Matthew Bourbon | The Psychologist, 2012, acrylic on canvas, 48.5" x 30"
Bourbon shared his step-by-step process for and thoughts behind his painting Ms. Motives in this Process of a Painting piece…There are quiet andwonderful moments throughout his process – one of my favorites being the point in the painting where he has painted Ms. Motives’ legs so naturalistically, before covering them in their metaphorical and painterly geometric “tights.” - Ellen C. Caldwell, Los Angeles Contributor
Matthew Bourbon | Of Two Minds, 2013, acrylic on canvas, 30" x 30"
Playful, curious, and enticing, his works are something I want to see in abstracted art today – they are highly conceptual; they make me think, laugh, smile, and enjoy the bright, boldness of his humor, intellect, and wit.
Matthew Bourbon, Ms. Motives, 2013, acrylic on Canvas
Matthew Bourbon: Ms. Motives started with a basic desire to create a painting that had a haiku brevity. I wanted to highlight an equivocation between depicting things in a perceived pictorial space and painting things with a type of modernist flatness. I liked the basic idea/image of a person's legs touching the ground and something obscuring the top half of the figure. In past paintings I have used "abstract" forms as a kind of animate character within my paintings. In this instance I wanted to alter this slightly and place more emphasis on a kind of veil connected to the figure--almost like a garment--but not exactly. I only had a vague sense of it at the start.
MB: My insistence on flexible and sometimes obtuse relationships to ideas, themes and narrative within my art has parallels for me in a real human/social sense. I believe people are by nature communicating beings, but our efforts at clear communication are partial, contradictory and often opaque to the internal dialogues within our minds. Motivation, both as an artist, but also day-to-day motivation intrigues me. Our efforts to bridge this communication divide seems essential to how one comprehends or miscomprehends the lives and actions of others.
MB: I hope I am not too Pollyannaish, but I want all my painterly maneuvers to be relevant to this kind of thinking. Not that it all needs to be knowable to a viewer, but that all this runs around my brain and hopefully affects my decisions as I make my paintings.
MB: Essentially for me, Ms. Motives became a woman--who stands in for a type of otherness. She is already twice removed from me as both a fiction and since I am a man. Further, she is only revealed in the detail of her walking legs. I grant that there is a certain sensuous or even sexual quality to the image, but also analytic—which all seems germane to what this painting is for me in the largest sense.









