The Self, The Act, and The Illusion: The Art of TheJambi
- Thejambi
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The Self, The Act, and The Illusion: The Art of TheJambi
Since you all are gracious enough to share your creations here, I thought I would do the same.
My real name is Phil Scally. I am from Detroit, MI but currently reside across state in Grand Rapids. In 2009, I graduated from Kendall College of Art and Design with a Bachelors of Fine Arts (drawing emphasis with a minor in printmaking). I continued on at Kendall and received a Masters of Fine Arts this past May.
My work is very existential in its nature. I suppose the important thing to know when looking at my drawings is that there is no wrong way to look at them. I am a firm believer that, as the artist, I am entitled to have my own interpretations and expectations that are independent from what the viewer may experience. It does not mean I don't care what someone has to say, It's quite the opposite. I find the conversation the most rewarding part of the artistic process. I may add more to this post as I go but this should be an adequate starting point.
I'm not quite sure what my expectations are with this thread but I am open to any and all: questions, criticisms, discussions, ideas, clarifications, etc.
My real name is Phil Scally. I am from Detroit, MI but currently reside across state in Grand Rapids. In 2009, I graduated from Kendall College of Art and Design with a Bachelors of Fine Arts (drawing emphasis with a minor in printmaking). I continued on at Kendall and received a Masters of Fine Arts this past May.
My work is very existential in its nature. I suppose the important thing to know when looking at my drawings is that there is no wrong way to look at them. I am a firm believer that, as the artist, I am entitled to have my own interpretations and expectations that are independent from what the viewer may experience. It does not mean I don't care what someone has to say, It's quite the opposite. I find the conversation the most rewarding part of the artistic process. I may add more to this post as I go but this should be an adequate starting point.
I'm not quite sure what my expectations are with this thread but I am open to any and all: questions, criticisms, discussions, ideas, clarifications, etc.
There's the dog. You can't fake that stuff. Confess with your mouth.
- Thejambi
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Re: The Self, The Act, and The Illusion: The Art of TheJambi
I have been on a slight hiatus after graduating in May but ere are some shots from my MFA Thesis Exhibition Of Being:






There's the dog. You can't fake that stuff. Confess with your mouth.
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Re: The Self, The Act, and The Illusion: The Art of TheJambi
awesome work . I'll be back later with questions, comments and complete envy
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Re: The Self, The Act, and The Illusion: The Art of TheJambi
Those are great. Thanks for sharing.
In the fourth picture I particularly love the one on the far left.
In the fourth picture I particularly love the one on the far left.
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- Thejambi
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Re: The Self, The Act, and The Illusion: The Art of TheJambi
Thanks!Bob Loblaw wrote:Those are great. Thanks for sharing.
In the fourth picture I particularly love the one on the far left.
It's funny you should pick that one out. I have had several people comment on it and express bias towards it. I personally do not like it much at all. If you wouldn't mind i would enjoy hearing why that one stands out.
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Re: The Self, The Act, and The Illusion: The Art of TheJambi
This is great stuff, thanks for sharing!
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Re: The Self, The Act, and The Illusion: The Art of TheJambi
I liked that one too. It has a kind of violent movement that reminds me of a figure trying to get out of a straight-jacket. It's probably not that at all, but that's what came to mind.Thejambi wrote:Thanks!Bob Loblaw wrote:Those are great. Thanks for sharing.
In the fourth picture I particularly love the one on the far left.
It's funny you should pick that one out. I have had several people comment on it and express bias towards it. I personally do not like it much at all. If you wouldn't mind i would enjoy hearing why that one stands out.
Great work, dude. Really evocative; like you're doing with human embodiment what the Abstract Expressionists were doing with colour and mood.
RisingTides wrote:There is more kindness on the internet than we would care to admit to ourselves. Sometimes we are so afraid of falling victim to a ruse, we miss out on actual opportunities.
