Lockwood Dennis Painting - "l.a. Freeway" (1995) - Dec 01, 2022 | Artemis Gallery In Co
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Lockwood Dennis Painting - "L.A. Freeway" (1995)

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Lockwood Dennis Painting - "L.A. Freeway" (1995)
Lockwood Dennis Painting - "L.A. Freeway" (1995)
Item Details
Description
Lockwood "Woody" Dennis (American, 1937-2012), "L.A. Freeway" oil on canvas, 1995. Signed on lower right. A vibrant painting of a Los Angeles freeway by American artist Lockwood Dennis. Dennis is perhaps best known for his works that depict classic automobiles and other people movers. Here colorful cars shine in the foreground and the middleground of the canvas, with palm trees and homes beyond the freeway and sunny skies above. The LA freeway system is famous for being packed with cars all through the day and night. Many may recall the spectacular opening scene of the film "La La Land" for instance, in which dozens of drivers stuck in a traffic jam on an LA freeway jump out of their cars and come together in a marvelous song and dance number on the freeway overpass! While no dancers are featured in this painting, the familiar bumper to bumper traffic of the LA freeway system certainly is! Size: 24" L x 29" W (61 cm x 73.7 cm)

Paintings like this example were very much informed by Dennis' woodcuts for which he took great inspiration from vintage cast-metal toy cars, trucks, and construction vehicles, comic art, Japanese woodblock prints, and WPA era industrial design.

Lockwood Dennis was driven to paint throughout his 45 year career. Although this medium posed the artist's greatest challenge, painting was the most personal and rewarding artistic endeavor for Dennis. Each canvas reveals new aspects about him as a person - his approaches to life, the environment, and art. During the early years, Woody was most influenced by the works of Post-Impressionist pioneers of early Modernism such as Cezanne and Matisse. As he evolved, Woody developed a graphic style that was informed by the style and imagery he created for his woodblock prints.

Lockwood Dennis paintings have been collected by the following museums and organizations: Microsoft Corporation, Redmond, Washington; Seattle Art Commission, Seattle, Washington; Hallie Ford Museum of Art, Salem, Oregon; Tacoma Art Museum, Tacoma, Washington; Swedish Medical Center Foundation, Seattle, Washington; Museum of History and Industry, Seattle, Washington; Jefferson Museum of Art and History, Port Townsend, Washington; Whitman College, Walla Walla, Washington; Museum of Northwest Art, La Conner, Washington; Clallam County Historical Society, Port Angeles, Washington; Bainbridge Island Art Museum, Winslow, Washington; US Library of Congress, Washington, DC; US State Department, Washington, DC.

Lockwood Dennis was quite eloquent and insightful when asked about his art. The following is an excerpt from the "On Impetus" section of his "Philosophical Musings on Painting":

" The impetus to paint is always an experience - a specific place, weather, ordinary things remembered. A celebration of just being here, experiencing the world. The experience itself is somehow lost in the process, and, anyway, its not intended that it should be conveyed. The result is a picture animated by that experience.

Dennis continues, "A painting starts with an exuberance. It's good to be alive. The work is a wonderful place. The feeling seems to cover everything, but it relates especially to past experiences, beginning further back than I can remember. It becomes specific in associations with past experiences: Portland, Eastern Washington, Africa; but not with an exact description. The memory of a precise place and time - a moment of past reality is too terrible to bear, there is such a sense of loss, of things gone forever. So it is a present experience, based on the past. And perhaps the cartoon character adds the levity to remove it from the past, or 'animate' it in the present."

The following is an excerpt from Lockwood's public lecture at the Northwind Art Center in Port Townsend, Washington (April 2012): "For me, my painting began with trying to recall my Peace Corp trip to Africa. We were living in Wapato (Eastern Washington), so I painted our surroundings there in much the same way as Africa. I first painted Port Townsend when some friends invited us to house sit for them and introduced us to many good friends here. When we moved to Port Townsend in 1975, we were living at Fort Worden and I painted from sketches of the gun emplacement bunkers and cliffs. I did a lot of water color paintings with artist Bill Nelson around town and out on the coast (La Push). I used the lithography printing studio of J. Albers to produce 245 editions. And then friend and University of Washington professor Michael Spafford got me started on woodblock prints which I continued to do after we move to our current house in 1990. I did 385 editions of 20 or more each. This changed the paintings a lot, for better or worse. The important thing for me is making a space you can move through. I use places that I find exciting that way. The hills of Africa, Fort Worden, San Francisco, Onomichi; and industrial sites, all of which remind me of where I grew up in Portland. It's about maintaining the mystery of the unexplored.

In the paintings, I work around a center to which everything is related. My wife showed me this in a Monet lily pond on our first date (1960). And I work with layers, based on Cezanne. The subject of my master's of art thesis was about how to conceptualize space in a flat picture with linguistic theory."

Provenance: Lockwood Dennis Art Estate, Boulder, Colorado, USA

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#175861
Condition
Painting is signed by the artist on the lower right and in overall excellent condition. Signature, title, inventory number, and date are handwritten on verso.
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Lockwood Dennis Painting - "L.A. Freeway" (1995)

Estimate $1,500 - $2,000
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Starting Price $750
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