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Art> Muralist
Muralist
Is there such
a word as Muralist? We talk to a man who
does things to walls.
An interview with Michael Gullberg
By Jeffrey the
Barak
Published July 2000
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| The
wall featuring "...and Then The
Goddess Began Conjuring Herself Up Out
Of The Palm Of My Hand." by Michael
Gullberg. |
What is the full title of the piece seen
above?
...and Then The Goddess
Began Conjuring Herself Up Out Of The Palm
Of My Hand.
Where is this mural located?
2317 Lakeshore Avenue
in Echo Park, just west of Dodger Stadium
in Los Angeles. It's on the side of a house.
There's a brick wall in the photograph which
gives us some sense of scale, but exactly
how big is it?
Fourteen feet high,
eleven and a half feet wide. There's actually
some rocks and stuff down below which help
to put in perspective.
How long did it take to paint this work?
I started at the
end of October in 1996 and I had an unveiling
party on May 18th 1997. That's seven months.
While you were painting the mural, was the
public passing by, watching you?
Yeah, people would
come by and I would be in my own world.
People would sit behind me for a while and
I wouldn't know they were there for a long
time. Then I'd notice them and say "Hi."
What kind of paint is it? What's the medium?
Well it's actually
house paint. Behr exterior latex acrylic
semi-gloss paint from The Home Depot. The
background surface is Stucco, primed.
What is your current project?
It's long one. Forty
feet long and about seven and a half feet
high.
It must be easier when you don't have to
climb up
ladders all the time.
Yeah, it's a little bit easier. I still
need to get a stool to reach the top two
feet. This one's gonna take a while. I probably
not going to be done with this one for another
year or so.
Is there such a word as Muralist?
Yeah. Diego Rivera
was a Muralist.
Upon who's house is Goddess painted?
The current owner
of the house is John Duffy, but when the
work began, the owner of the house was a
woman who owns about four of my smaller
painting, Carol Sherman. It was her wall
and originally she was thinking about simple
silhouettes or something like that. And
then we started kicking around some ideas.
There was some Indian imagery that she liked
and I think that's where the Goddess came
from. Carol was very much into the Goddess
aspect of the feminist movement also.
So the Goddess was more of a symbol of empowerment
than an actual God-like potent being?
It's not a specific,
it's an all encompassing universal female/feminine
energy.
What's the difference between painting a
large mural and painting something two feet
wide?
It depends on the
artist! For me, what I have found is that
with smaller canvases I was cramming a lot.
I was putting a lot into one small painting.
Somebody said to me once, you've got to
start painting bigger. This was after I
had painted Goddess, and I started to notice
the difference. There's a lot of emotion
and energy in my work and I pour that emotion
into it. A lot of big emotion, and I think
the extra space affords you more freedom
with that. I express myself more fully on
a large space.
So it's not just a case of it being larger
so you can see it from further away, there's
something more to see if you are close to
the piece.
From every perspective, from far away, from
up close from the sides, from the top. That's
the whole thing, I'm creating other worlds.
Have you ever thought about camouflaging
a building and making it blend into its
background?
Even though this
mural sticks out, it's colors blend into
the hillside. The painting is affected by
all of its surroundings. This is more apparent
in my current work. I'm affected by all
the surroundings, even the insects. One
of the things that I started to understand
when I first started painting this mural,
is I'm actually painting landscapes, other
worlds, on top of the ants', insects' and
spiders' world. They've actually visited
while I was painting. This one spider which
looked almost futuristic and robotic, with
things like wipers on it's eyes, came into
my field of vision and looked up right at
me, and I realized at that point that in
creating something like a mural, you are
also destroying something.
On my current piece, the lizards come out
of the drain. I disrupt the ants many times.
Ants are crazy, they get right in the line
of the brush, they'll come right up to the
brush and sacrifice themselves for the beauty
of art. I'm in touch with the animals and
the insects too. Murals have brought me
back to that kind of stuff. I was raised
in the woods in the rural areas of Pennsylvania.
What about decay and maintenance?
That's one of the
reasons I use Behr house paint. It has a
fifteen-year guarantee. I also use a clear
coat, a graffiti coat I've been watching
this mural for the past three years. With
the amount of paint I'm putting on, I could
literally peel that thing right off the
wall.
So it's
like a big latex skin on the wall.
Yes.
Like a
condom.
It's like an art
condom.
Do you have to keep stepping back to have
a look at the piece?
I walk all the way
up the street, walking backwards, holding
my paintbrush. There are a lot of varying
perspectives.
Do you use an outline first, or a slide
projector?
No, no, no. This
mural was strictly out of my head. The planning
and design elements were as I was going.
I used tape for certain perspective lines.
At an early stage in this piece, carol said,
"You know what, I like what you paint,
I like your style, so just go ahead and
paint whatever comes to you." And I
did. A lot of my work evolves as the paint
is being moved around. All of a sudden things
reveal themselves in the paint. I let go
enough to allow the paint to kind of show
me what to paint, basically.
You sign your work "Michael".
Is that your artist name?
It was, now I'm thinking
of using my whole name, Michael Gullberg,
but the single name Michael looks better
as a signature on the paintings.
What would you like to say about being a
Muralist?
Buy more murals!
No reasonable offer refused.
See more of Michael Gullberg's art at
http://michaelgullberg.com/
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