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New Times / ArtThe following articles were printed from New Times [newtimesslo.com] - Volume 23, Issue 48
Seeing musicLos Osos painter creates opera artBY GLEN STARKEY
The Seattle Opera has tapped Kreitzer again, this time to create an image for its poster promoting Richard Wagner’s Der Ring des Nibelungen, or The Ring of the Nibelung, a cycle of four epic operas based loosely on characters from the Norse sagas. These Norse tales were also the source material for J. R. R. Tolkein’s The Ring, and Wagner’s music was perhaps most famously used in Apocalypse Now, when a formation of helicopters blasts “The Ride Of The Valkyries” as they attack a Vietnamese village.
“They wanted a painting for the promotional poster and then a painting to represent each of the four opera cycles,” explained Kreitzer, “so I did those five paintings and I just kept going.”
Rather than painting scenes from Seattle’s production, Kreitzer instead focused on the story itself and let his imagination run wild. For instance, in the first opera cycle, Das Rheingold, the Nibelung dwarf Alberich steals gold from the bottom of the Rhine river after being teased by three beautiful mermaids, so Kreitzer created four major paintings depicting the beautiful but cunning Rhinemaidens. In one painting, the three beauties stare out of the painting at the viewer, their eyes glowing with a hint of evil as air bubbles swirl around them. In another, also seen from underwater, the three nudes swim in formation. In an image looking into the water from above, the three maids playfully blow bubbles at the viewer. In another, also from above, Kreitzer has painted the distorting effects of seeing the mermaids through the rippling water surface. “I decided to pick characters and scenes and depict them,” explained Kreitzer. “There are a lot of 19th century German paintings of Der Ring des Nibelungen, but the painters then made the image look like opera singers in costume on stage.”
Kreitzer, when pressed, describes his work as romantic realism, and indeed he is an artist interested in both accurate human form and realistic landscape, but his work also romanticizes both the natural world and The Ring’s characters. For two and a half years, this project has all but consumed him. He filled four sketchbooks with images. “If I want to see it, I have to sketch it,” he said. “The Rhinemaidens were the most fun, and of course The Valkyries are the most fantastic and recognizable images. To make paintings like these, you have to have a code. I’ve seen Valkyrie paintings with winged horses, but that looks awkward, so I have the Valkyries wearing winged helmets that suggest flight. The idea is to make fun use of a certain amount of code but make the images as original as possible. They need to read well graphically but also be something people could live with.”
“If [a painting] has to be explained, it’s a failure,” he said. And to explain his diverse style, he noted, “I paint the painting the way it needs to be painted. If you get stuck in one style, then that’s how you become known and people expect you to always paint in one style. It’s limiting.” David Kreitzer is clearly an artist for whom the sky’s the limit. See more of his work at dkreitzer.com. Glen Starkey wants his precious. Tell him he can’t handle it at gstarkey@newtimesslo.com. |
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