting that takes a similar heightened position in the mainstream of contemporary art, a form that is universally accessible but impossible to be duplicated by another. A language all his own forever to be known as “Carsonism.” No alt text for this image Hemingway captured the popular imagination with a revolutionary sentence structure, almost militaristic in cadence, that somehow translated into stories of great emotional depth blending despair with valor, hopelessness with redemption, and great love with great loss. It is certainly a valid comparison to put these two side-by-side for indeed Carson is an undisputed master, a Maestro of his own form. An originator of a visual lingo that knows no bounds, the compositions soar as his spirit allows. Creativity flies, moving ever-onward, staving off unholy forces. Carson's paintings strive for perfection like Hemingway's sentences. There's not a wasted word nor a misplaced droplet of color. Who paints like this today? Theoretically, it doesn't matter. Not to Carson because he invented his own very specific mode of expression which involves a very personal creativity. His great gift requires great discipline. Putting the time in, often in solitude, expending the greater part of a 24-hour day painting. However, if science could shine a microscope into a person's mind and examine his make-up, Carson would outshine many. No alt text for this image In the annals of art history, Carson certainly claims a portion of attention. “Nothing,” he says, “can resist the human will. Man must explore all facets of his freedom. The forces within us are instruments of overachievement.” The will to be one with the world, to belong to the stars and to the grains of sand came to him in the same breath. “The mountains, rivers and oceans, all that make up our universe are sacred places more precious than a golden altar.” The origins of Carson's style were formed in the interior of the Catholic churches he visited as a boy. Whether situated in a rich parish or a modest village, the buildings were reflections of baroque tastes dictated by centuries of religious architecture. “It was required,” notes the artist, “that the House of God be the shiniest and most sumptuous of all.” No alt text for this image This decor provided Carson's first aesthetic feelings and discoveries. These buildings of stone and glass planted the seed of a dream, of a vision of beauty. Where else could a young boy view the transformed light of the sparkling stained glass windows or admire the amazing talent of the artists who sculpted the statutes and painted the images of the Way of the Cross? For Carson, even Sacred music has often consecrated artistic vocations. Silence and contemplation played a subliminal role in creating strong, lasting images. “As a young child, I attended the religious ceremonies. I observed everything—the “trompe-l’oeil” paintings, the priestly garments embroidered in gold, the gathered crowds. I recall these things to this day with emotion. I was already under their spell when I passed through the heavy church doors. I had a precocious awareness of symbols – dipping my index finger in the fountain made me feel pure and legitimized. For what purpose you may ask? To enter a sumptuous treasure trove. To feast my eyes on everything shiny, the dancing flame of the lanterns, the candelabras. Mingled with the odor of melting wax from the candles, floating in the air, the scent of incense…” No alt text for this image Depending on the hour of day, the light from the exterior would bounce off the plaster saints, bringing their glass eyes to life. The angels of the stained glass windows would become animated. He was transported to another world. “Obviously, only today can I measure the impact these events had on my imagination, in a sublimated and softened memory.” It is these memories that have served as the basis to create a new style — a completely new pictorial language — that makes an appearance on the scale of artistic values in a way that has nothing to do with the current directions, genres or styles that are mostly found in today's or any day's art market. Born in Montreal in 1957, Charles Carson has been devoting himself entirely to his art since 1983. Over the years he has participated in numerous exhibitions in Canada, the United States, Europe, Asia and South America. At the age of 33, Charles made his own discovery of Latin America and lived in Columbia for nearly 10 years. Here he produced extraordinary and exotic works, yet he always retained his sensitivity, depth and vivacity, as well as the dynamic range and variety of composition. Yet his paintings still hint at the winters of his youth — those gray storm-clouds that visit his works and give them a striking three-dimensional feel. “Although born in Montreal, I spent many years living in remote country settings where. “Today I am no longer preoccupied by the weaknesses of life. To the contrary, I allow myself to go with the flow and to let my imagination run free. It is the best way to face life.” No alt text for this image I pursued my chromatic search before moving to South America. I wanted to live new experiences, artistically as well as culturally. I developed a passion for skin-diving and gained artistic inspiration from scenes on the ocean floor, from the multitude and variety of colors to the cathedral light produced by the sun piercing the ocean surface. One day, I