''brdy bnch''. 36 x 36 inches. Acrylic/oil on canvas.
Artistic Truths Through Satire
When the funny bone is hit, we laugh despite the neurological responses telling our brain it is supposed to hurt. Whether we see, hear it, or feel something humorous, we laugh. It is easier to laugh at truths to lessen the blow of a garish truth. Some visual compositions may come across as funny, witty, or comical, yet we are laughing in agreement with the artists observation. Sometimes we may not want to take certain medicines knowing they improve health and/or lessen pain. By adding humor, so to speak, it is an easier pill to swallow. Satire brings illumination to a serious issue or observance that is worthy of in-depth conversation or contemplation making the subject matter open for discussion.
Curtis Sneary has dedicated a number of acrylic and oil compositions to visually interpret what is not considered the social norm. One of his larger works “brdy bnch”, expresses the accessibility and technological advances with handheld devices that has changed how, as a society, we communicate and interact with one another. Whether it be family, friends or acquaintances.
The opening scene of the popular 70’s sitcom, The Brady Bunch, was with the family members looking at each other and acknowledging each other. Looking from person to person, frame to frame and finally directly at the viewer to acknowledge their presence before finishing the opening credits of the show (You can watch it here if you need a refresher). Sneary has set the opening scene of the Brady Bunch show to display the family members each in their respective evenly spaced boxes modestly dressed with the exception of adding today’s gadgets. Smartphones, gaming devices such as the PS vita or Nintendo DS and tablets. Everyone within the picture plane has a device. The text in the center of the canvas is reduced to a text message with the vowels taken out. Their body language should also be noted. No one is looking at each other. Each figure is engaged in some variation of an introverted position fully focused on the device in front of them. Although it may appear that Mrs. Brady is looking at you, guess again, she is looking over the viewer. Looking at the composition as a whole the irrelevance of connection and isolation are depicted well. Sneary states “ [T]hough the painting is humorous, the message … is this might not be a good direction for society, families are becoming fragmented and these devices are impacting us in a negative light.” Aside from his satirical works, the artist also paints landscapes in the Saint Petersburg area since receiving his degree from up north many years ago.
Curtis Sneary had his training from a private art school, The Columbus College of Art and Design in Columbus, Ohio. During high school his then art teacher, Lee Eckleberry, noticed his talent and was able to grant him a scholarship to CCAD to further develop his skills as a fine artist. Since his training and years of experience, most of Sneary’s larger pieces, such as “brdy bnch” are made with acrylic and oil. First the acrylic is applied to the canvas as the base layer and then a water based oil paint is added on top of the canvas that creates a more manageable smoother surface. Sneary’s landscape pieces are usually oil paintings since they are completed on location in an Impressionistic style.
For some artists their creative process may be working from images in their head, drawing in a sketch book, drawing from models, or whatever the case may be. For Curtis Sneary, he enjoys riding around on his bike until a scene strikes him and going with the feel of it while painting landscapes or manifesting ideas that hang around in his head. If you would like to see more of Sneary’s landscape work you can stop by Community Coffee in the Grand Central District, Lonnie’s Cafe on Central or the St. Petersburg Chamber of Commerce for those of you that are in the St. Petersburg area. If you enjoy what you see share it! :)
8 January 2014
The Donald as the Tin Man? Yes, please.
JANELLE FAIGNANT MAY 11, 2016 10 PM
You wouldn’t think Marilyn Monroe, Fred Sanford, and Donald Trump have anything in common. But local artist Curtis Sneary has rendered satirical pop art versions of the movie siren, grouchy TV dad, and fiery businessman. Iconic images are his playing field, and when you see them you can’t stop looking.
In Swah-rey on Central Avenue in St. Pete, Sanford stands beside his tattered sofa clutching his heart: ‘This is the big one Elizabeth!”
In Pom Pom’s Teahouse & Sandwicheria a print of a modern day Monroe famously poised on the subway grate takes a selfie on her iPhone.
And propped up on Sneary’s easel is his latest project — Trump as the Tin Man, skipping down the yellow brick road, which now resembles bars of gold, arm in arm with a Hillary-faced Dorothy.
“Her nose was too short; I just lengthened it,” Sneary says. “It can be off by an eighth of an inch between the nose and the mouth, and that can make the biggest difference.”
