Art Review
Mike Swaney
Mike Swaney was one of the founding members of Human Five, an art collective that was started by a group of friends based out of Vancouver. They ruled. I caught up with Mike who is now living in Spain. It's nice to see that he's been holding down the fort.
Nathalee Paolinelli

Heaven for Barteck

Performance
You've been living in Europe for quite some time now (6 years or something wild like that). When you first set off on your journey was life in Europe on the radar?
Someone
told me there was tons of gold to be found over here. I initially set
off on a general globe-trot with the final destination being New
Zealand, I have relatives there. I started off in South-east Asia and
Spain was kind of a spontaneous, instinctual check point on the trip.
I ended up staying. At the time, leaving Vancouver and starting fresh
somewhere else was absolutely necessary.
I like to picture of what your studio looks like. Tell me how has your art practice has evolved since the Human Five days?
My
practice has changed enormously since those Human Five days. When
you're accustomed to working a specific way for so long such
as, constantly exchanging opinions and processes with a trusted group
of friends, suddenly making decisions alone becomes a huge dilemma. I
think I've always considered my friends' work in Human Five better than
mine so it was like I was constantly trying to keep up with them
without really investigating what it was that I wanted to do. We used
to work on everything together so style and intellectual property
always had a very foggy border. Since working on my own for several
years I've finally begun to develop some intrinsically personal ideas
and directions, and as stupid as it sounds I find making the right
decisions after awhile becomes elementary.

Been There Done That

Spanish Kitchen Still Life
Your
images are so exuberant. I'm mesmerized by them trying to find the
entry point. How do you go about starting a drawing or collage?
For
the collage work I usually begin by looking through photos...most
recently my own photo archive. I don't make plans or sketches for each
piece but simply draw the images quickly onto the surface and from
there start filling in space with colored papers. For me everything
works best when I don't spend too much time thinking about what's going
to happen next.
Your
work is somewhat like looking at a labyrinth, requiting childhood games. Could you humor me and play
along? A fill in the blanks type thing...
Gold.
Those
old chocolate commercials, not sure what brand it was...I recall rivers
and banks of chocolate..maybe a chocolate waterfall too. They always
gave me a very royal feeling.
Map.
Pangea, Google, the illustrations and cover pages you had to do in high school
for reports on countries. Pale blue. globes with mountain reliefs.
Violet.
Blueberry pie mixing with the ice cream on a searing hot day.
Consciousness.
That
word always brings me back to the Thai jungle where I did a 10 day
meditation retreat. You weren't allowed to talk for 10 days and they
gave you a pillow made of wood, a sheet, and a mosquito net. The beds
were concrete, elevated slabs with a wicker mat on top. There were
these amazing natural hot pools where you could go in between
meditation sessions and at night bats would fly overhead. I remember
being disgusted once because this one guy was shaving in it while a
bunch of us were sitting there relaxing. Everyone had a daily chore and
mine was sweeping out the gazebos. There was always red ants all over
the ground and i had to sweep them away but every time they would
eventually crawl their way up the broom and bite my arms and legs.

The Glades

Art Brut
Are there any rituals you go through before making work?
I
guess if you want to consider this a ritual...I do get this extremely
inspired and energetic, and the more intense it gets, the more I
procrastinate working because I always know that what's in my head will
never come out the same on paper. When it passes I can usually get down
to work.
Where
does your inspiration come from? Childhood, films you've
seen, artists you know? Can you explain how this informs your work.
Kippenberger, Guston, Fischil and Weiss, Paul
Mccarthy, Erwin Wurm, Jockum Nordstrum, Tal R, Gelitin, Tom Sachs,
Thomas Hirschhorn to name a few... these people really inspire me.
I've been absorbing so much imagery for so long, I've started to
notice the common thread through it all is humor. I've always liked
the films for Werner Herzog and David Lynch and also I really enjoy
dark, disconcerting films where you don't really know what's happening
but are fully intrigued. I hope people may have similar feelings while
looking at my art. Music plays a bigger part in my work, especially
dancehall. A lot of times the titles of works and even some of the
scenarios are based on dancehall, dance moves, Jamaican slang and song
titles. Since moving to Spain its' popular culture, traditions,
festivals and day to day curiosities......all this exudes inspiration
for me. After four and a half years of living here it's still an
adventure every time I leave the house.

Self Taught Artist

Beverly Hills
Can you talk a little bit about representation? What galleries are you linked with?
I
have done a lot of research getting in touch with galleries, seeking
out those I like and artists I feel in tune to. Almost all of the shows
I've been part of have been because of recommendations by other
people/galleries/friends or because of people randomly contact me. I
have a couple group shows coming up in April. In San Francisco
at Guerrero Gallery, and Gallery 16 in June also in SF. I'll be in
group shows at Adhoc Galeria in Vigo, Spain. At Galleri Christoffer
Egelund in Copenhagen and the Guasch Coranty Painting Prize Exhibition
at Centre d'Art Tecla Sala in Barcelona.