"Bauhausian” is a playful riff on bauhaus aesthetics, mostly focused on the works of Klee. My undergrad education was at the original american iteration of the famous Bauhaus school in Germany. The red circle is a recurring element in bauhaus design because of the purity of the circle and red as a powerful primary color. In my eduction the red circle was almost an inside joke. In the spirit of the bauhaus, I experiment with aligned painted forms across a 3 dimensional space and reimagine paintings as physical spaces. - Gregory (2022)
Gregory Scott received his bachelor's degree from the IIT Institute of Design in Chicago in 1979. Creating works that blur the distinction between painting, photography, and video, he returned to graduate school at the age of 49 to strengthen his knowledge of art history and video-making. In 2008 he received his Master of Fine Art from Indiana University.
Scott’s recent mixed media work combines traditional oil painting on panel with flat screen HD video and archival digital printing, creating layer upon layer of illusion with genuine wit and humour. As well as exploring (and confounding) our assumptions about the individual media of painting, photography and video, his works also comment upon the human condition: humour, play, desire, identity, loneliness, and melancholy. Scott often references or includes paintings by other artists in his work and in the present piece he is clearly referencing British street artist Banksy. Throughout his works he quotes from artists ranging from 19th century painters like Manet to contemporary names like Banksy.
Artist Statement:
“I am a painter and a photographer. My early paintings were often based on my photographs. So, the two mediums have always been connected for me. I recently began to produce figure paintings with tightly cropped compositions resulting in canvases of people missing various parts of their anatomy - heads, legs, arms. A quick “what if” study photo of myself filling in the missing body parts in these paintings was the “a-ha” moment that led to my Impositions work. These images explore different approaches for imposing paintings within photographic images.
Some of the artistic issues I am exploring include dimensional perception as viewed in a painting vs. a photograph; the demarcations between photography and painting; perceptions of photographic truth; and introducing the artist's hand and imagination into the world of the literal photograph. What really drives my creative process, however, is the desire to evoke intriguing emotional narratives within beautiful photographs. The work explores humor, play, desire, loneliness, and melancholy. In most cases the titles are an integral part of the communication and have been carefully considered to add meaning without constricting interpretation. Guiding all of this is my desire to make this work accessible to all audiences.
The set staging in Impositions is often self-consciously visible. It is important for the viewer to see the mechanical apparatus that supports the canvas. The goal is to bring a sense of honesty to the finished piece and avoid the realm of digitally manipulated images as well as the over-produced sterility of commercial studio shoots.”