nearly lost my life during a skin-diving expedition. The whirlpool that nearly swept me away did not affect my love for open water.” Be it the roar of an ocean or the flow of a river, the excitement of the potential danger manifested in broad strokes of the pallet knife, in blue sheaves and successive waves, to form the pictorial theme of a marine scene in the Carsonism or mosaic movement. By, Arévik Vardanyan, Advisor in art and museology What creative energy! “…one must recognize the undeniable talent of Charles Carson for his exceptional sense of chromatic harmony: his blue inspires dreams, his red surprise the eye, his yello illuminates the heart…” of transparencies and depths, dynamic composition and a continually renewed sense on innovation. Here is the winning recipe that propels the artist from one success to the next.” /2003 No alt text for this image Influenced through his admiration of van Gogh, Cézanne and Turner, at thirty-three, Carson spent time in Latin America where the spirit of inspiration gleaned from Columbian and other landscapes led him to a new personal era of expression through his imaging. Carson made a name for himself there, where he held numerous exhibitions and developed an amicable relationship with Fernando Botero. While many native artists left for Europe and America in search of fame and fortune, Carson found international recognition from his stay in South America. The influence the painters, topography and people of Colombia exerted upon the young Carson, and the vibrant and ancient culture that he absorbed, is evident in much of his work today. No alt text for this image In recognition of his contribution, a life-size statue of the artist in bronze has been on view in a major Cartagena public building since 1997. He also created a monumental mural entitled El Caballo del Mar for the main hall of Cartagena's principal airport, and he executed another mural entitled Yo hice lo que tu querias for the Church in Santo Domingo (a renowned Heritage Monument). No alt text for this image Carson's travels were the impetus for his deep feelings regarding the social and ecological problems of today's societies. His fascination with and love of nature occupies a primary place in his creations. A major turning point in his work were tropical scenes combining colors usually associated with a Caribbean sunset. From this starting point, he produces even greater depth and power than would seem conceivable from the paint. What technique manages to get such verve from color, and yet such detail? Again, it can only be described as “Carsonism.” No alt text for this image By Guy ROBERT, (1933-2000) - Founder of the Musée d'Art Contemporain de Montréal Carson a discovery … “Carsonism”, 1992 “In my capacity as art expert and historian, it has given me great pleasure to examine a significant quantity of the artist's paintings. I was struck by their freshness, dynamism and rhythm — the freshness and vivacity of the palette, the dynamism and diversity of the compositions, the rhythm that animates each segment of his paintings, much like the best jazz piece whose sense of improvisation opens up the instinctive structure of the melody and animates it with its syncopated syntax. If one prefers, it can be compared to a Scarlatti sonata or a Vivaldi concerto whose variations and modulations define the structure and subtlety of the piece.” Carson gives his paintings a depth that makes the best demonstrations of perspective pale in comparison…none of contemporary art's well known “isms” seem appropriate and I must resign myself (with great satisfaction I might add) to naming this new movement: CARSONISM!” Guy ROBERT, (1933-2000) - Founder of the Musée d'Art Contemporain de Montréal, art historian, writer and editor, author of an analysis in which “Carsonism” was described in glowing term. “Carson to the ism” was described in glowing terms. "There is one constant in all of the analyzes and for each of the experts and art historians and it is this: Carson's work generates energy, an unparalleled “joie de vivre” which is reflected in a mastery of forms and transparency of colors." No alt text for this image His physical control is always evident and he paints in bold strokes of incredibly vibrant color yet with a delicacy and intimacy that touches an emotional chord in the viewer. The making one of the strength and softness is the basis of the resultant beauty. This masterful technique has gained the artist a legion of collectors and admirers internationally and his works are sought after by serious collectors around the world. What is especially interesting and exciting about Carsonism is the fact that he was determined from the onset to contain his desire to be recognized as an exhibiting artist until he was confident that his body of work — from the very beginning — would be unique in a world where imitation, appropriation and other flattering forms of self-indulgence were and still are rampant. Carson's approach was like that of a monk, or a martial artist in training who would not come out to do battle until totally confident that the results would end in victory. Of course, there are no guarantees in this life of anything, yet Carson took that leap of faith, based upon years of study, trial and error and inspiration. No alt text for this image Early in his career, the artist employed traditional techniques, gaining inspiration from his