PETER SAUL @ Leo Koening Inc. Recent Works – Part 3 – Technique and My Photos
Peter Saul’s opening was covered in part 1 and part 2, his technique and my photos are my last post on this series covering PETER SAUL @ Leo Koening Inc.
I tried to get a good picture of Peter Saul – but failed to get one to my liking – about the best picture I did get was the artist, center – with his back to me. That’s OK, maybe that’s the way it’s meant to be.
 This is a part of Saul’s painting of “Still Life with Warhols” 2006, which there was no picture on the gallery website for, but it was in the show. Looking at the artist’s technique – he maps out broad areas of flat shapes, colors them and then builds up his lighting, from imagination, maintaining the hard edge – which he needs for defination. He’s evolved his own way of doing it. You’d never mistake a Peter Saul painting for anyone else’s. Nor does he Airbrush – amazing. Here’s what Peter Saul has to say about his technique.
“Several people have asked if I use spray gun or masking tape. No, never. The way it’s done is I hold a piece of paper towel in my left hand while I paint and wipe the brush on it till just the right amount of paint remains on the bristles. Then I carefully feather the paint onto the canvas. It can look sprayed, or not. It takes a certain skill, but it’s a lot of fun to have that skill. I listen to the mellow music of the old folks radio station while I work; I can paint the whole picture, from streching the canvas to signing my name in just one month, working alone.”
Peter Saul answers a few questions above.
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Peter Saul works alone, most of the time, streching his own canvas – at his age he can still get by without assistants (though he might have assistance from time to time).
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He skeches out his ideas first – works out the main details and shapes and then transfers the design onto canvas, probably with the help of a projector – just to get the overall layout as he wants it.
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From that point – he’s filling in the areas of the painting with solid colors and then working the texture and lighting up.
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After about a month per painting ….he’s done..said all he had to say and signs it – and sells them for 60K-100K each. Not bad.
And the paintings are worth it – every cent. I’m sure Peter Saul is collected by every major museum in the world – and they should collect it – he’s a master artist.
Here’s more on what inspireds Peter Saul from this “To the Viewer” introduction for the catelog of this show:
“I like to walk around N.Y. to see the art shows, particulary pictures of something dramatic or exciting. That’s my art taste. Even though I love viewing the stuff, the ideas that prop up Modern Art are the dumbest in the world. Especially the notion that a painting is about itself and the way it’s made. Sure, try reading a book about itself, or going to a movie about itself, not a lot of fun.
But what upsets me more is the way the word “sentimental” got trashed, defined as something bad. I’m a very sentimental person. I like to browse in my volumes of Orientalist and Victorian anecdotal art while I listen to Christmas carols and drink good, medium-priced champainge. That’s the real “me.” So, I reserve the right to paint sentimentally, anytime. I painted “Basket of Kittens” in the early nineties but I could do it better today.”
Someone I spoke to last night asked me if Peter Saul has an “oral” fixation – since most of the imagry of his work revolves around the mouth. Perhaps. I had not really looked at it that way..but why not? Also, “sentimental” is a term that Joe Coleman used to describe his painting – he had the same concern that people labeled Coleman’s work “sentimental” – read the interviews here.
I commented only on paintings that are in the current show. Peter Saul had so much work – he had another show at the David Nolan Gallery that opened the day before. Since I did not go to that show yet - I don’t wish to comment on those paintings yet – but I am aware of the show at David Nolan and will go to it sometime over the next week or two. There are not many pictures, just a PDF document.
Here’s a larger shot of “Still Life with Warhols” to end this post.  Go see both shows and hope the Peter Saul grants me an interview – hopefully in person, which will be more interactive.









