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If this studio shot is any indication, Tommy Taylor’s show at Institute 193 is going to be rad.
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An exhibition of Tommy Taylor’s new paintings opens at Institute 193 in September.
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My studio visit with Clint Colburn

Untitled (Tip of Tongue)
Sitting in Clint Colburn’s living room, I realize I’m surrounded by cats. A print of a leopard hangs above the couch, a picture of a tiger hangs over a bolt of groovy fabric on the opposite wall, and another framed leopard is propped against the mantel. To my left, a real-life cat (named Manx) stares at me with disdain.
“There are a lot of cats in here,” Colburn concedes as he enters from the studio carrying a box of his new work. He is whip-thin, his blonde hair pulled back into a lank ponytail. “I grew up with all this stuff. It’s my parents’ from the seventies, so it has that connection to my childhood. I keep it around because I’m interested in early influences…how my eye was trained to see from an early age.” I inspect a red dresser in the corner covered with stickers of the Garbage Pail Kids—deformed parodies of the Cabbage Patch Kids. “Those are Garbage Pail Kid stickers,” he chuckles, “like I said, early influences.”
Colburn grew up in Western Kentucky, but has lived and worked in Lexington for nearly 11 years. He attended the University of Kentucky, and now lives in a second floor apartment in a Victorian house close to downtown, which he shares with his girlfriend, Erin Eldred. The pair has converted an adjoining room into a studio space, where Colburn creates deeply self-reflective artwork surrounded by a clutter of books, supplies, and ongoing projects.

Limestone Bed
Colburn works in a variety of media, and often turns to unconventional materials: for every piece rendered on canvas or paper, there is another on an old book cover or scrap of poster board. When he paints, he occasionally eschews brushes, preferring to apply the paint with sticks or rough pieces of cardboard. Many of his newest works are mixed media compositions made with remnants salvaged from earlier drawings in marker or ballpoint pen. He says, “Before, I used outside material when I made collages…images from books, etcetera…but now I’m cannibalizing my own old notebooks.”
This process of recycling and layering is indicative of Colburn’s attitude towards his work. For him, the act of art making is a profoundly contemplative exercise, and a tool for self-discovery. “By the time I finish a piece, sometimes I don’t even remember how it started out. The whole reason for doing this is to push my subconscious to the front of my mind and see what comes out,” he explains.
Colburn’s process of incremental accumulation pushes some pieces beyond their original dimensions, resulting in diptychs and triptychs. “I’m fascinated by how a drawing can open up into another one,” he comments, “a big part of my process is about seeing how I can find the potential in what I’ve already made, and how I can tweak it. Everything is in flux.”
Because of the inward-looking nature of Colburn’s work, perhaps it’s not surprising that much of the imagery that appears in his art should be mirrored in his home and studio environment. He has adopted a visual language rooted in his early aesthetic development—prints of predatory cats from his parents’ basement, a psychedelic palette, the cartoonish grotesquerie of the Garbage Pail Kids—and reimagined it in fresh, compellingly meditative compositions.

Hanging Plant Life Plan and the Hanged Man
Clint Colburn has shown his work throughout the South and Midwest, as well as in Los Angeles and London. His exhibition “Mad Flag” was on display at Land of Tomorrow Gallery in Lexington, Kentucky, March 2 – March 23, 2012. For a video of that exhibit, click here. His publication Wild Glass Look Back, published by Space Face Books, is available in Institute 193’s webshop. To see more of his work, visit his website.
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Boone came to see me at the gallery. He wasn’t very impressed with the exhibit.
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Jonathan Williams’ 1972 portrait of David Hockney, on display now at Institute 193.
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Albert Moser’s panoramic photographs go on display at Galerie Christian Berst on July 1.
I copyedited a little publication of Moser’s photos a few months ago, and installed an exhibition of his drawings at Institute 193 this past January.
If you happen to be in Paris, you should check it out.
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A homeless woman named Linda roams around downtown Lexington, where she will offer to draw your picture in exchange for a dollar or two. I approve of this panhandling style, so if I have some cash on me, I usually commission a little something. It doesn’t hurt that she often offers to illustrate me riding on the back of a dragon or a unicorn.
Linda whipped up this masterpiece in February, during an event at Institute 193. I’m the one on the left looking like a lady librarian. The woman beside me, Sarah Wylie, is pregnant—Linda was thoughtful enough to include a little fetus nugget in the drawing.
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A few months ago, Oxford American Magazine asked Institute 193 to nominate a young artist for a feature about emerging Southern artists. Now the lovely and talented Lina Tharsing is sitting pretty at the #5 spot on their list of 100 New Superstars of Southern Art. My boss (nominated by the designer Natalie Chanin) is holding down #68.








