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JES BELKOV GORDON. (photo by Hallelujah Truth)
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At the end of August 2013, I met
intuitive painter, Jes Belkov Gordon
at a C4 Atlanta Techsmart event, “Blogging
for Artists (see my blog).” Jes’s intense energy engaged me, making me curious about her
intuitive artwork and her blog, Buckets
of Color. I met her at Sycamore
Place Gallery in her studio full of vibrant paintings for the following
interview
HALLELUJAH TRUTH: Give me your personal definition of ART.
JES GORDON: I would say that it’s “expressed
creativity.” Visual art is very different from “art” because when you say the
word “art,” I don’t think of visual art exclusively. I call myself a born
sculptor and trained painter. My husband is a musician, and my kid is a folder
(origami).
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BUMBLAC #4 (for sale here).
Jes gets the titles for her paintings by writing down a lot of words
that relates to the current series she’s working on then inventing a work like
“Bumblac.” “It comes from “bubble magic,” Jes explains. (Detail photo of painting by Hallelujah Truth.)
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HALLELUJAH TRUTH: Tell me more about expressed creativity.
JES GORDON: I think I am a little different
than most. I view an artist as having two qualities that are separate: skill
and creativity. I see skill here (Jes
flings an arm out in one direction) and creativity and talent over here (flinging the other arm in the other
direction).
Most
classes you take are skill development ones. There are very few that are about
creativity development, which is more of a spiritual thing. A skill is centered
in your head. Creativity is centered in your gut.
Picking
up a specific brush, applying the brush in a certain way, and manipulating it
is in the brain—that’s a skill.
Grabbing
my brush, dipping it in the color that feels right, and slopping it on the
canvas in a way that feels good is in my gut—that’s creativity.
I guess
the most important place for you to experience “expressed creativity” is to
forget the skill in your brain and let it come from your gut, almost like the
skill is ingrained in you at a cellular level and woven into your being….
(Pausing for a moment and then continuing)…Skill can inspire you. You can go
to a class and learn a technique, but know that when you learn the skill from
the teacher, it is the teachers. You can take ownership of it in your own way.
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BUMBLAC #3 (for sale here). (Detail photo of painting by Hallelujah Truth.)
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HALLELUJAH TRUTH: What is SPIRITUALITY to you?
JES GORDON: I’m not your typical American, my
parents were hippies, and they had a guru from India. We followed this eastern
path that required 2.5 hours of meditation a day.
Don’t
worry I never accomplished it, but “meditation” and “spirituality” always meant
the same thing to me growing up. Meditation was a specifically taught practice,
sitting with a mantra. And I always battled with the question of what
spiritually was when that meditative path no longer suited me.
It was
only recently that painting became my meditation.
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PAINTING LARGE! As you can see in this photo of Jes posing with her painting "SHIFTING," many of her images are quite big. Recently, she has considered painting big, but cutting down to small (see her blog on this topic). |
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SHIFTING (for sale here). (Detail photo of painting by Hallelujah Truth.)
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HALLELUJAH TRUTH: When and how did that happen—that painting became
your meditation?
JES GORDON: I would say in spurts, here and there,
about six years ago (2007) but in a committed way, about a year ago (2012).
I’ve created a pretty large body of work in just a year. Painting on paper was
key.
HALLELUJAH TRUTH: Could you elaborate?
JES GORDON: I think before that I was too
caught up in the preciousness of the outcome.
HALLELUJAH TRUTH: Before paper?
JES GORDON: Yes, when using canvas or
expensive materials. Then as soon as I started using whatever painting
substrates were around, a freedom opened up to me.
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UNTITLED (for sale here). (Photo of painting by Hallelujah Truth.)
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HALLELUJAH TRUTH: What is the connection between
the ART you make and your spirituality?
JES GORDON: They are inseparable. If “spirit” is what moves on when this life is
over, then “spirit” has a lot to say.
I think
that part of spirituality for me is delving into what it means to be human.
This will sound really weird, but I remember realizing I was “here again” when
I was about three years old. And looking at my mother and saying, “You’re the
mom this time.” If we can have a human experience, it does wonders for our
soul.
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HANGING CONTRAPTIONS. For Jes's smaller paintings, she has devised an efficient way to display them in her studio at Sycamore Place Gallery. (photo by Hallelujah Truth)
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HALLELUJAH TRUTH: In what way does your ART enhance your SPIRITUALITY?
JES GORDON: They are not separate. Art is my
spirituality.
HALLELUJAH TRUTH: Would you say your art is your practice?
JES GORDON: I am working through not getting
too caught up in what’s going on in the art world. Some times, it is easy to
get derailed and believe that being involved is necessary.
But as a
practice, I need to do intuitive painting exercises. So I always have a body of
work going on that is nothing but fun. I don’t care if it comes out good or if
it goes into the trash. I don’t care what happens to it. Right now, I am addicted
to circles. I can’t stop painting circles.
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JES IN SITU. The light streams in Jes's painting space at Sycamore Place Gallery. Her bubbly paintings seem to drift and rise in the sunbeams! (photo by Hallelujah Truth)
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HALLELUJAH TRUTH:
Has SPIRITUALITY always been
a source of your ARTMAKING? Why? If not, when did the SPIRITUALITY emerge?
JES GORDON: No. I think originally it was
beauty. I’m as Libra as you get, so it was all about beauty. Then it was about
pain. And believe it or not after my parents died, it became about
spirituality.
When my
father was dying from cancer, he was told that there was nothing else that they
could do for him and that he should paint. He never did. But it made me look at
art and creating art in a different way.
The
beginning of my painting becoming a spiritual practice is based on both of my
parents at the end of their lives (Jes’ father died in 2005 and her mother in
2009). They both had stories about what they were going to do when they
retired. They died before they retired. So “cuss” that! Live life now!
HALLELUJAH TRUTH:
Who (artists, authors, friends, etc.) do you consider influential in the
way you think, act, and make ART?
JES GORDON: Right now, a contemporary who is
influencing me is Connie
Hozvicka. Not so much what she paints but her approach. I took an online
class from her, and she is the messenger that changed my life.
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SELF-PORTRAIT (not for sale)
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HALLELUJAH TRUTH:
What is your purpose for making ART?
JES GORDON: Living a long life joyfully.
AN OPPORTUNITY TO PAINT WITH JES
Jes is offering an intuitive painting workshop at Sycamore Place Gallery in
Decatur, Georgia, on Sunday, October 6, 2013, from 11:00-6:00. Go here or contact Jes for more information.
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HALLELUJAH WITH JES. I love having the opportunity to visit artists in situ. These Spiritual Art Pilgrim interviews give me the chance to get to know amazing artists like Jes and to go deeper into their process. I learn so much and in the process, making friends with the artist and clarifying my own artistic process. Thank you Jes for your bubbles, buckets of color, and way of being in this world. You are such an inspiration. |
If you liked this interview, here are links to my other Spiritual Art Pilgrim Interviews:
9. Tazwell Morton (drawer, painter, ceramicist)