Artist Spotlight: Andrew Luk

“Worked His Fingers Raw”

Andrew Luk‘s artwork, according to him, “takes a critical view of social, political and cultural issues with philosophical undertones.” His ink work, the stark black contrasting against a pure white background, is bold and striking. The colors in his pieces are regimented and sporadic. Andrew is an artist who seems to transcribe his personal stances on life into each scribble, stroke and smudge. His work is edgy, evocative, fervent and charged. Attempting to decipher the implications of each piece is a welcomed challenge, but simply admiring a skillfully done work of art is a equally satisfying.

ArtVenue reached out to an artist who creates such immensely eye-catching work, and here is what he had to say.

“Take advice and criticism. Always question everything, including yourself.”

"Here's Staring at You"

Home is where the heart is-where is home for you?
“Home” is in Hong Kong, where I grew up, but I don’t really like the concept of home being a place. It’s wherever you feel comfortable.

Favorite movie ever?
Oh man… Office Space, Fight Club and Return of the Jedi are all neck-and-neck for the title of favorite movie.



How and when did you discover yourself to be an artist?

Art was one of the few classes I enjoyed in high school. Over the years, I developed a passion for it – then when college application time came around, I started scaring my parents with art school pamphlets.

“I believe in lots and lots of practice, accepting criticism from people more knowledgeable than myself, and practicing some more.”

Where did you learn the skills and gain the knowledge you, as an artist, possess today?

There’s no such thing as “natural talent.” I believe in lots and lots of practice, accepting criticism from people more knowledgeable than myself, and practicing some more. I’ve had some really phenomenal guidance over the years. Having a short attention span helps a lot, too – I seem to switch mediums every two years or so, which forces me to constantly learn new techniques and add new skills to the arsenal.

"Small town Luxury"

The very first piece of work ever created by you – what/when was it, is it anything like the work you do now, and do you have it in your possession?
Wow…I really can’t remember that far back. I do remember drawing comics with friends in fifth grade. Our recurring character was this guy with spiked hair and a black eye. True to fifth-grade-boy-temperament, the comics involved a lot of stuff blowing up, and copious amounts of toilet humor.

“Take advice and criticism. Always question everything, including yourself. And eventually, you’ll get somewhere.”

"flyover"

Describe your art with 3 adjectives, a genre and a metaphor.
Adjectives:  honest, seductive, enlightening.
Genre:  surrealist.
Metaphor: like lamps blaring up just before the oil is gone.

What is your creative process, typically?
I usually work better at night. It’s easier to not worry about external stuff knowing that everyone else in the world is asleep. There’s something about a sunny day that begs me to run outside…  Typically, I begin my day making coffee or tea, cleaning my work area, reading, or looking for inspiration on tmblr. When I go to sit down, I’m hell-bent on making something interesting or practicing in a sketchbook. Sleep deprivation is a tough one. I’ve had sleeplessness work with me and against me.

Dali utilized the state between wake and sleep to come up with great imagery, so I’m certain it has its merits…but conversely, it renders irritability, which leads down that very negative and very familiar, “…what the hell am I doing with my life” train of thought.

Music-wise, my ipod is usually on shuffle or im watching some movie or documentary I’ve seen a bajillion times. Films have the effect of preoccupying the left side of my brain, allowing me to be a lot more fluid with mucking around with ideas in sketchbooks. It’s the same calm you get from doodling in math class.

“Art isn’t supposed to make instantaneous revolutionary reforms on a grand scale, but instead awaken discussions of the individual opinion.”

Where/who do you gather and/or seek your inspiration from?
I get most of my inspiration from reading fiction, art by other people, movies, and the news. Al Jazeera and e-flux are both an overflowing source of contemplation. Recently, I’ve been delving into philosophy, and reading up of visual neuroscience.

What kind of art makes you happy from the inside out? What kind makes you wish you were in your happy place?
I am not of the view that art is subjective. Art isn’t supposed to make instantaneous revolutionary reforms on a grand scale, but instead awaken discussions of the individual opinion. It’s a subversive resource of exploring others’ psyche and changing their perspective. It can be as simple as bringing attention to a reflection in a puddle…or as complicated as portraying the intricacies of the human spirit.

"Specimens"

Bukowski said, “You begin saving the world by saving one man at a time; all else is grandiose romanticism or politics.” Art that does this effectively invigorates me from the inside-out. Hackneyed art; everything from pretty pictures, to some Star Wars graphic tee, to a lousy landscape, drives me to wish I was in my happy place consistently: making and experiencing good art.

