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Prelude to Deluge: A Studio Visit with Jeff Sypherd

Watch the office exclusive premiere of 'Prelude to Deluge: A Studio Visit with Jeff Sypherd' below. 

 

What does your work aim to say? What emotions do you hope to evoke with your paintings?

 

I’m very inspired by a Van Morrison song called “The Way Young Lovers Do”. In it, the instruments are very chaotic and eerie sounding, but the lyrics are really beautiful and about love. In my painting I think I would like to do something like that, dancing between doom and hope.

 

Tell me about yourself. Who are you? What’s brought you to this moment in your career?

 

I'm from Riverside, California. Son of a surfer, I grew up around a lot of music. I wanted to be Van Gogh in the third grade. Today I'm painting and tattooing in New York City. I've been chasing the dream for a pretty long time, and would like to continue to do just that. It's always changing. You mention that the experiences in your personal life are reflected in your paintings.

 

What have you learned about yourself through your creative process?

 

I guess that I can be a little impatient.

 

Where do you go to find inspiration?

 

My girlfriend's place, Strand Bookstore, back to California, any beach, Tony Polito’s acetate stencils, the Human Recreational Services website or Will Sheldon’s instagram. I like to pretend I'm in the lineage of Chaim Soutine and Willem De Kooning.

How does painting influence your tattooing?

 

I look at a painting from art history and then I think, hm, how would this look as a tattoo. And then I would try to apply it on the skin in more of a tattoo language i.e black outline black shading bright colors and exposed skin.

 

You often reference other paintings and tattoo designs within your work. How does this influence the message you aim to communicate?

 

I like to use references as a vehicle to take the viewer where I want them to go. I aim to communicate that inspiration is the absolute best, and these images are all around us and have been forever. I love that we get to look at them. It’s like doing a cover song or something. If you like the way it looks, try to sing it in your own voice.

When do you know a painting of yours is finished?

 

I normally get a feeling leading up to it knowing it's about to be done, but to be completely honest I’ve never thought about this ever, I don’t think. I could only imagine that I would know a painting is done when all of the strokes are in their places.

 

What are you working on right now? Are you focused on any new projects that you can share?

 

I’ve started a series recently titled “Everyone” that looks like a graduating class photo or cast of characters in rows that could be just like all of us. Some of them are warped , some of them are elated, some depressed, others are content, but everyone’s a little off. I’m also working on a couple paintings that are heavily inspired by people eating nice meals out in the gutters and on the sidewalks. I'm always painting, I love painting.

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