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An Artist is Born
I have always been one
to follow my passions through self teaching and doing. As a young
boy growing up in Shreveport, Louisiana, I began developing my
creativity by building elaborate forts from bamboo stalks I cut down
near my home. Later, I helped my father, a masonry contractor, build
commercial and residential buildings. After my father acquired his
own manufacturing plant, I expanded my medium to metal, learning to
weld functional art pieces from steel. In early adulthood, I
traveled the United States and abroad working in the communications
construction business. The aesthetic qualities of a well-constructed
communications system trained my eye and fueled my desire to always
be absorbed with physical form and aesthetics. In my early
thirties I developed a passion for outdoor sports and began
skydiving. I was fascinated by the artistic formations created by
skydivers in freefall and the techniques we used to achieve them. I
left the communications business and spent several years as a
professional skydiving photographer and videographer. My connection
with
the
form and movement of skydivers as an observer of human sculpture in
motion influenced my decision to embark on the ever-changing
forms possible through stone carving. My yearning to be totally
engrossed in the technical and artistic process in a more personal
way was further fulfilled. I gave up skydiving and rallied my skills
for the most satisfying artistic pursuit
yet.
Sonoran Desert Inspiration
Continually
drawn to spectacular natural surroundings, Mark and his wife moved to
their home in Phoenix adjacent to the Mountain Preserve. Inspired and
grounded by the beauty and tranquility of the Sonoran desert and
surrounding mountains, Mark applied his artistic talent to the creation of
unique rock sculptures, fountains, and water features, combining the
natural splendor of the native rocks with an artistic flair.
Mark’s first sculptures
were fountains designed as landscaping features using schist and granite,
native rocks found locally. Over time, his work evolved into pieces of
sculpture with a water component, rather than “fountains,” and then to
sculptures in and of themselves.
This evolution led Mark
to
expand his medium to include stones from around the world, including onyx, marbles,
travertine, sandstone, calcite, alabasters, and soapstone. His carvings
explore each stone type to uncover it's unique qualities. Mark’s work
encompasses a variety of abstract styles and the generous use of negative
space.
"I like to
push the limits of the material whenever possible to uncover each stone’s
unique personality. My sculptures
often start out as mental images put to paper,
but my philosophy is that the stone gets the ultimate glory. I use my
tools to discover it’s most natural expression in the context of my
vision.”
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Awards
Go Downtown
Albuquerque Arts Festival, 2009: 3rd Place, Best Art
Utah Arts Festival
2010: Best in Show |
EXHIBITS
March 11, 2010: Solo
Exhibition, Mystique Gallery, Scottsdale, AZ
February 20-22, 2009: Broadway Palms Dinner Theatre, Mesa, AZ
February 2009: Sedona Arts Center, Group Show, "Romancing the Arts"
September 12, 2008:Sunnyslope Art Walk
July 18, 2008: Frasher's Steakhouse and
Lounge, solo exhibit for Farmer's Insurance, March of Dimes auction
July/August 2007: Phase Four
Studios,
group show July through August
May 2007: Sedona Arts Center,
group show
August 4, 2006: Studio Tadd (First
Friday Art Walk) group show
June/July 2006: The “A” gallery
(First Friday Art Walk) downtown Phoenix
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