Had There Been Else: a New Painting by Tim Lane

It is difficult to try to present an idea or vision without creating a bias. We hold to the idea that alien life forms, or the creation of alien life forms, will arrive in some type of ship. Maybe it is more likely that quantum mechanics will play a part--that they or it will step through a portal or rupture in space. Because there is no experience to rely upon (other than science fiction), I cannot "know" how to describe this event (first contact) without creating a bias. I am likewise aware that in an unknown equation such as this there is generally a coefficient of anxiety or terror: we tend to fear what we do not understand. I think an element of this works its way into The Sublime series, despite my strong desire to present the possibility without informing it. These thoughts are totally different than my concerns with politics (or actually a direct result of my understanding of politics). I realize that my politics reveal my biases, and I accept this. I do not have a problem with it. And I accept that some of these biases will most likely have to change for the betterment of other individuals within society. I am the sum of many ideas--some of them good, some of them flawed. It is all right. Let there be a conversation.

New painting.

Had There Been Else, 2020acrylic, enamel, oil paintstick & crayon on packing paper10”x10”

Had There Been Else, 2020

acrylic, enamel, oil paintstick & crayon on packing paper

10”x10”

Vibe by Tim Lane

This painting is a synthesis of the vibe in the US after September 11, 2001. It is one of my earliest paintings. All of my paintings from 2001-2002 were focused on this vibe. Many Americans felt anxious, and the feeling was palpable. On this July 4th weekend, it would be great if every person not of color could acknowledge that brown people feel this type of anxiety all the time.

Ping, 2002spray paint & marker on half of ping pong table6’x6’

Ping, 2002

spray paint & marker on half of ping pong table

6’x6’

Art Communicates Message & Inspires Hope by Tim Lane

Today has been a great morning for me. The Torrez-Miner family gifted Sheila and I three powerful prints for our personal art collection. These prints arrived by mail. I was flooded by the love and generosity of the gesture, the gifts, the communication, the connection. We are all connected. The prints are three of Dylan’s most recent works. I love the intimacy of works on paper. We welcome these gifts. Much love to you, Estrella Torrez and Dylan Miner and fam.

Today, I am fine. The struggle is real. It can affect my family members. Therefore, it can affect me. If it can affect me, then it can affect you. We are all connected. Whites need to support and lift up the struggles of BIPOC. Black Lives Matter!

IMG_2908.jpg
IMG_2909.jpg
IMG_2910.jpg

Mass Gap by Tim Lane

How can we explain that scientists and astronomers have not been able (until maybe very recently) to detect any objects in our known universe that are greater than 2.5 times and less than 5.0 times the mass of our sun? This is known as the mass gap. Certainly there must be entities in space with masses within this gap.

I have enjoyed working small lately. Here is a new painting for The Sublime series.

Beyond Yet,  2020house paint, oil paintstick & crayon on  packing paper10”x10”

Beyond Yet, 2020

house paint, oil paintstick & crayon on packing paper

10”x10”

When in the Studio by Tim Lane

I’ve been feeling a real urge to work with basic abstracted shapes in tandem with my current iconography versus my usual approach of layering visual elements. I decided that starting small was a good idea. I have never really tried to make a “landscape” per se. I’m very satisfied with this piece which will take its place in The Sublime gallery, as well as the shop.

There, 2020house paint, oil paintstick & crayon on packing paper10”x10”

There, 2020

house paint, oil paintstick & crayon on packing paper

10”x10”

Guest Article for City Pulse by Tim Lane

city-pulse-logo-black-red.png

FAVORITE THINGS

Tim Lane and his art collection

Lansing City Pulse, June 16, 2020

Posted Tuesday, June 16, 2020 2:02 pm

Rich Tupica

Tim Lane is an athletic specialist for the City of East Lansing and the assistant coordinator of the East Lansing Art Festival. He is a husband and father. Aside from that, Lane is also an artist, writer and poet—and his favorite thing fully reflects that creative passion.

My wife and I have lived on the East Side of Lansing for 25 years. We rented for a couple of years before buying a house. Once the house was bought, we began collecting artwork.

In the summer of 2017, the sink in our upstairs bathroom malfunctioned. Over the course of an unsuspecting night, water filled the upstairs and began to work its way to the ground floor and basement through the ducts, outlets, stairs and ceiling. The place was a water park, and we were ultimately displaced for six months.

Miraculously, very little of the artwork hanging on our walls was damaged. A few pieces were. Several pieces had to go. Over the years, our personal art collection has become one of my favorite things.

Our collection began with a couple of pieces I had inherited from my aunt who was a graphic artist. One year, early on, we spent our income tax return on a series of collages our good friend, Detroit artist Teresa Petersen, had made. We established a relationship with Patrick Turner and began to collect his work, as well, around this time. Turner was an artist from Milwaukee who had won awards at the East Lansing Art Festival.

Sometimes artists trade work. As an artist, myself, I have traded work with artists who have become some of my good friends. We have a Travis Black in our dining room, an Aaron Curtner in our living room — both local, homegrown artists. I have a beautiful allegorical painting of a winter woods in my work office that was painted by Mike Clark of Silver Spring, Maryland.

One of our largest paintings is a painting by Jayme Theis. Jayme and I had a two-person show at Otherwise Art Gallery in Old Town back in 2003. When the show ended, Jayme and I traded. The trade commemorates my first exhibition of paintings. Prior to that, my first show had been an exhibition of collages at Todd Mack’s, where I befriended Alison Alfredson, another exceptional local artist.

One day, a large package arrived. It turned out to be a portrait of me that our friend, Mike Clark, had painted from a photo. I had no idea he had been working on it. I was speechless.

Our most recent acquisitions are two prints by Pete Martens, a local printmaker. I bought them for my wife on our 25th wedding anniversary. One print echoes our love of Lake Michigan — the other depicts the Michigan State University Chapel, where we were married.

When our house flooded, we had to pack quickly. There was no time for a ton of organization. Boxes were stuffed in various safe places. For the past three years, we have been searching for the box where we stored a sculptural piece by local artist Ingrid Blixt. We finally found it just last week. It was in the attic. Once on the upright piano in the living room, it is now on the Art Deco chifforobe in our dining room.

(Favorite Things was edited by Rich Tupica)

https://www.lansingcitypulse.com/stories/tim-lane-and-his-art-collection,14563
20200616-140215-Fav Things TIM LANE (1).jpg