
The ART Page
FUTURE ONE PERSON
EXHIBITIONS: September 5th - November 1st 2009
Homer Watson Gallery, Kitchener - Waterloo, Ontario
www.homerwatson.on.ca

"Painting" 2005 -
2008 Oil
and Collage on Panel 48 1/4" x 60 1/8"
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Artist Bio:
John Mars has three times won Ontario Arts Council
painting awards. His work has been featured in eight,
one person exhibitions in Canada and the United States and it has
been featured in many group shows.
"As a young artist, I had the good fortune of a
friendship with Graham Coughtry and, I was also acquainted with
Michael Snow. We played music together in jazz groups. I
learned a lot from just listening to those two guys talk about art.
Graham's expressionistic style had a huge impact on me. He used
great amounts of paint and although my work doesn't look at all like
his, he did get me into using a lot of paint. He also got me hooked
on collecting books on art history." |
"Painting" 2004 -
2005 Oil and Wax on Panel 25 1/8" x 21 1/8"
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"Initially my paintings were mainly rooted in the
landscacpe. Gradually, they became more abstract and, now they are
very much non-objective works. I'm no longer trying to make a
'picture' per say. I'm just involved in the act of painting now.
It's sometimes hard for viewers to get their head around the concept
that I am not trying to depict something. When I paint, it is just a
very natural act."
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"Any World" 1978 by John Mars Liquitex, Collage & colored pencils on paper 16 1/4" x
22 3/4"
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| The work of John Mars
has been exhibited at the following galleries: |
| S.A.W. Gallery, Ottawa
* |
| Kresge Arts Centre,
Michigan State University, East Lansing ** |
| State University of New
York at Buffalo |
| Cambridge Public Art
Gallery* |
| Art Gallery of Brant
and Glenhyrst, Brantford* |
| Oakville Centennial
Gallery* |
| Woodstock Public Art
Gallery* |
| Grimsby Public Art
Gallery ** |
| Chatham Cultural
Centre* |
| Mohawk College Art
Gallery, Hamilton |
| Neutral Ground Gallery,
Regina |
| Hamilton Artist's
Inc. |
| Charlotte Gallery,
Brantford |
| * denotes painting in gallery's permanent
collection |
| * denotes one person show
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The paintings and photographs of John Mars have appeared on
album covers, posters and numerous magazines in North America. A
recent painting appeared in the Union Gas Annual Report for Ontario. The
images are all copyrighted but, you are welcome to print out any of the
images to stick on your fridge or whatever. To inquire about sales or, any
official reproduction rights or, to inquire about exhibiting the works, e-mail us click
here.
Thumbnail Gallery - Paintings: Click
to view larger scale (ca. 60kB)
A selection of works from an inventory of hundreds of
paintings by John Mars.
More to come...the oil paint is still drying.
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The oil paintings
are a very gradual process and, they take shape over a period of
many years. Gradually, they are layered up into a thick impasto. The
acrylic paintings on paper are much more immediate
works.
The paintings were
catalogued and photographed by John's studio assistant Zipporah
Stephenson.
"Painting" 1986 - 2002 by John Mars Oil on
Panel 47 3/4" x 37" |
How I Became A Painter by John
Mars
Below is a letter, which I sent by regular
mail to Betty Eslick in 2005. Betty is a retired lady, and, she is a
volunteer docent at the Albright-Knox Art Gallery in Buffalo, New
York. We met at a lecture on Clyfford Still in the auditorium of the
gallery. It turns out that Betty and I are both long time fans of
Still's work, and, after an enthusiastic discussion, I promised to
mail her a copy of a rare article on the artist that she had not
read. All of this somehow led to my writing a personal letter to
Betty that included a series of annecdotes that attempted to explain
how I was inspired to become a painter, while I was still a
rebellious, young high school student
...
April 1,
2005
Dear Betty
Whenever I look
into the archives here at Cotchford House (my home), I am always surprised
at what I find. I go downstairs, looking for the Horizon
Magazine with the 1979 story on Clyfford Still in order to xerox the story
for you and, I find that I have an extra copy. Lucky you. So,
enjoy.
