ACA Galleries John Mellencamp: The Isolation Of Mister Exhibition Oct. 22 Through Dec.19
The creative spirit often finds multiple expressions and such is the case with John Mellencamp. Known primarily as a legendary musician and long-time social justice activist, Mellencamp is a member of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, recipient of The Woody Guthrie Award and the John Steinbeck Award.
He is also an accomplished painter who has seriously pursued painting for
more than 35 years. He has had solo exhibitions at The Butler Institute of
American Art, Youngstown, Ohio; the Tennessee State Museum, Nashville, The
Museum of Art - Deland, Florida and the Morris Museum of Art, Augusta, Georgia.
Raised
in Indiana and influenced by his mother who painted in the family home
throughout his childhood, Mellencamp’s urge to paint started at age ten when he
began experimenting with oils. Later, he came to New York with the intention of
studying painting. He had his first formal training at the Art Students League,
with portraitist David Leffel, where Mellencamp discovered German art and the
work of Twentieth Century Modernists such as Walt Kuhn and Chaim Soutine. He
evolved a style of portraiture influenced by the paintings of the German
Expressionists.
Mellencamp’s imagery thus takes its inspiration from the same sources as his music: the struggles of the working man and woman, oppressive authority and social struggle. And like his music, the paintings are carefully composed through the structural requirements of harmony, rhythm and order. The exhibition title conveys how John must essentially isolate himself, using the silence to summon images and manifest his voice.
Mellencamp continues to live in his native Indiana, where he maintains his
home and studio outside Bloomington, where painting continues to be a mainstay
of his creative spirit.
Sometimes There's God, 2014, Mixed Media On Canvas 22 x 20 in.