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Artist Statement:
More information at the official Tom Curtis Website at www.tomcurtis.net Please feel free to contact me with comments or questions. I may not be prompt, but I WILL reply.
My work involves an intuitive and energetic exploration of form, color, line and juxtaposition.
This exploration involves ritualistic processes ...
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Artist Exhibitions:
Selected Exhibitions and Performance / Installations
"Artists in the Round" SomArts Cultural Center Main Gallery, San Francisco, Opening July 5th 2007
Artists Alley San Francisco 2006
Art SF "Hell Iz Other People" Group Show 2005
Fruitful Grounds San Francisco Solo Show 2003
Terrain Gallery "Ha!" Selections from the Mirth CollectionGroup Show ...
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Artist Galleries:
Coming Soon!
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Collections:
John and Marsha Goldman, Atherton, CA
Christopher and Amber Marie Bentley, San Francisco
The Braun Family, San Francisco, California, USA
The Shorenstein Family, San Francisco, California, USA
The Kaplan Family, San Francisco, California, USA
Elaine Chan Scherer, San Francisco, California, USA
Monte Thompson, Oakland, California, USA
Rose State College, Midwest ...
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Commissions:
The Old Federal Reserve San Francisco, CA USA
Tiffany and Company, San Francisco, CA USA
Saks Fifth Avenue, San Francisco, CA USA
San Francisco Ballet, San Francisco, CA USA
Silicon Graphics, Sunnyvale, CA USA
Netscape Corporation, Mountain View, CA USA
Oracle, Corp, Redwood Shores, CA USA
Kristy Yamaguchi, Always Dream ...
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The Press Democrat May 1996
“Artist’s work tells stories of humanity”
“Family Time,” Tom Curtis’s large artwork installed in Copperfield’s Café on Kentucky Street, is a mahogany plywood panel of quadrants colored white, green, brown and an orange-yellow, the colors of the seasons he remembers as a child in Oklahoma City.
At the top is a cream colored plaster cast of his pregnant wife’s abdomen, taken the day before their daughter was born. In the center, rotating at three times the speed of a second hand, is the plaster cast of their daughter’s body.
The daughter, Cyan, has, in effect, become part of the art, and the piece fulfills the function art had before it was displayed in museums and galleries.
“Native-American and African art told a story about an event or a belief.” Says Curtis. “The art contained that event or belief. That’s why it existed, to pass on a story, not as decoration.
Another piece, “Wild Blood,” tells another story. On a large red background with deep red splotches are flat, featureless monkeys, their arms curved and linked. They are simple, fun, toy-like, painted in bright colors as if decoration for a child’s room, but there’s an edge: a realistic, weathered, three-dimensional human skull in the upper left corner. Monkeys are thought to be the source of AIDS and Ebola viruses, and, in “Wild Blood,” their playfulness is an acute contrast to the macabre.
“Humans have the idea they can control nature, but when it comes down to it, that notion is just human folly,” says Curtis, 43, who works in a 10,000 square-foot studio near the Museum of Modern Art in San Francisco. “What humans co and what they think they can do is very absurd, and it’s important for artists to represent that.”
As much of human life is the attempt to create order form chaos, so, too, is the search for an AIDS cure.
“Medicine is order from the chaos of disease,” says Curtis, whose work is influenced by scientific research. “Art is the place scientists can bare their souls and where artists can be scientists. Look at Salk. He tested his polio vaccine on himself, He took a risk, and that came from the artistic side.”
Curtis’s exhibition illustrates his range of media: found objects assembled in extravagant displays, three-dimensional props, paintings, and kinetic pieces with sculptural elements.
Curtis, who makes his living making props for special events, was raised outside Oklahoma city, and as a teen-ager living in his parent’s garage learned the beginnings of the technical side of his art watching John Gnagy’s 1960s TV art show and pouring through his aunt’s “Famous Artists” correspondence school books.
At 24, he worked for two years in a stained glass and prop studios in Dallas, then moved to San Francisco to attend the San Francisco Art Institute, where he earned a master’s degree in painting and sculpture.
-Andrew Jowers
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