environment. His early figurative works left him unsatisfied and he started to lean towards a semi-figurative and extremely personal style of painting. This technique, along with his unique pictorial language rapidly affirmed themselves and his talent was revealed with each new creation. The artist produces extraordinary works that exhibit sensitivity, depth and liveliness, as well as dynamism and variety of composition that characterize his work. “From an early age, I was in search of other sources of inspiration. I was born with a personality that was exuberant, imaginative and inventive. My inherent curiosity instilled in me the desire to delve beyond a simple explanation of how something worked. My persistence helped me to find answers to many questions – not necessarily the best answers or those that were for my own good. No alt text for this image Carson's imagination led him to a sense of a place beyond, higher, farther, deeper. He was seeking out a unique destiny with other universes to discover. Hence his fascination with the underwater life, so evident in many of his paintings and other universes perhaps yet to be discovered. His goal was to create a life for himself as an artist that was not subject to anyone's authority. Refusing to follow a predetermined path, he greatly preferred the unknown. In international art exhibitions, Carson's work stands alone. His stalls are sanctuaries in which he and the viewers can escape to a tranquil place, inhabited with a realistic presence of the aforementioned storm clouds but marked with a placidity, a bouquet if you will of sweetness and softness. The flowers, the fish and the birds are created with a power reflected the divinity of their creation, represented by an artist who considers it his right to transform a concrete image of the eye into something different guided by his innate sensitivity and an artistic gift that allows him to incorporate into his works personal feelings, to share his universe of color, dreams, thoughts and emotions. No alt text for this image Carson says, “The art of painting is to forget the subject matter; it no longer exists, relegated to the shadows, lights and reflections of color.” van Gogh may have said the same thing. They both take the reality of a scene and transform it into their own very specific concoction that somehow, when put together, is a coherent, emotional and brilliant force. Watching Carson at work is like watching a tiger in his natural habitat. Stalking his prey, the artist is firm in his quest. The quest being perfection, that is to make something, lterally out of nothing that has an impact on one's emotions and beyond that, to get the world to recognize his creations as valuable entities in the continuum of art history. It may be legitimately asked, how many artists are so instantly recognizeable that critics had to come up with a name, ie a school of thought even, for the produced work. That Carsonism has caught on is not just a freak show or the work of a great publicist. The fact is he has taken all the schools that have come before him, blended them into his subconscious and developed his art form. No alt text for this image Carson is far from one-dimensional and a follower of no one. He would not exhibit a single painting until he was certain he had created an approach that could only be attributed to him. It came after years of contemplation, hours of experimentation and decades of polishing a format that came to be known as Carsonism. How many artists are so attached to a style that the world recognizes it by the artist's own name? Was there an artist named Impression? Or Modern? No. Carson created his style, his language and whether it was because he was ostracized in gym class for lack of athletic ability, or because his family didn't send him to a fine art finishing school, or whatever the reason, Carson put himself in front of that blank canvas, or whatever else he was working on, and made it resonate with his own words. It's a language we all can understand, no matter the country of our origin and it is a lot easier to communicate internationally in this manner. No alt text for this image How did you grow into becoming an artist? I did not attend a fine arts school despite my desire to do so. Neither my family nor social environment fostered such pursuits. Regardless, this did not inhibit my perpetual search for a pictorial language. The “still life” paintings that I was working at during this time were academic exercises. The subject matter was of little importance. These studies allowed me to explore space and depth, two elements that would be crucial to my future work. I was also doing glass etching with a diamond tip. By superimposing layers of glass, I produced the three dimensional effect that I was looking for. I experimented with various processes, including: collage, copper, paint and grass. The inspiration came from my discovery of the magnificent Lalique crystal in Europe. No alt text for this image Although this creative technique was received positively, I was not through searching. I continued to perfect my technique for juxtaposing colors, using acrylic to create vivid abstract forms. On a linen canvas, I spread pieces of colored glass, complemented by strokes of acrylic to create an impression of high relief. Then, to make the colors explode, I highlighted them with an ultra bright lacquer. I was fascinated and seduced by