Ann Getsinger

Oil on Linen

 

2023 New Paintings

 
 

 

Panoptica

Ten oil paintings which all together are called Panoptica. Each painting is four feet high by three feet wide. Together they form a circle connecting the changing light of one day to the seasons and weather of one year. The landscape forms a circle as it goes from inland to ocean and back.
There is no beginning or end.

The foreground of each painting is dominated by a still life, each built on a different idea. These ideas interact and converse with each other, literally, conceptually, and metaphorically. The forms create a visual narrative that contrasts human and natural cycles. Each painting is stand-alone complete while at the same time integral to the whole.
In Springrise the sun rises as tiny shoots of grass grow from the rotted compost of the previous year. The series progresses through Lilac Attack to Summer Sailing, showing an afternoon with grasses growing taller, partially obscuring naked and carefree lovers playing with a toy sailboat. In Second Cutting, with evening falling, the tall grass is shown freshly cut, leaving an army helmet alone in the blood-soaked soil. Night falls in Midnight Sail as the winter wind blows feathers, seeds, and snowflakes from one painting to another, against a backdrop of darkened ocean. A full moon glows from the space between the two paintings. Finally, winter ends with the compost of early spring as The Ringmaster, a tiny toy bunny, holds court above foraging rabbits completing the circle at the conjunction of the burned remains of winter meeting the promise of fruit and new life in the warmth of another summer.

 

 

Artist Statement

“Rarely making preliminary sketches, I work as realistically as I want over an abstract foundation, essentially letting my mind wander in an intuitive way between subconscious, conscious, and super conscious. Integrating still life, landscape, and figures, painting is a trip into the many ways that anything relates to everything. My work reflects my life by integrating stillness and motion, a sense of time and timelessness, and most of all–mystery.
I often find myself in a place of enormous freedom, full of surprises.”
~ Ann Getsinger