With that said, I don’t always consistently make good art.

Have you thought about branching out and experimenting with other mediums? What would you get your hands on?
I’ve recently picked up the camera again. I’d like to get my hands on video because it has the ability to bring the viewer closer to a realistic experience, equipped with visual motion and sound.

Where in this world or society would you like to see your art flourishing? What is its intended purpose, who is its intended audience?
I’d like to get into the gallery scene, but I also see some of my work being used as illustrations. My art is intended to make people reconsider who they are and what they want out of life. It has a momento mori aura and reflects what I find life to be about; a constant negotiation of morals, ideals, reality, disappointment and hope.

“I seem to switch mediums every two years or so, which forces me to constantly learn new techniques and add new skills to the arsenal.”

Pick your favorite piece on ArtVenue. What is it of, why is it your favorite and what does it mean to you?
My favorite piece is the piece titled Worked His Fingers Raw. It’s of a hand with bare-bone fingertips. I drew it for my dad. It was when I started my first full time job and was confronted with the true value of money; a lesson well learned. Suddenly, my dear old dad seemed less like that unpleasant jackass of my teen years, and more like a caring father.

What is some advice you could give to budding artists, hopeful to make a name for themselves or looking to build a portfolio?

Practice, practice, practice. Lock yourself up in the studio or bedroom, and just work at it day after day. Then, show it to people who know your venue; your realm. Take advice and criticism. Always question everything, including yourself. And eventually, you’ll get somewhere.

"Iron"

View Andrew Luk’s complete ArtVenue profile!

ArtVenue would like to thank Andrew for allowing us some of his time and thoughts. We are thrilled to have him on ArtVenue – welcome to the family!

Artist Spotlight: Bethy Williams

"Strange Star Girl"

Bethy Williams‘ ink and watercolor work can do one of two things. They can teleport your mind to a galaxy light-years away, where a velvety backdrop of darkness pin-pricked with stars envelopes you with weightlessness. Alien-like creatures with serpentine purple hair gaze at you with glittering Milky-Way eyes. Symbols and encryptions appear like hallucinations, and you wish you could stay forever to unearth the meaning of everything you see. If your feet stay planted on earth, Bethy’s artwork can show you a celestial dreamscape where her artistic inclinations run free, a glance into her creative space.

Bethy’s illustrations conjure up other-worldly feelings of fantasy and imagination no matter who is looking at them. ArtVenue couldn’t wait to ask some questions about the artist and her fantastical artwork.

“…As Orson Welles told Eddie in the movie Ed Wood, ‘Visions are worth fighting for. Why spend your life making someone else’s dreams?’”

"Tentacle Girl"

Home is where the heart is-where is home for you?
Wilton, New Hampshire. It’s a little town with a population of a few thousand, full of idiosyncrasies, centuries-old ruins and rural New England magic.

How and when did you discover yourself to be an artist?
Making art is just something I’ve done for as long as I’ve been conscious, practically as a biological function. When I was a little kid, probably from the time I was about two years old, my dad would give me pads of paper from his office and I would fill them with drawings from the front to the back, then I would draw on the back, then I would draw on the spine. I would also make picture and story books with stapled-together printer paper. The stories were very strange. A lot of kids draw, but for me it was more than a pastime. I was obsessed and hyper-intense. I was creating a whole world and it was serious business

 

“When I draw my long-haired girls flying between the stars, it’s because I look up at the sky and feel like I could just about do the same thing.”

What are a few things on your artistic bucket list?
Ever since I was a kid I’ve wanted to see my work published in Fortean Times. Seems oddly specific, but seeing that happen would have great personal meaning to me. I also really want to make liner notes for at least one terrific musical release.

"Three Maenads"

Where did you learn the skills and gain the knowledge you, as an artist, posses today?
Years and years of scribbling, sketching, obsessing, and perfecting. My work is definitely not the product of any kind of structured education. I also have to give credit to my mom, though she isn’t an “artiste” in the stereotypical sense, she sews and crafts and taught me how to mix watercolors one rainy day when I was about four.

