Three Exchanges: Collaboration
w/Matt Thiesen
2010
- C. Shoup
“Matt and I went to high school together. After graduation we each left
Kankakee County to explore different cities, and eight years or so later,
under different terms, we both returned here.
“We had engaged and tasted the wider world, and back here we found
an artistically sterile environment. I don’t remember the specifics, but
we started to connect as artists. Matt had a digital video camera. We
made a few “art films.” I remember it as a time when I was involved in
a crazy, exhilarating creative process. We went so far as to film a
donated and preserved sea turtle shell traveling around Salina and
Essex Townships; another time we spent a chilly autumn afternoon
filming guitar improvisations inside an abandoned mental hospital.
“Three Exchanges involved a completely different process. I liked one of
Matt’s paintings; he gave it to me. Then after a few months, I drew on
it, gave it back to him, and we began to exchange the original piece and
add to it, uninhibited by any rules or directions about what we were
doing or what outcome we would achieve…”
The Day Danny Fought the Storm; 2004
Turtle Shell; 2005
Manteno Mental Hospital; 2006
Film Stills
“Places was the first exchange with Matt. The painting started as the
blue background and the color buildup in the upper right area. On a
whim, I drew the iron tower, sent it back to Matt, he added the nurse,
the word “places” and after a few more weeks of exchanges, this piece
landed on my doorstep with Matt’s final submission. He had “painted”
a hideous, juvenile, sloppy drunken mess in the middle.
“Anyway, I set it against the wall and looked at it for a week, and
eventually saw Matt’s mess as tentacles somehow growing from the
blue background. I blended oils until I matched the original background
color to define the final octopi arms, and I used a gold paint marker to
harness the wayward dark smudges.
“There is balance around the perimeter, a concentration of interacting
images, circles set in motion, and even a gouged out, pure black
“entrance” into this piece. Our unlearned and spontaneous
composition works.”
Places, 2010
Acrylic, oil, pen, wood, mixed
media on masonite panel.
“This piece was exchanged only once. I framed an oak panel in walnut.
Onto it I painted the black tree and the blue and white organic shapes.
“I didn’t consider it finished—but didn’t know where else to go, so I
dropped it off at Matt’s.
“A week later it reappeared on my doorstep. Included now was a solid
horizon, a creeping combine, an ominous barn and silo, and a strange
dried up plant.
“It was such a fascinating composition, and I had the good fortune of
recognizing (immediately) that it was finished.
“This is a supreme collaboration.”
Modern Agriculture, 2010
Oil, acrylic, mixed media on
oak panel.
“Matt—being Matt—ultimately lost interest
in the art exchange process after the second
piece—but I insisted we complete three.
“He had salvaged an old baking board from
the alley, added the mixed media, and then
apparently during some hallucinatory
moment of ecstasy, poured paint across the
upper edge, and dropped it off at my house,
saying: “I don’t like it. Do whatever you
want.”
“I challenged myself to create a narrative
atop this background. The archer is made
of slivers saved from my framing stock. The
three “mini framed” color squares are
heavy canvas covers from old library books.
This is the story of an ancient hunter.”
Overview; details from the back of The Archer.
The Archer, 2010
Acrylic, mixed media, wood, bamboo,
glass, canvas book covers on masonite.