That slightly unsavory looking fellow making entreaties... I don't think he knows who he's dealing with. Neither did I...
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... but I had a feeling I'd stumbled on someone worth investigating further. This Alex Ross was different somehow.
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Alex Ross once said, "As one who has experimented with practically all known mediums, materials, and tools, and has, I hope, a mind unencumbered by academic regulations, I am disappointed that I have not yet come up with that secret technique to mystify all the experts."
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"I am convinced, however, that my experiments are not wasted."
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Alex Ross was indeed tirelessly experimental in the art of picture-making. He wrote the words above in 1962, but it was already evident to Norman Kent when he interviewed Ross 15 years earlier in 1947: "Your newest work is losing its slickness," said Kent, "and I attribute this in large measure to your experimenting with mixed methods."
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"One of these days an art director will call you up and tell you not to bother with making a finish - that he is going to make color plates right from your sketch."
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(It happened in Cosmopolitan magazine, 1956 ~ L)
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Ross' experiments with media and style - and with subject matter - only accelerated during his busy 1950s period. "I believe I spend more time planning a picture than in the actual painting," said Ross. "The subject is my first consideration. At this point I face a crucial decision. I am one of those odd people who have a genuine liking for both modern and traditional painting."
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"Where this paradox will lead me is anyone's guess."
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Continued tomorrow
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