 

Your illustrations are delightfully fantastical and have a specific subject/theme. When and how did your interest for “hyperspace faery tales and otherworld portals” begin?
I have that kind of imagery in my head all the time. When I sleep I have extremely vivid dreams and when I’m awake I have extremely vivid daydreams. Just closing my eyes is like watching a movie sometimes. But where does it come from? You know in the cartoons when a character is really happy about something and they get stars and fireworks in their eyes? That’s the only way I can explain it.

 

“Making art is just something I’ve done for as long as I’ve been conscious, practically as a biological function.”

What I mean is that it reflects the way I feel about life: that life is full of amazing wonder. I identify my work with faery tales because faery tales say that magic is all around us, and it’s true. When I look at pictures from the Hubble telescope or listen to cicadas singing in harmony on a summer night, I know just how true it is. When I draw my long-haired girls flying between the stars, it’s because I look up at the sky and feel like I could just about do the same thing.

"Reverb Girl"

Describe your art with 3 adjectives, a genre and a metaphor.
Adjectives: magical, rapturous, ridiculous.
Genre: fantastic.
Metaphor: a happy sphinx from outer space in an old New England forest.

Your work reminds me of artist Tara McPherson’s celestial pieces. Are there any artists you emulate or that influence your work?
My artistic heroes include Delia Derbyshire, Bryon Gysin, Jean Cocteau, William Blake, H.P. Lovecraft, Walt Disney and Pee-Wee Herman.

What is art to you? What is art for you? Why create it?
That is a mystery I have been trying to unravel my entire life. The funny thing is, it makes sense to me in some deep part of me, and it makes the most sense when I am working and not thinking about it, but when I try to explain it I am at a loss for words.

I guess I could say that there’s something inside of me that seems to have a life of its own and wants to manifest itself in the physical universe through pictures and symbols. I’ve met other artists who have said that’s more or less the way they feel about it as well. Then, in turn, when you make art right, it brings the people who look at it a deep-down satisfaction of a mysterious kind, something that can’t be met by any other means.

You could call it something spiritual (I do), but you don’t have to. However you slice it, the fact is that man has an inner life that is just as important as his outer life. It has always been that way; just look at the Chauvet cave paintings and you will have no doubt about that. It seems to be part of the deal of being human, and whether we can explain it or not we’ll always need the satisfaction that only art can bring.

“When I sleep I have extremely vivid dreams and when I’m awake I have extremely vivid daydreams.”

"Girl with Ancient Astronaut"

Who is the long-haired female in your illustrations?
The long-haired females in my work are not all literally the same person but there is a unity of purpose to them. She represents the “spirit” of my work. As I’ve said, my work is alive to me in a funny kind of way, and the long-haired female, with her untamed mane and twinkling eyes, represents the personality of my artistic universe.

Are there any other mediums you would love to explore and experiment with?
I would love to work with film, and I would also love to work with some kind of performance. Maybe something involving an accordion.

“However you slice it, the fact is that man has an inner life that is just as important as his outer life.”

Last exhibition or gallery you visited?
The last exhibition I visited was the Lowell Folk Festival this past August, which featured art in many different media by Lowell artists. The Lowell art scene has a special place in my heart because there is a strong spirit of co-operation, collaboration and fun.

Pick your favorite piece on ArtVenue. What is it of, why is it your favorite and what does it mean to you?
My favorite piece on ArtVenue is “Strange Star Girl”. It’s hard to explain, but when I finished her I had a sense of finally saying something I had always wanted to say and knowing that I said it exactly the right way. When you look at her, you can get a sense of what my entire artistic mission is about. She has become sort of a mascot for my work; she even appears on my business cards.

"Lantern in Black Space"

What is some advice you could give to budding artists, hopeful to make a name for themselves or looking to build a portfolio?
There is nothing in the world more precious than an artist with a genuinely strange artistic vision. If this is you, hold onto that strange vision with all of your might. Protect it, cherish it, nuture it, and never let anyone stop you. Your strange vision is your unique contribution to the universe; what a tragedy, what a crime it would be to let it die and deprive the world of something wonderful and new it has never seen before.

Of course, hard work, dedication and a professional attitude are supremely important as well. But as Orson Welles told Eddie in the movie Ed Wood, “Visions are worth fighting for. Why spend your life making someone else’s dreams?”

"Mary, Seated"

View Bethy Williams’ complete ArtVenue profile!

ArtVenue would like to thank Bethy for allowing us some of her time and thoughts. We are excited to have her on ArtVenue – welcome to the family!