the art of the master glassmakers of Murano and to emulate their artistry, I heated huge, multi-level ceramic ovens, created molds and inserted my glazed pieces at a temperature of 2,000 to 3,000 degrees. What kind of artist tools did you employ? I desperately wanted to reproduce with paint, the textures, forms and transparency of stained glass windows. I used oils, acrylics, pastels and charcoals in my artistic process. All recovery areas served to advance my experiments for adherence and durability. No alt text for this image I spared no effort during these years of experimentation with special effects and contemporary art. I would drop bags of paint from the roof of the house and rush to see the splatters they created on the sidewalk! Or I would use a drill to spin a panel I had coated with different colors of acrylic paint. Not to mention the balloon filled with paint that I would burst over a canvas… I even used an old bicycle wheel to spread colors on a canvas to see the effect it produced. Once, I nearly burned my house down experimenting with a special lacquer. This misadventure brings a smile today. I learned that paint and fire do not make good partners. In my efforts to recreate the “Murano effect”, the wooden roof of my studio as well as the work in progress were reduced to ashes. No alt text for this image By Robert Bernier MOSAIC MOVEMENT “Charles Carson's painting is divided into two approaches which are both distinct and complimentary. One was even named Carsonism by some art critics and historians. This approach is not easy to describe, but generally speaking it is composed of an infinite succession of slightly oblique strokes which, on the surface, add maximum energy to our perception of theme and subject, with the whole being animated through subtle transparencies which are quite sensational, creating an impression of depth and color. It's like an incessant flow of particles—all the same size—which sweep the paint with fascinating, even disconcerting regularity. Carson's second approach is simply that of mosaic. As its name suggests, we find a fragmentation of form and surface characteristic of the mosaic style. In both instances the artist endows the surface of his canvasses with great energy, creating an altered state in which his powerfully metaphorical universe is expressed.” Robert Bernier, art historian/Magazine Parcours, The Advisor of Arts – Winter 2004 No alt text for this image This incident, as is often the case with fortuitous scientific experiments, allowed me to perfect a mixture of glass and epoxy finished with a blowtorch. No alt text for this image I lost count of the number of plaster molds that were sacrificed for the cause. Not to mention the kilos of glass tiles used during the mosaic experiments. Since those days, I have used an acrylic paint that is more malleable for the textures, dries more quickly and allows for multiple layering of color. My first subjects were bouquets of flowers, done in an abstract style. For me, the message necessarily had to be communicated with the proper tools. I strove to find a language that was personal. It was both a quest and a challenge. Jacques de Roussan, (1929-1995) Historian, publisher, writer and art consultant. “Charles Carson presents us with magnificent visual richness. The viewer must learn to read – consciously or not – the scenes or subjects being proposed. Carson interprets and transposes with great strength and subtlety. An attitude that within the visual arts world, precedes and follows all major careers.” – 1993 No alt text for this image My first inspirations for the Carsonisme and mosaic movements came from Quebec. The stained glass windows of our many churches as well as the color and transparency of the province's spectacular autumn scenes fascinated me. The image of autumn leaves reflecting in the river culminated in the mosaic movement. In my younger years, I was fascinated by sunligh-t shining through stained glass windows. This image has always had a hold of my imagination which probably explains why I have always sought to replicate this transparency and luminosity and to create the effect of light coming from behind the canvas. Both the Carsonism and mosaic movements are reflections of water in motion.” — Charles Carson “Hero of Creativity” – Let the next writer come up with a better catch phrase, for now that is a standard they have to top. No alt text for this image By CHRISTIAN SORRIANO, Paris 2009 Art no longer holds any secrets or mysteries for a seasoned pro like me. Copyists, imitators and opportunists are quickly unmasked; self-proclaimed “artists” daubing in images of the sea, flowers, bodies or faces that have no soul, no emotion. Shunning popular trends and cheap visual effects, Charles Carson reveals the many unique facets of his immense poetic skill in each and every one of his paintings. They offer a breath of life, his life, questioning and delighting the minds and trained eyes of connoisseurs. Charles Carson has staked his claim to artistic posterity, for today one proclaims “it's a Carson” in the same manner that one refers to the works of immortal artists like Picasso, Matisse, Warhol or Basquiat. Christian SORRIANO, President of Drouot Cotation and Hotel Lausanne, Switzerland, Expert in Arts and Antiquities for Hotel Drouot auction and Expert in public auctions, Expert and assessor with the Customs Commission, Expert for Administrative