High
school counselor from Denver is featured artist at NJC gallery
show
Closing
reception will be held February 21
By
Barbara Baker
NJC
Marketing Director
If
you are on the campus of Northeastern Junior College between now and February
21st, you’ll want to enjoy the artwork of Paul Oser, on display now
in the Peter L. Youngers Fine Art Gallery located inside the E.S. French
Hall. “The Art of a Journey” gallery show may be seen weekdays
from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. by visiting the liberal arts building on campus.
Oser,
who lives in northern Denver, is currently a school counselor at Pomona High
School. Three
years ago, he accompanied a group of juniors from Arvada High School to do a
college visit here. Terry Ruch, a metro area admissions/alumni coordinator for
the college, who was leading the group’s tour, realized through conversation
that Oser was an accomplished artist and suggested he connect with the gallery
curator and schedule to have a showing here in Northeastern
Colorado.
Imagine
astronomy, biology, and art rippling from the same geometric pools of circles,
squares and triangles, from solid and fluid states and you have Oser at his
best. “As I wrap shapes around my own worlds, order comes from chaos in finite
terms in present tense,” Oser writes about his exhibit. He calls it an
“unveiling of a debut retrospective of thirty years of such progressions.”
According
to Oser, the 20 paintings in this show are such stones left from pathways he’s
explored since his senior year in high school 30 years ago. “They represent a
journey that helped me rise above the looseness of doodled hills, rigidity of
drafted structures, and the splashing about in many pigmented pools,” he says.
“On the whole, I search to fuse the duality of a world both geometric and
organic.”
Oser
says his paintings require building or breaking visual ideas until something of
substance forms. He observes basic elements of shape, color, and proportion and
then using exaggerate lighting effects, he applies mosaic, cubist, curvaceous,
angular, or tubular shapes. He likes to explore undulating patterns of cool and
warm colors as he tries to represent natural rhythms of day and night, parts and
whole, land and sky.
“I
paint from nature, photos, self-created clay models, and doodles,” Oser says.
“Often I quickly work out on paper a feeling or idea I want to convey and then
go back and forth between the bigger picture and the smaller matter to resolve a
piece of art. Sometimes I tinker. Sometimes I don’t. I admire the work of
Wassily Kadinsky, Chuck Close, Paul Cezanne, and Edward
Hopper.”
This
featured artist does indicate that as of late, he is loosening up. “The
spontaneous overflow from a paint-laden palette knife or lightly held brush
unearths emotional reservoirs,” he said. “Having primal, nonverbal, instinctual,
painterly experiences opens me up to my hunches, passions, patterns and themes.
So when I paint my colors come straight from the tube, my contours from
unfettered angles and curves.” Oser indicates that prior to a Denver series
after the 9-11 tragedy, his work was more tightly controlled. His later work
reveals that he has relaxed, He’s left canvases unfinished, draft marks
visible, and paint less evenly applied and says that this lack of perfection has
its own reward.
Two
paintings in the show are of special interest. The painting
14th and Grant uses light, shadow and strong color for a film
noir feel of the city of Denver both pretty and gritty. “I was teaching
in an inner city school in 2001 when a student told me that the Twin Towers
fell,” explains Oser. “I had just visited New York City one month prior and had
been living on the 10th floor of a condo downtown. A series of
paintings emerged from those experiences celebrating life as a dweller
downtown.” He said that Edward
Hopper, some Cubists, and many others use bold and primary colors and structures
and he likes this kind of art. The painting Dog Squared ,
according to Oser, “depicts my seven year-old best friend, Spencer. He is an Old
English Sheepdog and he brightens my life with constant hopes for snacks and
walks. The use of pigment both white and bright, with Chuck Close elements, and
undertreated canvas deconstructs yet one more staring contest with me. The
geometric over lay on natural objects intrigues me to look towards new worlds
merging.”
Oser
originally hails from Cincinnati, Ohio and studied pre-med at Xavier University
before completing a bachelor’s of art in Literature and Humanities from
Metropolitan State College of Denver. He holds an master’s degree in school
counseling from the University of Phoenix. This
year marks his 20th year as an educator in American high schools. He has taught
English Literature in Belize, ESL Earth Science, theology, art, and Spanish in
Colorado. He has enjoyed travels in the states, Europe and lots of places south
of the border. To stay open-minded, he tries to learn more than his memory can
handle, write a poem a year, paint a lot, and laugh and sweat daily. To Oser,
art is like spirituality. It is both a personal journey and a collective leap of
faith.
“I
was a senior in high school when a physics teacher told our class that the human
body measures up to be the midpoint between largest stellar distance and the
smallest subatomic particle,” he recalls. “This led to thinking about my own
brief walk on a spinning planet midst many spinning spheres which are somehow
unified in an infinitely grand web. That’s both cool and humbling. Do I pluck
the strands of it? Or leave no trace behind? Do I matter to timeless space? Or
do the stones I overturn somehow ripple elsewhere?”
Oser
is without doubt, an interesting artist and character. A closing reception for
the show, which Oser will be attending, will take place on Thursday, February
21st from 4 to 5 p.m. at the gallery. The reception and refreshments
are free to the public. For any questions or more information regarding this
exhibit please contact NJC Gallery Director, Emily Vines, at 970-521-6710 or via
email at Emily.Vines@njc.edu.
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