McCreery
Jordan
Biography
McCreery
Jordan is known for her exquisitely painted, intensely lyrical
art. Her style and subject matter are strictly her own, yet her
constant experimentation keeps her work fresh and magical. Her
mixed media pieces, in particular, reflect an astonishing ability
to invoke both mystery and clarity.
Ms. Jordan,
who has lived in Santa Fe since 1993, is an established artist
who has conducted workshops throughout the United States for the
past twenty years. She imparts her passion for art to her students
while teaching them the solid skills that are at the heart of
her own work. She is proficient in oil, acrylic, encaustic, and
watercolor, and she frequently combines them for maximum effect.
The subject matter can be anything from landscape to figures and
still life, and the approach can be anything from photorealism
to abstract and beyond, with dimensions ranging from 6 x
6 to billboard size.
Jordans
work has appeared in many publications, most recently in New Mexico
Millennium Collection A Twenty-First Century Celebration
of Fine Art in New Mexico. She shows her work in galleries, museums,
and invitationals (most recently in Sorrento, Italy. She has garnered
many awards and other honors, and her work is represented in many
distinguished private collections in the United States and Europe.
It also can be found in public venues ranging from a restaurant
in France to the Wall Street Journal.
She is
a published poet, avid fly fisher, and has produced two instructional
art videos.
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It started modestly enough in the spring of 1981 when
John Walker painted a small seagull in the corner of one of Roxann
Moores misty seascapes. The collaboration grew until John
and Roxann abandoned their individual works to devote all of their
creative energies to the paintings they signed "Walker Moore".
"Ironically, our early joint efforts were not
considered acceptable in some exhibition venues," says John,
"so we allowed the fictional Walker Moore to become a person."
Over the years, that "person" became a thorough fusion
of two distinct styles which, when merged, became a unique "third
style" that only exists because of their collaboration.
Husband-and-wife team efforts, while not uncommon in
film, theater, music and dance, have always been rare in the visual
arts. Records indicate that couples as far back as the 14th century
worked as illuminators, providing decorative illustrations for
manuscripts. In the intervening centuries, painterly collaboration
occurred in many highly organized and successful studios, though
it was usually conducted by a master painter assisted by specialists
or apprentices. Collaboration between equals, in the manner of
Walker and Moore was extremely rare. Rarer still is the way John
and Roxann set aside their early attempts at specialization in
exchange for the freedom to work together on every part of every
painting by modifying, painting over, and adding to each others
brushstrokes. Even Johns red-green color blindness cannot
impede the shared effort, as he contributes an opinion on values
(a scale of light to dark) to the colors mixed by Roxann.
In the mid-eighties, Walker and Moore focused their
attention on the stark architectural subjects that, along with
their unique style, have become a trademark of their work. Roxann
likens them to an "empty stage in a theater, a place where
the imagination of the viewer is invited inside to complete the
painting". With this deliberate effort to draw the viewer
into the final act of creative collaboration, they allow perceptions
of the work to change and evolve over time, shifting with the
mood or light. For this reason, the artists seldom render actual
locations, finding this common approach too constraining. Instead,
they give viewers the complete freedom to remember, imagine or
dream. While traveling widely in search of ideas, Walker and Moore
take the unusual approach of layering the new designs, materials
and colors they find on top of earlier discoveries, producing
composite images made from bits and pieces around the world.
In the interest of preserving domestic tranquility,
John and Roxann long ago decided to take turns while painting,
rather than work simultaneously. As they trade the painting back
and forth, usually ten or more times prior to completion, each
has complete freedom to change, or add to, any part of the work.
Not surprisingly, the results are unpredictable. This lack of
certainty does not trouble them, however, and they find it both
stimulating and challenging to return to a painting that has changed
in their absence. Nor is their creative expression limited by
their choices of a painting medium. Casein is the least used of
the water mediums which, though difficult to master, in patient
hands, can be highly versatile and expressive.
Roxann Moore holds a degree in Fine Art from Howard
Payne University. John Walker studied Art at the University of
Arizona in Tucson.
Currently the Walker Moore collaboration can be enjoyed
at Grimshaw Fine Art/the variant gallery, an established gallery
featuring fine art for everyone, located at132 Kit Carson Road,
Taos, N.M. 87571. 505.758.4949 * 800.638.5169.
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