Arthur Gonzalez on Surfing Rejection, the Rat Fink, and Magic Realism
MAY 14, 202678 MIN
Arthur Gonzalez on Surfing Rejection, the Rat Fink, and Magic Realism
MAY 14, 202678 MIN
Description
<p>In this episode, host Hugh Leeman sits down with the Bay Area artist and educator for a wide-ranging conversation about creative identity, the art of handling rejection, and what it takes to build a life in art over four decades. Arthur traces his path from discovering lowbrow artist Ed "Big Daddy" Roth and Juxtapoz co-founder Robert Williams as an eleven-year-old in the streets of Sacramento, to abandoning photorealism, to fishing exploded ceramic shards out of a garbage bin and calling it sculpture — and finding, in that moment, exactly who he was as an artist.</p><p>Arthur opens up about the six consecutive graduate school rejections that nearly derailed his career, how studying under legendary California artists Robert Arneson, Wayne Thiebaud, and Manuel Neri at UC Davis transformed his practice, and why he applied for the NEA Fellowship so many times that four of those applications said yes. He also reflects on magic realism as a creative framework, the original dark mythology of Pinocchio, the closing of CCA and SFAI and what it means for the future of arts education in the Bay Area, and why every artist — no matter how established — needs to keep asking: what am I making, and why?</p>