Tribunals, Expert with the International Union, Official government representative , by ministerial decree dated December 2, 1992, with a mandate to organize the “Art and Antiquities Professions” What Carson has done is invent an approach to life that is that of a warrior wielding a paintbrush for a sword, A ninja in paint. His mannerisms are disciplined. There is no waste or obfuscation. Everything is crystalline. Shining, bright and brilliant, even in the way he operates the front end of his business, travels to exhibits, sets them up, prepares the wall space of an exposition so that every inch is maximized. He is not going down without a fight and every aspect of his creativity is measured. No alt text for this image Hemingway's sentences are short and sweet. Could he write like Fitzgerald or Faulkner or Steinbeck? Perhaps. Pollock could draw. He could render so that when a fool looks at a drip masterpiece and says, “My kid could do that,” well maybe. But he certainly couldn't knock out a realistic charcoal passable sketch which gave Pollock credibility with the so-called cognoscenti. It is an artistic and creative fact of life that Carson goes about his work with a precision that is almost unfathomable. No alt text for this image Therefore one might ask, could Carson create in another manner? Maybe is the answer again. But it is clear he never wanted to be anything other than an original. What is true about Carson and many other great artists is that they put the time in, often in the deepest of solitudes, to accomplish their vision. This is the part that is most daunting for a human being. Have you read that the author of numerous best-sellers, Harold Robbins, with all the money he needed, had one room painted in his home totally black, with only a desk, typewriter and single pointed spotlight attached from the ceiling to shine over his shoulder onto the matter at hand, in his case words on paper? Carson's fierce spirit of determination and invention is akin to this. Even the small paintings—not to be confused with a minor work because none of Carson's work can be deemed minor—contribute to the thematic line of his vision. The point may be not only to create a new language, but to say something in it by taking the alphabetical fragmentation of each word and making them into a coherent statement of power. An artist uses various tools to perform such a task and Carson's experiments (successes and failures) with glass and kilns and explosions and his years of sitting in Catholic churches as a youth in rich and poor parishes of his native Quebec and being enthralled by the imagery and refractions of light on and through the glass are well-documented. No alt text for this image “Charles Carson has the art of deconstructing his designs with an astonishing elegance. The purity and transparency of colors and their juxtaposition bring them all into a harmonious whole stemming from and inspired by the pleasure of handling forms. These enigmatic compositions, transformed in the laboratory of his fertile imagination clearly show the mastery of the artist.” — LOUIS BRUENS, (1928 - 2013) Art historian, writer and expert, Founder of Académie internationale des Beaux-Arts du Québec No alternative text for this image Carsonism came about through his adaptation of the aforementioned media into application by brush on canvas. Not since Pousette-Dart has anyone done this with such power and consistency. While Pousette-Dart built his paintings up with oil, sometimes over the course of 30 years, and created embryonic universes within and without the rules of art — brilliant universes of revolving natural forms that from a distance as well as from up-close reveal secrets of creation unknown to most mortal men — Carson, in devising his approach, takes a similar path to a similar result with a voice all his own. In addition to his soulful work, what I loved best about Pousette-Dart comes from a story his wife Evelyn related just before his one man show at New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art. No alt text for this image “Richard told the curator that if his banner outside was one inch smaller than Picasso's, they could forget about the show. While nowhere nearly as famous or collected as Picasso, at the recent Armory art fair, the Poussette-Dart's were flying off his gallery's wall at about $400k for a 30” x 40”. Mid-show, I heard the dealer call Evelyn asking for more. That, say more than a few scholars and critics, is how it will be for Carson. He is young enough to attain that level; also skilled enough and also original enough. He's going to France for three years to concentrate on making museum pieces and they will have to think hard to come up with better a headline than this: “Carson to the ism” and “Hero of Creativity.” Let the next writer come up with a better catch phrase, for now that is a standard they have to top. No alt text for this image Whether fighting off the gym class bullies or working his way out of a cylindrical spout of water in which he almost drowned, Carson's paintings show a power that opts for life. In the Carsonism pieces, he recreates natural scenes with deconstructionist vengeance, the three dimensionality of his minute dollops of sculpted paint surround the spaces, fill the emptiness. That's Carson to the ism. Clean, well-lit. Fully functional but esoteric. “Oh, there's a bird amidst all that,” a viewer