It looks like I picked up the extra
copy of the mag for 25 cent$ (at a thrift shop, I would guess). Glancing
at the subscription mailing label, I think how amusing it is that it
once belonged to Burleigh ( pron: BUR LEE ) Henry, who was vice principal
at my ol' alma-mater, North Park Collegiate, in Brantford, Ontario. I
note that it looks like, besides the fact that B. Henry lived on what is
quite a nice street, he must have been hipper than I realized in the old
days! He had a subscription to
Horizon?!
As part of the
administration of dear old NPC, Burleigh was most definitely none too
pleased when John Mars, a long-haired hippie type, was elected
president of the Student Council of said high school in
1971. I was the first president of the school to have a
political agenda as opposed to the previous ones who seemed mainly
concerned with sock-hop dances, school spirit and, decorations at
football parties. I worked on those activities enthusiastically as well,
but, I did have other fish to fry. Burleigh and, I sat on the Senior
Advisory Board together, due to our respective positions. We had our
moments, to say the least.
At first, the
administration were shaking in their boots, worrying that the new wave of
elected kids were overly influenced by Jerry Rubin, Huey Lewis and
The Chicago Seven and, Germaine Greer etc. Me and, my newly
elected colleagues knew that these ol' dudes were alarmed. That gave
us a distinct advantage. We did not want to burn the school
and/or steal their books but, we knew that they had some arcane rules that
we wanted them to reconsider.
In 1971 at North Park
Collegiate, the freaks had taken over from the frats. However, by the
end of the term, B. Henry and, the two other principals were literally
telling me how proud they were of what my lil' group of political,
thinking characters had accomplished. We changed the constitution of
the school and, the staff of the high school came to realize that, we
actually had some grey matter. We weren't there to follow the
hilarious doctrine that Jerry Rubin put across in "Steal This Book". We
turned out to be much more sensible than they all thought. At the end
of my year, I asked the 3 principals (including B. Henry) to
sign my yearbook, much to their surprise. I respected them and, they
respected me, at the finish up. They all signed with nice
comments.
Funny, how an address label can
bring back a flood of memories.
At
the same time ( circa 1971-1972 ), I put the school's art teacher on
his ear. I already knew that I was one of the few kids at NPC
that was quite likely to continue with visual art in some way and, he did
not have a clue how much I loved working with paint. Mr.
Fletcher had virtually no painting talent himself and, I think that he
wanted to be teaching math or anything else. Early that year of my
Grade 13, he told us that the next project was to do a
painting. OK. HuH? He gave us absolutely no direction,
except to tell us who in our beloved, lunch bucket Brantford, Ontario
(I now call it Gretzkyville) sold oil paints and, acrylic paints and,
then the F man told us to use whichever we wanted. I asked
what we were supposed to paint for said project and, he
said, whatever you want.
On a
project deadline day, Fletcher would call out all the names of your
classmates in alphabetical order, asking each of you all to bring
your thing up to the front and, show it to him and, he would then jot
down a mark (from 3 10?) in his ledger, while adding either few or,
else absolutely no comments of his own. On this particular deadline
day, I knew for a fact that no one else in the class had the project
completed. It sort of went like this:
Fletcher: Dave
Armstrong? Student: Sorry sir, not
done
Fletcher: Mike
Bradley? Student: Not done,
sir
Fletcher: Cindy
Charlick? Student: Sorry sir.
Fletcher: Kevin
Cosman? Student: Not
done.
or, whatever the case was....
Until he gets to the letter M in the
alphabet. By then, is he mad or
what?
I'm done, in more ways than
one. Johnny walks up to the front with a totally non-objective
oil painting, with fairly thick impasto. 19 inches high, by 16 and a
half inches wide on a Masonite panel (with no knowledge that it should
have had several coats of gesso on the panel as a ground oh well
!).
Thousands of ochre strokes from a half inch wide brush and,
"Painting" 1971 by
John Mars Oil on panel 19" x 16
1/2" | a slightly
less wide brush, descend from the top. Added later
are, jagged burnt umber, violet and red dashes, with some
scattered yellow dashes at the bottom. A bunch of globby
shingle like strokes all descend from the top edge. All of
this was painted while listening to two records over and over. One by
the genius jazz composer/ bassist Charles Mingus and, his group with
Eric Dolphy on alto sax and bass clarinet. Another by Sonny Rollins
(which had some weird oil painting on the cover). The whole process
seemed to make sense to me, at the time. It still does to
this day. I was having fun. I was only thinking: let's be
creative. On that day, I walk up to the front and, the
dialogue sort of went like this:
Fletcher: What's this supposed to be,
Mars? Mars:
It's............. my painting sir. Fletcher: Of
what? Mars: I
don't know. Fletcher (abruptly, now) : What do
you mean you don't know? You don't know what it
is?!. Mars: Well
sir, it's my painting. You said that we could paint whatever
we wanted. Fletcher: I can't mark this
GET OUT !
