Since my early 20s I have made my own Christmas cards. The work you see on this site comes out of a production of Christmas cards in 2012 that essentially never stopped. Made with colored paper found in magazine advertisements, I cut around any text, product or figure, arriving at pure color. I cut out the desired shape and adhere it to heavy-weight, Canson watercolor paper pre-cut into rectangular forms approximately 4 x 9 inches.
At core, I work with found color, sifting through the endless possibilities of shape and color within a very specific size range and format. The subject matter is usually a reflection of my immediate environment: landscapes, interiors, things I come across that I find amusing or interest me in so much as I ask myself: Can I make that? I travel frequently, so the scale of the work (small, easily transported), its mode of production (any table will do), and the materials necessary for the work are all convenient. I find magazine color wherever I go—while waiting at the dentist’s office, visiting friends, or abandoned in a train. All I need is glue stick and a sharp pair of scissors to make my art. The original works are fragile but they are not fussy; each card shows the hands that made it.
Sometimes I work with found fonts, specifically advertising copy and titles. I painstakingly cut out each letter and create new words out of the text as if I was playing a game of Words with Friends. I’ve learned great patience from this process and am always surprised at what comes out of the most banal sales text or headline. These works are almost always autobiographical in the sense that they reflect my current thinking, whether the subject is social, political and/or personal. They are more sardonic than the landscape pieces.
Some notes: Many of the works are “signed” on the verso with whatever scraps were leftover from making the primary work. The titles of the work usually describe my sources: the place or thing depicted, followed by the color I found and applied to watercolor paper, and then often a relevant song lyric from music listened to while making the work.
Though I was an art dealer for many years, being on this side of the studio wall is still very new to me. That said, I have had a few commissions: I produced 110+ hand-made wedding invitations for a young couple in Santa Monica in the spring of 2013. A few of the cards have been printed as bespoke stationery in limited quantities for clients in Los Angeles and Paris. An exhibition of my work was installed in a library of a small Breton town in the winter of 2016 and in January of 2017 I had an exhibition of my work in my new hometown of Port Townsend. Some ten prints (20 x 40 inches) of select images of the work are available in editions of 25.
I can be reached at johnetevis at gmail dot com