would note. Or a fish. Or a reflection from light cascading to the depths of the sea or a natural burst of energy from a trip up the Amazon. Carson has been there and done that and the main thing is that he gives these scenes, these segments, these minute conglomerations of acrylic a glazed energy so that when they are combined into one unit you see exactly what he wants you to see. The veil is opened, but the real question is: “to what?” No alt text for this image That's where the art critics come in. They know and they have seen. Carson isn't saying. It was more than enough for him to invent this style and then to top it off with what he calls the “Mosaic Movement.” This is a whole other field of dreams, but if you could chop off a bunch of square inches on a mosaic and drop it into a canvas of Carsonism, they would work together. Blend somehow in unity. After all, wasn't it the American poet/philosopher Eli Siegel, founder of Aesthetic Realism, who was famous for his statement, “Beauty is the making one of opposites.”? No alt text for this image Yes, it is an artistic and creative fact of life that Carson goes about his work with a precision that is almost unfathomable. Look at a masterwork by Vasarely. A modern viewer could not imagine anything being executed like that without the help of a computer generated graphic. Carson's pieces are puzzles that come together as a triune entity of paintbrush, palette and painter as One and they must become as one integrated into the format necessary to produce masterful depictions of whatever the artist envisions. They work as if a Sumi-e drawing because Carson makes no sketches, no pre-conceived notions. Just step up the plate and hit the ball out of the park. As successful as he is, there is a hunger to Carson that seems to be unquenchable. An insatiable thirst to do more, to do better, to be the standard by which all other artists are measured. No alt text for this image In this world, there is a train to glory and Carson is a passenger, riding close to the front. John Dunne made this statement for eternity: “No man is an island” and that's for sure. “It matters not for whom the bell tolls, it tolls for thee.” Carson sees this and his stance as an artist of great individuality is tempered by his compassion for the earth and his fellow man. His paintings are manifestations of his thoughts and deeds, his hopes for a better world, a just world, a beautiful world of peace and harmony. Knowing this about him further fuels our interest in his creative vortex — a whirling mass of sensibility and sensitivity to not only God's love but our obligation to our Creator to return favors granted. This is the meaning of the creative life in which we strive for greatness, recognition, riches and fame (of course) but in doing so, seek to bring mankind along with us. It's a long train running, this train for glory, and the sensitive ones are prone to fall by the wayside. No alt text for this image Carson tempers his passion with great control, seemingly, in his work and this may just be the key to unlocking the magic in his imagery and in his reason for being. Getting his message out to as many as possible is a motivating force in his life at this time and recognition from the media and an ever-growing group of collectors fuels this. Carson is building a legend and could that be said about you and me? And if not, why not? If Carson could do this, why can't any of us? and that seems to be what he is telling us in a language we can understand: the language of creativity. We are all born with certain gifts and it is up to us to discover and exploit them. Carson's placid demeanor houses a fury inside which must come to the forefront. Fortunately for him, and us, it does. Whether he will go down in the annals as the great master many think he is, time will tell. One thinks that if a Carson is placed side by side with any contemporary or even historic work of art, the Carson will rise to the top, in much the same way that musicians can be compared, or ballplayers or even journalists. What it all comes down to in the end is how deeply we are committed to developing and perfecting the kernel of greatness that resides inside us all. How often we miss the mark and come up short, whether in art or life, and how often must we push ourselves, pick ourselves up dust ourselves off and start all over again? As often as it takes, say the great ones. Therefore in this period of time, it is a great to be alive while Charles Carson walks the earth and paints his paintings. No alt text for this image Strong and calm, he leads us on a straight and narrow path to our pre-ordained destiny. After all, we weren't born here to be mediocre, were we? The pursuit of greatness is open to all. The force of real love is the fuel, combined with talent innate, that gets us where we have to go, less we fall by the wayside and have to come back and do it again. Victor Forbes at the Carson New York City exibition When Carson meets his maker, it is certain he will be told, “Well done…You have been faithful over a little; I shall set you over much; enter the joy of your Lord.” No alt text for this image Carson says he has learned much in his 55 years on this earth. I have learned much simply by observing him, his actions, his work ethic and the response to it. While I have many objects of art in my environment, the Carson stands out as a champion. Not for its