Now, keep in mind, Betty
not only was I not throwing erasers at some girl and, causing some class
disturbance like some idiots might be on certain art class days, but, I
knew that I was the only person that had actually completed the work that
that doingie Bill Fletcher had asked for.
He wants to see if he can
next say Lucille Minshall? and, see if whoever is next in
the alphabet has managed to finish something that might look a little more
like a picture. Too bad that no one else in the class has managed to
finish a painting by the due date. Again, knowing that my fellow
students has nothing to show him yet, I then asked Mr.
F...
Mars: Does this mean that I am
out of your class for the day or, for good
or, what?. Fletcher: I don't know, just
get out. (With the Martian thinking, but, not impolitely saying What
does he
know?).
Now, on my way to the
door, I imagine that I should be going straight to the
principal. Within split seconds, I have decided that I will tell Mr.
Kilmer that Mr. Fletcher could give me 1 out of 10, but, that
if he can't mark this, then Fletcher should not be teaching anything
to anyone and, that furthermore, he was not teaching anything to me at
present. As I am sure you can imagine, I had already spent a lot of
time in the principal's office since I was elected to council at the end
of the previous school year. I was always, calmly arguing a lot of
things. I was always straight forward with the principal about my
opinions. Said principal was Glenn Kilmer, a man of German
descent who actually had a moustache like Adolf Hitler's for several
years in the 1960's!!! What?! Truth can be stranger than
fiction. NPC yearbooks and school newspapers can prove this
fact.
In
those days, my friends and, I all listened to the Firesign Theatre lps,
especially one that contained a skit called High School Madness. We
felt that, with our Hitler-esque, moustachioed principal at the helm,
we were virtually living inside of that beserk comedy routine.
I
digress.
At any
rate, as soon as I was kicked out of Fletcher's class and, hit the
hallway carrying my oil on panel, along came Abigail Watson, who was in
her first year of teaching art and, in her early twenties. She was on
her way to Fletcher's room to borrow a box of erasers or, whatever...the
next conversation went sort of like
this:
Abigail: Hi John. Wow,
what's that? Mars: My
painting that I made. Abigail: That's
fantastic. Mars:
Really? Mr. Fletcher does not seem to think so, he just kicked me out
of his class, based on how this thing looks... I think.
I then proceeded to reiterate
the then current story to Ms. Watson, who told me to wait right there in
the hall. Within two minutes Abigail was back. She had told
Fletcher that she would like to take me into her class and, he agreed to
accept her marks, if I agreed to go into her
class. What?! I gladly followed Abigail down the hall to
her class room, immediately.
So, I ended up in a class of
mainly grade ten women. There were two guys in the class besides me
and, Abigail's period four class basically consisted of our junior girl's
basketball team. How cool was that? Plus, I ended up
gaining a soul mate - the very beautiful (in more ways than one
hundred) Elizabeth Alexander Rose (aka EAR), who I am still friends with
to this day.
Later, when I was
in my mid-twenties, the painting that I wanted Fletcher to consider
ended up being selected by a couple of different museum directors and, it
was included in a couple of my one person museum shows! The painting
had no signature or date on the front (that info was on the verso) and,
those directors just assumed that it was part of my then current body of
work and, picked it to be included in the shows that they were
presenting.
What
if Mr. Fletcher knew that I went on to make painting the most
important activity in my life? I doubt that he has taken
note.
Enjoy the Horizon
Magazine on Clyfford like I enjoyed hearing your stories about our mutual
hero and, I will hope to have the chance to hear more stories some
day, from my new friend Betty. Clyfford is the reason that
painting is the important thing in this life to me.
All the best,
John Mars
 "Painting" 2004 - 2005 by John
Mars Oil on Panel 7 1/8" x 12
5/8"
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Thumbnail Gallery -
Photographs: (Click to view larger scale)
The images shown here in the photo gallery are
available for licensing and John is also available as a portrait
photographer. |