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Gregory Hull: An Eclectic approach
Gregory Hull splits his time between studio and plein-air
painting
Reprinted Online Courtesy of Southwest Art Magazine
By Lynn Pyne
A
glance around Gregory Hull's studio in Sedona, AZ, tips you off:
The artist is an eclectic. Colorful earthenware pottery from
Italy and Spain hangs on the wall near a sun-bleached cow skull.
A stuffed rooster, quail, and several ducks stare glassy-eyed
across a room filled with antique dinnerware, rustic furniture,
and woven rugs. Sheets of classical music sit open on a grand
piano--along
with the tunes of Gershwin and Joplin.
The
studio testifies to Hull's inquisitive nature and wide-ranging
interests. The same traits are evident in the painter's work, which
covers most of his studio walls. His oil paintings represent an
unusually diverse repertoire that ranges from landscapes to still
lifes, nudes, and, occasionally, portraits. When painting outside
in the Southwest, Hull carries on the plein-air tradition of the
California Impressionist School by infusing his canvases with bright
sunlight, emotion, and gestural brush strokes. When working in
the studio, he reverts to a more polished, classical European style
in his subdued renderings of still lifes and nude figures. Altogether
the canvases are so different from one another in mood and subject
matter that viewers might mistake them for the work of several
different artists.

Gregory Hull, Old Cabin, Oil 9 x 12
"I'm
eclectic. So is my work," Hull says. It's a simple explanation
for the parallel between his personality and his art that, to him,
seems natural. Upon close examination, however, it becomes apparent
that eclecticism plays a vital role in what Hull calls the lifetime
learning process of painting. For him, the yin and yang of exploring
different directions helps him maintain a sense of balance, an
equilibrium, as an artist. It also provides a means of generating
and developing new artistic ideals.
Ever
since childhood, when his parents taught him the importance of
being well-rounded, Hull has pursued an array of interests. He
studied languages and became fluent in Spanish; he studied music
and became accomplished on the piano and other instruments; and
he developed a passion for collectables, which led to an enjoyable
side business as an antique dealer. His interests find their way
into his work: He makes use of his favorite collectables sitting
around the studio--a metal pitcher, a crystal goblet, antique plates--as
novel subjects for still lifes.

Gregory Hull, Canyon Walls Paria River, Oil, 50 x 40
Hull
is classically trained in art, having studied under English portraitist
Alvin Gittins while earning both bachelor's and master's degrees
in fine arts at the University of Utah, Salt Lake City. Gittins
imparted an academic approach to drawing and painting from life
and emphasized the study of human anatomy.
Hull
enhanced his training in classical figure and still-life painting
by observing the works of Old World masters in major museums throughout
Europe and studying painting in Madrid, Spain, for a year. He developed
a lasting affinity and admiration for the works of Vermeer, Rembrandt,
Velázquez, Sargent, and Whistler. During the same period,
Hull became interested in plein-air painting, and he frequently
ventured out of the studio to indulge his fascination with Utah's
bright light. This interest turned into passion when he was exposed
to California Impressionism after moving to Los Angeles in the
late 1970s.
Throughout the years Hull has kept a foot firmly planted in both
worlds, indoors and out. The contemplative, deliberate nature of
his studio work provides a counterbalance to the passion and spontaneity
of his outdoor painting.
During the weeks when Hull is holed up in his studio, the urge
to get away tends to build up. He takes off in his truck and camper
at least once a month, leaving the everyday distractions of telephone
and television behind. He wanders along highways and side roads,
letting the artistic muse guide him to places with such irresistible
combinations of composition, color, and light that he's compelled
to slam on the brakes and pull off the road.

Gregory Hull, Afternoon High Sierras, Oil 30 x 40
On
these trips Hull paints like a man obsessed, sometimes turning
out as many as four mid-size canvases a day. He works quickly,
attempting to capture the nuances of fleeting light and shadow.
Typical outdoor distractions--stinging insects, chatting people,
and gusts of wind that can carry a canvas away--don't slow him down.
"Outdoor work is passionate," he says. "You psych yourself up
so much that this energy bursts out onto canvas--you have to work
fast. I probably couldn't do that every day, but since I save up
the energy, the inspiration, when I get out there my hands are
trembling to get started. When I'm out on a day like that, I am
completely happy. I'm communicating with nature and having a great
time. It's not a struggle to paint; it just flows out. There are
those moments when everything is going great and you feel it. I
think you're striving for that feeling all the time."
Hull's subjects have included the canyonlands on the border of
Utah and Arizona, the California coast and mountains, the massive
organ-pipe cactuses in the southern Arizonan desert, and the evidence
of mankind on such landscapes in the form of rustic cabins and
Spanish missions. He usually completes his landscapes on site,
but he often takes photographs for reference and sometimes makes
a few changes in paintings back in the studio.

Gregory Hull, Road to the Shore, Oil 18 x 24
Hull is most captivated by the pattern of light and shadow that
give a scene its appearance of dimension; light is the primary
ingredient in all of his work, whether landscapes, still lifes,
or nudes. A recent landscape, COASTAL PATH, depicts sunlight dappling
the purple shadows of a sandy footpath at the ocean shore in Carpinteria,
CA, one of the artist's favorite painting steps. Despite the obvious
attractions of wave lapping at the beach, trees jutting into the
blue sky, and violet mountains rising in the distance, the light
and shadow dappling the narrow path commend attention. The palette
in COASTAL PATH consists of subtle ranges of color typical of Hull's
paintings.

Gregory Hull, Orchid Still Life, Oil 24 x 20
Similarly fine modulations of color can be seen in many
of Hull's studio pieces. A recent example is his STILL LIFE WITH
GRAPES, which captures the subtle interplay of the glints of hammered
metal juxtaposed with the waxy skins of purple grapes and their
reflection on a polished table. Typically when Hull makes discoveries
in one area, he introduces them to other facets of his work. He
has found inspiration in objects, such as Navajo rugs with their
soft-edged woven fibers and subtle tones, that pervades even his
landscape painting. Conversely, he is striving to introduce some
of the spontaneity and spirited brushwork of outdoor painting into
his studio works, aiming to give them an expressiveness that transcends
the inanimate subject matter.
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