Lucky 13, paintings by David N. Goldberg at Barefoot Studios
Lucky 13
David N. Goldberg
December 3, 2005 - January 28, 2006

Closing performance - January 28, 2006, 8 PM
Now's the Time with Kenny Mandell on saxes & Ethan Cudaback on drums.

Sparked by an inspiration from Kandinsky I embarked on the challenge of creating non-objective or abstract work. I realized this approach to painting afforded me more freedom. I strove to free myself from the figure/ground relationship. I wanted to determine the depth of field at various points in the picture plane.
I also decided I would deliberately create ambiguities and tensions between shallow and deep space and energy and form in my pieces.
This approach allows me to maintain an open framework of my methodology. Therefore,
I can continue to challenge myself.
I have also worked on refining my color palette, making determinations when to use more saturated or subtle colors to orchestrate greater complexity in my harmony of color.
Biography/David Noah Goldberg
 
I was born in New York City on July 23rd 1951. My mother Vivian and my aunt Mell were both aspiring artists and studied at the Brooklyn Museum School. They introduced me to impressionist painting and various other modern art movements when I was a child. My mother influenced me by taking me to all the art museums in New York City as a child. When I was 11, at summer camp I painted sets for a production that was overseen by Earl Robinson, composer of Ballad for Americans. At another summer camp at Dartmouth, New Hampshire where participated in a softball tournament, I wandered into the basement of the University Library, there to my amazement was a mural by Orozco called Migration of the Western Spirit. At age 15, I studied art privately in Queens NY with Lillian Schwartz who encouraged me to notice my natural talent as a painterly colorist. While at Russell Sage Jr. High I took art classes and continued to follow through with my interest in drawing and painting at Forest Hills High School.
In 1969 I entered the BFA program of the State University College at New Paltz. The campus is ninety miles north of NYC in the Hudson River Valley. It was known at that time for the art education program. My most profound influence at the college was a drawing and painting instructor named Alex Minewski. Mr. Minewski studied with Hans Hoffman in NYC and with Nicolaides, the author of The Natural Way to Draw, in Paris. He imbued me with an unflinching determination to develop and trust my own vision of art. In 1973 I was awarded first place in an undergraduate show juried by Alan Frumkin owner of a well known 57th street art gallery in Manhattan. After leaving New Paltz, I made a pilgrimage by bus to Mexico City and Guadalajara to see Jose Clemente Orozco’s murals. The experience at Dartmouth never left me and I was inspired to see his other works in person. He portrayed his humanism spirituality & politics in a fiery imagery which I found compelling

In 1974 I moved to the San Francisco Bay Area. There I discovered a city surrounded by the dramatic natural beauty of the Pacific Coast. It possessed a magical atmosphere that had obvious influences of the Beat and Hippie movements. The poetry readings and vibrant music scene were invaluable sources of inspiration. The Bay Area afforded rare chance meetings with people I admired such as Robert Rauschenberg and Imogene Cunningham. Mr. Rauschenberg, humble and kind offered this advice to me, “…just keep painting.” I met Ms. Cunningham at an exhibition of hers at the De Young Museum. I was very impressed with her young spirit and uncompromising aesthetic integrity. I attended figure-drawing classes at the San Francisco Art Institute and continued to paint in my inimitable style of Figurative Expressionism. I worked as an artist’s model at City College of SF, Santa Rosa CC and also painted houses to support myself. I devoted as much time to painting as possible. I often hung out in North beach cafes where I sketched the local characters. In addition I filled my sketchbooks with colorful non-objective drawings where the harbinger of the next phase of my imagery was developing. By 1981 I was painting almost exclusively non-figurative. My way of painting continued to develop into grafittiesque and geometric movements. I built my own lexicon of form and color.

In 1990, I moved to Seattle, Washington. I lived in the Ravenna neighborhood just north of the University of Washington. I worked in my house teaching art and continued my house painting as well. I had many art shows in various venues such as The Virginia Inn, The Fourth Avenue Plaza, and The Painted Table. I met my wife Catherine who is also an artist. After  eight year in Seattle we spent two years living in New York and then resettled in Tacoma where we are raising our 8 yr. old Eli. Living in Tacoma since 2001, we now have a studio and an art gallery called Art on Center. I have shown at the Kittredge Gallery at University of Puget Sound and The Gallery at Tacoma Community College.