In the StudioQ&ASeattle

Seattle: In the Studio with Philip Miner

Written by Andrew Katz Katz

Article hero image
I recently stopped by the studio of Philip Miner, located just blocks away from one of Seattle's working waterfronts. On the way in, an elderly gentleman stopped me and asked if I might let him and his sister in because they wanted see the saw blade that almost killed him years ago. After they located the saw blade and chatted for a bit, Philip and I sat down and talked about his work, his move from New York to Seattle, and how location can influence work.  —Joey Veltkamp, Seattle contributor JV: When talking about your process, a lot of it seems rooted in the question, "What possibilities still exist for abstraction?" PM: During the twentieth century, abstract painting often attempted to provide an aesthetic solution to particular problems. Some of those were political, some psychological, others phenomenological. I am interested in how that history can become a starting point for making pictures. I am asking how these particular types of images have potency today when I reuse these tropes in paintings. Not as indices. JV: While your work in I AM HERE, MO FO! at SEASON is painting, you also do collage work. How do the two bodies connect? The collage works and paintings are both ways I think about images. Perhaps one way to think about how they relate it is that I am interested in how images are used. On one hand I am involved with abstract painting and formal processes that speak to a specific history, where the on the other hand what I am interested in has more to do with the intersection of photography and painting. JV: What are you thinking about these days? I've been thinking about classicism actually. Greek idealism of the perfection of form. Picasso too. Mostly based on the advent of the exhibition here in Seattle, but also the use of collage and painting. JV: Has relocating from New York to Seattle influenced your work? I would say the most influential thing has been the change in the perspective of history. Everything in the West is so new, it's fascinating to see how the urban environment here has evolved. Things here have been built so quickly. There's a different speed of living here, and I suppose that transposes into how I am making my work here. It has also really shifted how I think about the relation of painted images and photographic ones, based on the time I spend now looking at artworks online. It has fueled my works on paper and the paintings to find a new place. What's funny is that nature hasn't really crept in much, even though I feel so close to it here. Perhaps that's what is next.... Philip Miner is currently on view in I AM HERE, MO FO! at SEASON in Seattle. Joey Veltkamp is an artist/writer living in Seattle where he runs the local art blog, best of.
A

Written by

Andrew Katz Katz

More stories

View all

THE MAGAZINE

Explore our magazine to discover exceptional artists

Open magazine with text, modern illustrations, and a list of artists on a pink background.
View issues

Call for Artists

Submit your work for consideration

New American Paintings is a juried exhibition-in-print and digital, presenting the work of 40 emerging artists in each issue.

View competitions

Your gateway to new art

Discover tomorrow's art stars, today

Two books on a wooden table with a modern decorative sculpture in the background.

PRINT + EARLY ACCESS DIGITAL SUBSCRIPTION

$179/YEAR

DIGITAL SUBSCRIPTION

$99/YEAR OR $10/MONTH

Each issue of New American Paintings features forty artists selected through our juried competitions—presented in a beautifully curated, full-color publication. Subscribers receive six issues per year, plus exclusive online access to current and past editions. Are you a collector? Consider our premium subscription and receive our museum-quality printed publication + access to each new digital issue two weeks before its general release.