Artist: Brad Hatch
Title: Red Sea Meets Desert Sand
Size: 24" x 36"
Medium: Digital Photography Giclee on Gallery Wrapped Canvas
Artist Information
Biography:
I
was born and raised in Salt Lake City Utah. Right out of high school I
joined a group of musicians doing performances using the latest
electronic music technology along with lights, slide projectors, dancers
and other forms of visual art. We performed at the Hanson Planetarium
and other venues in Salt Lake. In the mid-70’s we did one of the first
ground breaking music videos with a well known videographer named Jack
Vetterli. At the time I concentrated on electronic music composition and
production, with visual arts as a background interest.
In
the 1980’s I studied photography and psychology at the University of
Utah. I shot portfolio pictures for dancers in the dance department. I
also shot and produced a slide show for student services at the
University of Utah combining music and images. I have had my work used
in advertising, including a project for the Utah State Travel council
who exhibited one my pieces in the Salt Palace Arena, home of the Utah
Jazz pro basketball team.
After
graduation, I moved to Michigan where I acquired a master’s degree in
social work at the University of Michigan. During my time there, I made
several trips into inner city Detroit where I experimented with shooting
pictures of the urban decay. What was urban blight to others was a rich
environment of colors and textures for me to do photographic
experimentation. Using a city in decay, I tried to achieve the same
contrasts in color and texture that I was trying to achieve in sound
with my electronic music.
After
graduation, I moved to Fort Collins Colorado where I was employed as a
medical social worker and Pourdre Valley Hospital. During this time I
continued my experimentation into abstract photography and was
successful in exhibiting in the Walnut Street Gallery in Old Town Fort
Collins.
In
2001 my photographic vision was realized even more when I went digital
with cameras and Photoshop. The change from audio mediums to visual,
from synthesizers and multichannel recording, to cameras and Photoshop,
have given me the opportunity to translate principles of artistic
expression from one medium to another.
Statement:
My
photography starts by shooting images of the convergence of man made
and manipulated objects and nature's process of reclaiming these
materials. This includes subjects such as rusting metal, flaking paint
on wood, or rotting fabric. I choose my shots based on their texture and
formal composition, with as much color variation as I can find. In
Photoshop I play with the contrast, hue and color saturation to bring
out a tasteful blend of contrasting elements in the work. The end result
is artwork that looks more like an oil or acrylic painting.
My
art seeks to capture the dramatic conflicts of industrial society's
attempts to bend raw materials to our will and natures divergent goals
to exact constant change and impermanence. The paint on a building or
car is meant as much for preservation as it is for looks. When it gives
way to nature, patterns in cracks may appear and layers of paint, primer
or rust, newly exposed, create depth in the image. If this can be
compared to a dance, it would be the tango with its passion and drama
being played out between two bodies moving with a mix of harmony and
conflict to create art in movement. My art chronicles our emotional
dance with nature. Working on an abstract emotional level it transcends
definition to reveal something deeper in ourselves. I hope in
experiencing my work you will be able to connect with these emotions in a
new journey of discovery.