Barkoff’s View From The Top

Where you live matters. Ira Barkoff,  a wiry fellow of advanced years with dark hair and a gold ring in one ear, says the sky and clouds and the trees he sees from his mountain-top home in Cornwall feed his imagination, drawing him away from the earlier, more concrete works. They still line one wall of his studio, though. The past is always there.

   His work changed when he moved from New York City to Cornwall in the 1970s. 

 “I have to be in nature,” he says. “My work really took off when I came here.”     

From faithful and careful paintings of homely things he has drifted into the glowing, sometimes glowering, abstractions of skies, shimmering air and water and the sentinels of trees he sees from his studio windows. They appear on his canvases with paint daubed  and shaded and refined with tools he makes, such as his yard-long “squeegee,” a length of plastic he draws and sometimes wiggles across his canvas.

“I just keep working until I get something.”

 Barkoff filters what he sees through his subconscious, he tells me, not painting a scene but painting his vision of it.

Lately, he has painted a lot, preparing for his first show in this area at The White Gallery in Lakeville. He has  exhibited widely, but never so near home. He pulls out  a  few new canvases for me, some of them very large, all of them about color, and mood, with fleeting references to Monet now and then.

“Contemplating nature is being in touch with god,” he wrote in his artist’s statement. And there is hardly a better place to watch nature than from his mountain top.

 

Ira Barkoff’s new works will be on exhibit at The White Gallery with an opening reception on May 26  from 5 to 7 p.m. For information, call 860-435-1029.

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