Jeff Elrod
An American abstract painter, Jeff Elrod explores the mutual mimesis between machines and human beings. He has employed since the late 1990s a technique that combines both manual and digital methods that he refers to as ‘frictionless painting’. Elrod works on the computer, then transposes the digital renderings onto the canvas by hand using more “traditional” techniques including acrylic, tape and spray paint or more recently unconventional ones such as printing.
Jeff Elrod resorts to basic editing softwares such as Photoshop and Illustrator in the creation of his large-scale artworks. The end result adopts the computer programmes’ format and conveys a sense of illusory depth. This confrontation between new technologies and more conventional forms of painting reveals an imagery that connects the history of painting, abstraction and digital movements altogether.
« Computers are just an extension of the paint brush. It’s not an adversarial relationship, but it is true that at one time the art world seemed threatened by computers, but that seems so old fashioned now… »
J.E. in an interview with Bill Powers
Jeff Elrod integrates photographic elements such as superimpositions, focus and transparency in his artistic process. The continuous technological innovation in editing tools and print technology developed his practice even further.
In Jeff Elrod’s hybrid works, technology and traditions meet, whilst automatisms and gestures merge.
Jeff Elrod
Contemporary
Painting
American artist born in 1966 in Irving, Texas, United States.
- Localisation
- Marfa, Texas, United States