He lives on a quiet, sunny, brick-paved Kenwood street, and his studio sits tucked in the back of the pea-green house he shares with his wife and son. This is where he’s putting the finishing touches on the Trump and Clinton piece as music plays in the background.
“Trump is the Tin Man and he’s trying to find a heart,” his wife, Beth, says, “and Hilary’s trying to go home, to the White House.”
A friend heard on the radio that Clinton’s favorite movie is the Wizard of Oz and asked if Sneary knew that before he started the painting.
“I didn’t,” he said. “It was weird. I was kind of channeling.”
Sneary produces newspaper clippings, cartoon illustrations, magazine photos and articles, all used as references for the painting.
“I took a photo of Beth and I for the bodies,” he says, holding a picture of them standing in a driveway, posed the same way as the figures in the painting.
He first makes acrylic sketches, to get a feel for it, before he paints over the sketch in oil.
“But I start with sketching,” Sneary says.”The ideas just come from filtering what’s around me.”
To say that pop culture, television and movies are a big influence on his work only scratches the surface.
Sneary’s parents divorced when he was young and Beth says he was essentially raised by the television. A lot of his paintings have to do with emotional childhood associations, with an adult twist.
“Some of these are characters that come to you when you’re home by yourself as a kid,” Beth says. “And the scenes are scenes that he has a connection to.”
A painting of an angry, open-mouthed Jack Nicholson screaming at the nurse to put the TV on captures the famous scene in One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest.
“I have actors I like,” Sneary says. “And I like climatic moments in movies.”
He re-imagines familiar images in a new context to communicate with people, and Beth says most of his work is a commentary on something.
“Because people have these things in common,” Beth says, “Most of us know (the Wizard of Oz.)”
Childhood toys are also subject to interpretation in Curtis’s world.
A striking, bold-colored rendition of the boardgame “Operation” is being fed into an MRI machine in a piece called “MRI before Operation.”
“I had an MRI. It freaked me out,” Sneary said. “A lot of (my art) is anxiety-based, and life experiences. And I loved that game.”
Sneary discovered painting as a senior in high school. His art teacher picked up on his talent right away, and offered him a scholarship.
“His parents had basically not saved any money for him to go to college, no plans for him at all,” Beth says. “(There was no) encouragement with his art. That this one teacher recognized it was a miracle. It was a miracle that he went to college and got the scholarship when there were no plans for him at all. This one person really made a difference in his life.”
Married for 16 years, with a son who just turned 14, Sneary and his wife have lived in St. Pete for 14 years now. They are a team in his artwork, with Beth handling business issues and modeling for many pieces, (her body became Marilyn Monroe’s in that painting) and their goal is to make their whole house into a studio in the near future.
“It used to be artists were just trying to get in to a gallery, and galleries are great,” Beth says. “And they have clientele that maybe they can sell that work to. But there’s guerrilla marketing to get art out to people. It’s changing with the murals popping up all over town. It’s just as valuable as staying in galleries.”
Sneary teaches private students and some classes around town, and his work is available on his two websites: stpeteartist.com, dedicated to his landscapes and area landmarks, and csneary.com, the home of the satirical pop art.
In a piece like Monroe or Trump, Sneary says the answer to the question ‘How long does it take to finish?’ is a lifetime.
“Because you put all this knowledge into it,” he says, adding that the physical work averages about 40 hours, or a month to six weeks.
Sneary has shown the landscapes in galleries and sold well but his satirical pop art has been slower to sell, despite its popularity with audiences.
“It’s not over-the-couch kind of work,” he says.
However, the prints do sell, and recently a fan told him if she could afford to, she would decorate her entire house with his work.
Although he does a lot of networking and approaching establishments to get his work seen, “it’s gotta feel right. If I don’t like the place, I won’t do it,” he says.
“The thing about this work is that it’s not just appealing to the people with money. People in any social class in the world who watched the Wizard of Oz can access the work and get an idea of what this person is talking about,” Beth says.
“I paint what I feel. If you’re in it for the money, as the artist, forget it. I read a long time ago most artists don’t really come into focus until my age, late forties, 50,” Sneary says. “So I’m right on schedule.”
You can see many of his pop art oil paintings at Swah-rey at (2105 Central Ave.) through May.