size, but for its power. It is a conglomeration of everything the man represents: legitimacy, attention to detail, the yin of softness and the yang of accountability. A light emanates from it. Herein lies the secret to human happiness: get it done and get it done right. There's a serenity, as if feng shu-ing life from the inside out. No alt text for this image Carson makes a case that we can have it all. Teaching by example deep wisdom, Carson's paintings simplify dichotomies, pinpointing pathways to understanding, what the yogis call self-realization. Hendrix said, “Love can be found anywhere, even in a guitar.” Carson seems to be saying it can be found in a simple brushstroke, a collection of which brings thought to life, a triumph of good over evil. Of mind over matter. Of gain over loss. Thankfully, we have on earth, in our midst, in these pages, a representative of the power of a still, small voice speaking to us amidst the storm. With an artist like Carson at work, it is indeed a good time to be alive, if for no other reason than to see what will be his next creative invention. Victor Forbes is Editor-in-Chief and co-founder of Fine Art Magazine, published continuously from New York since 1975 Laboratory LAE for analyzing archeology and works I am responsible for laboratory analyzes and expertise in archeology and works of art, better known as the LAE laboratory. Our job is to authenticate works of art, that is, to make a scientific study of a work of art. We analyze the material that defines the essence of an artist in order to thwart forgeries. We analyze the composition of the constituent materials of a work of art in order to discover the gestures, the experience, and the creativity of the artist. I believe that our work is very rewarding and that it's an opportunity because we get to meet great creators, great artists and beautiful works, which can sometimes be of very humble origin. This is the case, for example, of the first drawings in a decorated cave or the primitive writings of an ancient manuscript. But this can also be a brush stroke of a Leonardo da Vinci or the touch of a van Gogh, a Matisse, a Monet or a Chagall. So many great creators, great artists, who in their own way, help shape our evolution and humanity. I like to say, quite simply, that the works of these great masters are also important and bring as much information as the equations of Albert Einstein. No alt text for this image So, you ask me, through all this, where does the work of Charles Carson stand? Well again, we are very fortunate. To be able to know such an artist during his lifetime is extremely rewarding, because we know for a fact that his work will shape our evolution and humanity. Charles Carson is a great creator. His work is inimitable, personal, spontaneous. I don't know of any other work that resembles his. It is halfway between abstract and figurative art, it is not part of any movement or trend. His work is a superposition of materials, of shapes, colors, drawings that create a world of its own that is visually very rich, so rich that it even creates a world of sound. To be copied is the fate of great artists and Charles Carson will not escape this. His work is extremely unique, and we know from experience that it is very complex to copy his work, but it is also what defines the quality of a great artist, in this case a great Canadian artist. – BÉATRICE SZEPERTYSKI Director and Founder of the Laboratoire d'analyses et d'expertises en archeologie et oeuvres d'art, a laboratory for analyzing archeology and works of art that is better known as the Laboratoire LAE, Bordeaux, France. Scientific expert in art, Expert in the central office against the trafficking of cultural property “I deeply wanted to develop an original method of painting because I find it trite to simply paint what the eye sees. This led to attempts to dematerialize landscapes into more abstract and figurative forms. I am flattered that many … have analyzed my pictorial language and commented on its uniqueness and originality.” – CHARLES CARSON No alt text for this image “"think that Charles Carson has a very bright future because he takes care of his painting and be takes care of the people who buy his paintings. It's very important for a painting to follow up with the things he creates and for me, this is something human. So I think that if he continues to love people, I'm sure that his fans will all remain friends with him because he is great company and they'Il continue to support him. » CHAMPLAIN CHAREST, MD, Renown wine enthusiast and avid art collector, was a close friend of Jean Paul Riopelle, with whom he shared passions. The two men met in Paris in 1968 and remained close throughout the years. No alt text for this image Charles Carson: A Master For Today By JAMIE ELLIN FORBES Over 37 years of publishing an art and cultural magazine, we have had the privilege of meeting so many gifted people over this long a period of time. Can you imagine what it would be like if people didn't have art? It would be a terrible plight. It's a great honor to be involved with people in the arts. Some artists have risen to great acclaim and importance while others fall by the wayside, but the intrinsic stories of the artists are pretty much the same. Each brings his or her own need to communicate to the viewer through a window they open to their soul to express something deeply personal to the next