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Re: The Self, The Act, and The Illusion: The Art of TheJambi
Interesting about the straight jacket. All of these are based on portraiture or the figure . My personal goal is to show emotion, feelings, energy and substance that goes beyond the corpeal image of the "self". Basically try to show what can't necessarily be seen. I really like your description.harmless wrote:I liked that one too. It has a kind of violent movement that reminds me of a figure trying to get out of a straight-jacket. It's probably not that at all, but that's what came to mind.Thejambi wrote:Thanks!Bob Loblaw wrote:Those are great. Thanks for sharing.
In the fourth picture I particularly love the one on the far left.
It's funny you should pick that one out. I have had several people comment on it and express bias towards it. I personally do not like it much at all. If you wouldn't mind i would enjoy hearing why that one stands out.
Great work, dude. Really evocative; like you're doing with human embodiment what the Abstract Expressionists were doing with colour and mood.
My influences are mainly early/mid 20th century. Alberto Giacometti, Francis Bacon and Käthe Kollwitz specifically. The Pollack comparison is spot on as well , not for the color but for the automatic/reactionary way that he worked.
There's the dog. You can't fake that stuff. Confess with your mouth.
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nyquillyn
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Re: The Self, The Act, and The Illusion: The Art of TheJambi
I've had a screen capture of Lazarus I pinned up in my cubical for a couple of months now. How much do I owe you?
- Thejambi
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Re: The Self, The Act, and The Illusion: The Art of TheJambi
turned2black wrote:I've had a screen capture of Lazarus I pinned up in my cubical for a couple of months now. How much do I owe you?
http://philscally.com/Large/Lazarus.jpg
Haha. I already sold it so I made my cheese on it. Glad you enjoy it. It was a tough one to let go of.
PS i just started to browse this forum but you have some outstanding photos.
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Re: The Self, The Act, and The Illusion: The Art of TheJambi
Why do they all look like pictures of dogs?
JK, looks great to me!!!!
JK, looks great to me!!!!
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- Thejambi
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Re: The Self, The Act, and The Illusion: The Art of TheJambi
Hahahaha!BurtReynolds wrote:Why do they all look like pictures of dogs?
JK, looks great to me!!!!
What is also funny about that is my Dad find an animal in every single drawing I do. It is usually a dog.
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Re: The Self, The Act, and The Illusion: The Art of TheJambi
I like these, Phil.
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Re: The Self, The Act, and The Illusion: The Art of TheJambi
I love this. Thanks for sharing.
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Re: The Self, The Act, and The Illusion: The Art of TheJambi
I am fond of David Lynch's filmography and your pictures have that dark lynchian sensibility. I like most of them.
Are you a horror fan?
Are you a horror fan?
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Re: The Self, The Act, and The Illusion: The Art of TheJambi
Giacometti, I can see that. Awesome.Thejambi wrote:Interesting about the straight jacket. All of these are based on portraiture or the figure . My personal goal is to show emotion, feelings, energy and substance that goes beyond the corpeal image of the "self". Basically try to show what can't necessarily be seen. I really like your description.harmless wrote:I liked that one too. It has a kind of violent movement that reminds me of a figure trying to get out of a straight-jacket. It's probably not that at all, but that's what came to mind.Thejambi wrote:Thanks!Bob Loblaw wrote:Those are great. Thanks for sharing.
In the fourth picture I particularly love the one on the far left.
It's funny you should pick that one out. I have had several people comment on it and express bias towards it. I personally do not like it much at all. If you wouldn't mind i would enjoy hearing why that one stands out.
Great work, dude. Really evocative; like you're doing with human embodiment what the Abstract Expressionists were doing with colour and mood.
My influences are mainly early/mid 20th century. Alberto Giacometti, Francis Bacon and Käthe Kollwitz specifically. The Pollack comparison is spot on as well , not for the color but for the automatic/reactionary way that he worked.
RisingTides wrote:There is more kindness on the internet than we would care to admit to ourselves. Sometimes we are so afraid of falling victim to a ruse, we miss out on actual opportunities.
