‘Father’ by Zach Mendoza

Artist: Zach Mendoza
Title: ‘Father’
Medium: Oil on panel
Dimensions: 10″ x 7″
Framing: Unframed
Year of Creation: 2021

NOTE: This piece was available to purchase as part of our ‘Mystical Rhythms’ show, which ran between 2nd – 23rd December 2022. If you would like to inquire about its current availability, please email sales@wowxwow.com and we will be delighted to assist.

Description

‘Father’ by Zach Mendoza

Artist: Zach Mendoza
Title: ‘Father’
Medium: Oil on panel
Dimensions: 10″ x 7″
Framing: Unframed
Year of Creation: 2021

About the Artwork:

“This painting is part of an ongoing series of portraits that I’ve been working on from photographs of sculptures and headstones that I took from Forest Lawn Memorial in Hollywood, CA. I always found Forest Lawn to be one of the quietest and most lovely parts of the LA area. It is a lush hillside that exists adjacent to a bustling city and ever-busy freeway. There is a unique solemness to the cemetery of course, but there is a great beauty to the well-trimmed grass and windy hill streets that traverse the hills. There is already so much symbolism built into these objects that stand above the earth and I think that this is an interesting space to occupy my mind while working. I think about ways to reimbue meaning atop these structures through my interpretation. Color is a tool that I’ve been playing with and choose to use with these. I think that there is a lot of room to run with monochrome despite what seems like a limitation. A single color can influence the work in a number of ways and the choice of color, similarly, seems to flavor the painting in a particular way also. Certain colors are reserved for the quiet solemnity subjects and others for the lighter ones and the historical use of colors in paintings and images to illicit certain emotions is something I’ve thought about in these as well. I think of the sculptor’s artistic choices in these commissioned marble subjects and I think most visitors to the cemetery find these symbols imediately identifiable. The common upward gazes seem to suggest hope and the downward ones suggest mourning. There are often floral motifs to suggest spring and rebirth and these things still command a sense of quiet not unlike a painting would in a gallery. I think that people go to see art in galleries to pursue this same sense of transcendent quiet. Headstones command reflection and I am fascinated buy them.” – Zach Mendoza

About the Artist:

(Artist Bio)

After graduating with honors from Art Center College of design in 2015, Zach’s exhibition history has continued to grow throughout the United States. His work has been featured in a number of galleries and in national publications including New American Paintings and Creative Quarterly among others. He has participated in numerous group shows and a number of solo shows as well. Of his work, Zach says “It is often a mishmash of ideas, images, half-truths and afterimages that become almost ghoulish amalgams of the sum of their parts. The process of creating, destroying, and then reassembling the ruins is a regular aspect of my work.”