level. I saw that the paintings of Charles Carson have a unique language. Initially, it was difficult to discern what the abstracts were telling me. Now I understand them very well. The language of the more Impressionistic pieces — the dreamscapes — I felt was very unique with the color usage and balance. The florals and seascapes invite you into the space to taste the colors. You are part of the process of whatever this moment is that the artist is describing. You are welcomed into the imagination of the process, which is far deeper than a mere snapshot. Here you will find the inspiration and mystique involving the colors combined with the rendering of the line: defined and united, yet singular in their presence, made all the more powerful by their coalescence and shared space which not only enrich the composition, but enable the viewer to understand the essence of the artists' vision. No alt text for this image The application and creation of the form is married to the colors so that the composition becomes very free, very available for people to enter into. The quality, the union — the synergy — brings success as the artistic statement is there and quite inspiring. Researching, reflecting and understanding, I could see that Charles has a great drive, capacity and great enthusiasm for the art. The level of his painterly energy carries the artistic statement through, bringing it to life and making it readily understandable. His colors serve the message even as the message serves the color. Carson, through his unique approach and visual language, lets people know immediately through the finished product what is that piece of the dream, that metaphor he is describing — his alphabet, as it were. When you do this successfully, you instantly have the viewer, if not you lose them My initial foray into writing about Carson's art was like a food for me. Describing Carson's experience and offering it to people to enjoy was and continues to be, incredibly satisfying. Energetically, when viewing his work, Kandinsky, Mondrian, Picasso and van Gogh come to mind. Although one could say that there are those influences, Carson has a great respect for any artistic process that is authentic, that it is important to avoid ephemeral fashions and trends. No alt text for this image Why Carson? He has a tempo. You can't just paint and extrapolate unless you know form. You have to be able to paint in order to extrapolate as if the light is coming through so he applies the paint with a structure and energy that results in an almost kinetic activity in a stationery work of art. The form that results through this enhanced application of color is obviously from his subconscious yet well-studied intent. His vision allows him to step between the spaces and resulting colors not only emerge, but they vibrate. As one form transitions from dream to reality and reality to dream and the abstract in-between, Carson manages to keep the transparency and the colors incredibly clean, which is rare. They are built, they have definition and there is a certain texture to the resultant paintings that is complex to arrive at. This combination of harmony and tempo is very complex and difficult to arrive at yet, via his painterly process, Carsonism emerges and it is unlike any other school of thought to date. He set out to be singular, to use the standard materials as no one before him has and he has succeeded. There are elements of this work that I have not seen elsewhere nor have I seen this technique done elsewhere. He is the only one in the world doing this style. Founding a process, a language and an artistic technique all his own, Carson is well on his way to taking his place among the great artists of the era. Source: Fine Art Magazine, New York, Winter 2012/2013

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Fine Art Magazine – New York City, USA – Winter 2012/2013 by Victor Forbes VIEWING A CHARLES CARSON painting is akin to reading a Hemingway short story. A[...]

Fine Art Magazine – New York City,

USA – Winter 2012/2013

by Victor Forbes

VIEWING A CHARLES CARSON painting is akin to reading a Hemingway short story. A Clean, Well-Lighted Place comes to mind. Both are exquisitely sparse, expertly rendered. Immersed in a collection of Carsons in a gallery or museum is like having a full-length novel unfold right before your eyes. Indeed, the artist himself notes, “My painting is a spontaneous projection of that which I feel. I stand before my canvas like an author before his blank page.” Hemingway, of course, is an undisputed giant of literature while Carson is peaking in mid-career success. The legendary author is known, perhaps to his detriment, as a “man’s man” and the artist, in his way fits that mold. He is strong and confident, succinct in his manner on canvas and in person. Dedicated to his cause, he spares no effort to manifest brilliance in every brush stroke, describing his energy as emerging from an “unexplainable force, trance-like”, that causes one to surpass limitations. As Hemingway developed a new style of writing that is oft-imitated, never attained, Carson has created a new way of painting that takes a similar heightened position in the mainstream of contemporary art, a form that is universally accessible but impossible to be duplicated by another. A language all his own forever to be known as “Carsonism.”

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