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nyquillyn
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Re: The Self, The Act, and The Illusion: The Art of TheJambi
Thanks for the link. I just updated my cubicle art as the screen capture was pretty shit quality.Thejambi wrote:turned2black wrote:I've had a screen capture of Lazarus I pinned up in my cubical for a couple of months now. How much do I owe you?![]()
http://philscally.com/Large/Lazarus.jpg
Haha. I already sold it so I made my cheese on it. Glad you enjoy it. It was a tough one to let go of.
PS i just started to browse this forum but you have some outstanding photos.
One of my earliest memories is of my parents taking me to a stage production of The Elephant Man. It was a minimalist production with just a single actor on a stage with a sheet covering him. Lights were used to cast weird shadows across the sheet as he talked. It was stunning and something I still think about from time to time.
Your work reminds me of that production. Powerful stuff.
- Thejambi
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Re: The Self, The Act, and The Illusion: The Art of TheJambi
@Zeb & Sarah.- thank you! I've really needed an audience and some feedback while getting back into the swing of things. It has been a hard transition from 7 straight years being surrounded by it in school to being thrown to my own devices so the nice comments are truly appreciated.
@neo- I am very much a horror fan. From A+ to the horrible D- ones you can find on netflix. The macabre has always Intrigued me. My first favorite book was Mickey Mouse and the Haunted Mansion lol. It's not because I'm a gothy brooding person, there is just something powerful and beautiful in the shadows . I think a lot of honesty can be found there.
@T2B- I haven't visited the Elephant Man in years but that is a great story! I'm really glad you found a connection, that is why I make art in the first place. Figured you woul like a better image
@Harmless- James Lords wrote several Biographies on Giacometti. There is a short one involving a studio session called "A Giacometti Portrait" that pretty much changed my life as an artist. I don't know your poetry that well but for some reason I think you would enjoy it.
@neo- I am very much a horror fan. From A+ to the horrible D- ones you can find on netflix. The macabre has always Intrigued me. My first favorite book was Mickey Mouse and the Haunted Mansion lol. It's not because I'm a gothy brooding person, there is just something powerful and beautiful in the shadows . I think a lot of honesty can be found there.
@T2B- I haven't visited the Elephant Man in years but that is a great story! I'm really glad you found a connection, that is why I make art in the first place. Figured you woul like a better image
@Harmless- James Lords wrote several Biographies on Giacometti. There is a short one involving a studio session called "A Giacometti Portrait" that pretty much changed my life as an artist. I don't know your poetry that well but for some reason I think you would enjoy it.
There's the dog. You can't fake that stuff. Confess with your mouth.
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Re: The Self, The Act, and The Illusion: The Art of TheJambi
Thejambi wrote:@Zeb & Sarah.- thank you! I've really needed an audience and some feedback while getting back into the swing of things. It has been a hard transition from 7 straight years being surrounded by it in school to being thrown to my own devices so the nice comments are truly appreciated.
@neo- I am very much a horror fan. From A+ to the horrible D- ones you can find on netflix. The macabre has always Intrigued me. My first favorite book was Mickey Mouse and the Haunted Mansion lol. It's not because I'm a gothy brooding person, there is just something powerful and beautiful in the shadows . I think a lot of honesty can be found there.
@T2B- I haven't visited the Elephant Man in years but that is a great story! I'm really glad you found a connection, that is why I make art in the first place. Figured you woul like a better image
@Harmless- James Lords wrote several Biographies on Giacometti. There is a short one involving a studio session called "A Giacometti Portrait" that pretty much changed my life as an artist. I don't know your poetry that well but for some reason I think you would enjoy it.
RisingTides wrote:There is more kindness on the internet than we would care to admit to ourselves. Sometimes we are so afraid of falling victim to a ruse, we miss out on actual opportunities.
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Re: The Self, The Act, and The Illusion: The Art of TheJambi
To me it evokes frenzied movement and--as harmless pointed out--a struggle for escape or liberation.Thejambi wrote:Thanks!Bob Loblaw wrote:Those are great. Thanks for sharing.
In the fourth picture I particularly love the one on the far left.
It's funny you should pick that one out. I have had several people comment on it and express bias towards it. I personally do not like it much at all. If you wouldn't mind i would enjoy hearing why that one stands out.
I find the inverted-C composition very appealing as well.
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