ARTWORKS by Jeff Whipple
TO SEE WORKS FROM 2015 AND 2016 CLICK HERE
"I Will Not Be Ordered" pencil on paper, 40" x 32", 2013 from the series "Marching Orders"
Scroll down to see more examples. This is only a fraction of what is on the e-catalog.
FOR THE NONFIGURATIVE PAINTING PAGE CLICK HERE
CLICK ON THE IMAGE BELOW TO SEE LARGER SIZE AND INFO:
NOTE: There are 100s more images of recent work in the online catalog. |
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I have comprehensive e-catalog of my recent work. It's 123 pages and includes commentary about many individual artworks. The catalog is currently only up to 2011 and will be updated soon.
It's a large file so allow time for it to load on your system. |
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The above two images are stills from "The Ephemeral Spasm", a 5-channel video.
Click on them to see large views and details.
CLICK HERE TO SEE THE VIDEO OF EPHEMERAL SPASM
In 2011, I made a five screen player to show videos like "Ephemeral Spasm"
"The Spasm Between the Infinities", video installation, Miami Beach, Dec. 2006
Above: Still frame from "The Spasm Between the Infinities"
Click here to see the "Spasm Between the Infinities" flash video.
To see a video overview of "The Spasm Between the Infinities" - CLICK HERE
Above views are from a solo show at 621 Gallery, a 3000 square-foot space in Tallahassee. 65 works in all media were displayed. The opening was June 4, 2010. The Railroad Square Art Park office estimated more than 3000 people attended the opening.
Images from the opening of Jeff Whipple's solo show at 621 Gallery
are below. CLICK HERE FOR 100 IMAGE SLIDE SHOW.
Installation views of the solo show at 621 Gallery
are here: CLICK HERE FOR INSTALLATION VIEW.
"Spasm Head", photograph mounted on shaped wooden panel, 27" x 27" x 2", edition: 25, 2009
"Historian", oil on canvas, 50" x 40", 2007
"Figure Study with Spasm", pencil on paper, 40" x 30", 2009
"Legacy", oil on canvas, 40" x 50", 2007
"Patron", oil on canvas, 36" x 24", 2007
This painting won Third Place Award in Pinnacle, a national juried exhibition at Florida A&M University in June 2009. |
"The Consequences of Being, oil on canvas, 30" x 48", 2007
This painting won a Patron's Award in the Northern National Art Competition at Nicolet College in Rhinelander, Wisconsin, Summer 2007. |
"Savior", oil on canvas, 70" x 70", 2007
"Fashion Trend", pencil on paper, 42" x 30", 2007, Collection of David Smith, Lakewood Ranch, Florida
"The Mover and Shaker", oil on canvas, 70" x 70", 2007
Read the Orlando Sentinel Review of the Lake Eustis Museum of Art solo show.
Below are views of the exhibit at C. Emerson Fine Art
The May 2007 show at C.Emerson Fine Art (above) opened with a great turnout and many sales. To see photos of the installation click here.
For a slide show of the opening click here.
TO SEE MORE RECENT WORKS FROM 2003-5 CLICK HERE
To see older artworks click here.
Photograph Artworks - CLICK HERE
by Jeff Whipple
My artwork has always been fused with my philosophy of living, which is to register, chronicle and respond to life. In recent years I’ve made art about the amazing miracle of the individual cognizant being and its random brief appearance in the infinity of time. To represent that brief appearance in various subjective contexts, I’ve used a symbol comprised of three irregular three lines. The symbol represents an individual life. My artwork examines the way life is valued and the legacy we all have been given by the countless lives of our ancestors. The symbol has been in my artwork for 28 years. The three lines depict the basic perception of pattern: one element alone has no meaning, two could be coincidence but three is a pattern. It became a life symbol because the pattern of the most basic spasm of movement is what distinguishes the animate from the inanimate, the living from the dead. I call the symbol a “Spasm”. Each Spasm has the three lines but they all are slightly different to refer to the individuality of each life. Spasms are used in my artwork in many different ways and each particular meaning depends on the context. If the viewer understands them as a symbol for life they will arrive at their own interpretations about how the symbols interact with the imagery.The figures with Spasms over their eyes may refer to how some people see the world through their life experiences or through the experiences of others. Or they are trying to see some meaning in life. In some of my images people are covered with Spasms. This could represent how our lives are affected by the people who lived before us. Or it could be about people who are burdened or blessed by other lives. Or the figures could represent whole societies or civilizations. There are images of Spasms melting or burning like candles to represent how lives continually drip or melt away towards death. In some works hundreds of Spasms form a solid mass or fabric, which could represent groups of people, communities or human history. The Spasm began in my artwork in 1982 as a painterly element. I used the 3 markings as a repetitive pattern that suggested it wasn’t random. At that time I began presenting realistic images within fields of colors and markings and I’ve continued with that same format ever since. I initially used the Spasms to define space in the fields of colors and create moods or visual rhythms. They were sort of like percussion in music and sometimes they were like stitching that wove the composition together. The Spasm began as a design motif to support the imagery and it has now moved to the forefront to become the imagery. |