"A Big OK …from U.S.A." Selected for Iowa State Fair Fine Arts Competition
The painting A Big OK …from U.S.A., was selected into juried exhibition for the 2022 Iowa State Fair Fine Arts competition. The Iowa State Fair runs from August 11 - 21, 2022 in Des Moines, Iowa.
The painting depicts a classic Art Deco-styled gas station in the NewBo district, at the corner of 3rd St. and 16th Ave. SW. in Cedar Rapids, Iowa.
I grew up a few blocks away from a Skelly station very much like this one, in Center Point, Iowa. As a boy, my friends and I would ride our bikes down to Rhinehart's Skelly for a 16 oz. glass bottle of pop. We may have quaffed a Pepsi or two, (not really wanting to share, for fear of backwash). I wonder how many kids rode their bikes to this station over the years, to do the very same thing. Is there a bit of waxing nostalgia going on here? Of course.
This subject might fit the same genre of work created by American Realist painter Edward Hopper. One of Hopper’s better-known works, Gas, was probably in the back of my mind when I came up with the idea to paint this subject. I took the reference photo on an early Sunday morning—6:54 am, March 21, 2021 to be exact—while standing on the tailgate of my SUV to get a better perspective.
Hopper painted Gas during the summer of 1940, which he spent in Truro, Massachusetts with his wife, Jo. The station in Gas is not an actual location, but an amalgamation of several different gas stations. Although a realist painter, Hopper brilliantly simplified shapes and details. He effectively uses light, shadow, and saturated color to heighten contrast and create mood. In Gas, a strip of forest stretches across the scene from left to right, becoming darker with the road that disappears into total darkness. This creates a feeling of mystery and uncertainty.
In A Big OK …From U.S.A., the streets also disappear behind buildings, but into the light, not darkness. The light in this work gives the scene an underlying sense of drama. Note the long shadows, and the morning light shining through two windows, lightly falling on the pavement in the foreground. The reason I signed this painting in the lower left, instead of the lower right, is because I loved the light and shadows so much, I didn’t want to ruin them with my signature.
Also, something interesting is happening with the reflections in the garage door windows as well. A slight concavity in the glass is causing the reflection to flip, so that the image of the red light pole next to the gas pump appears inverted.
Nostalgia that comes with a warning.
The work has an Edward Hopper-inspired love of light, with a nod to our current cultural obsession with nostalgia and fondness for “the good ol’ days”. However, this is not a serene scene. A dramatic sky belies the sense that all is well in America. Dark clouds suggest that trouble may be on the horizon. The hill between the Skelly and stop signs? That’s the city’s old landfill, known as ‘Mt. Trashmore’. A Thomas Kinkade-invented world of idealized perfection, this is not.
Unlike Hopper, who painted exclusively in oils and watercolors, A Big OK …from U.S.A. is painted in acrylics. I pushed the acrylics like oils, using layers and glazing techniques to get the desired effect. The gas pump and slender light pole are the heroes, and symbolizing America, still gleaming before the maelstrom begins.
The old Pepsi-Cola mural, which adorns the northwest-facing wall of Tornado's Grub & Pub, is a replica of an actual Pepsi sign from the 1930’s. The folks at Tornado's stayed pretty true to the original Pepsi art, though they changed the words on the mural’s callout from “Bigger Better” to “Great Burgers.” Though I have not tried the burgers at Tornado’s, and cannot vouch for their greatness, I’m willing to cut Tornado’s some slack, because it’s still a cool mural.
All of these elements—the Pepsi mural, the gas pump, the inverted reflections, the concealed light source and dramatic sky—help to create an unfolding narrative. The iconic gas station, isolated and stylized, is recast into an evocative symbol that takes us back to the roots of mythic America and away from 21st-century, here-today-gone-tomorrow culture.
The subtext of A Big OK …from U.S.A. is this: During challenging times, we often go back in time, to seek the familiarity of happier days. Not living in the past, but remembering our past, especially when things are not O.K., can give us inspiration and hope for the future.