Interview #29: Jare Israel (2022)⁠

“The Resonance of Form” / Interview by Charles David Corbin

Peeling of the Façade” (Denver, 2021) by Jare Israel.

Art is the inevitable consequence of growth and is the manifestation of inner development that stands as a signpost marking the progress of the human spirit towards a thing that is sensed but is far from being possessed.

— Robert Henri, in “The Art Spirit”

Living an authentic art life means searching endlessly for progression and meaning amidst life’s chaos, even when the path ahead is beyond our understanding and shrouded in darkness. The reward is discovered in the unprecedented psychological and spiritual growth that can result from traversing this path as it transforms itself into a well lived Art Life.

Confrontation of Self” (Denver, 2021) by Jare Israel.

“Black is the color of mystery, death and the profound final pause, and White symbolizes a world far above our own, a spotless world of perfection and a silence pregnant with possibilities”.

— Wassily Kandinsky, in “Concerning the Spiritual in Art”

Essential I” (Big Thompson Canyon, 2020) by Jare Israel.
Beneath the Surface” (Lake Loveland, 2021) by Jare Israel.
Revelation” (Capital Reef National Park, 2020) by Jare Israel.
Spirit of Awakening” (Rocky Mountain National Park, 2019) by Jare Israel.

“When looking at an abstraction, one becomes free to see the actual relationships and worries less about subject-matter — true meaning comes through more directly without extraneous representational factors.”

— Alfred Stieglitz, in “On Photography”

Where critics of abstract art may see an image without easily identifiable subject matters as directionless chaos, I believe that form, rather than being the subject’s literal truth, can nonetheless guide the feeling and meaning that we distill from the artwork.

“The artist takes the viewer to the edge of a cliff, as a mother eagle takes her nestling, and then drops him. Viewers with a strong imagination enjoy it, and discover that they can fly, while others fall down to the rocks where they are killed instantly”.

— Robert Bly, in “Tundra: the Journal of the Short Poem”

This concept most directly applies to abstract art, and the viewers who trust their own imaginative faculties and are willing to participate in forming their own subjective interpretations find great enjoyment and personal meaning in the process. While those who get too caught up in the objective properties alone quickly reach an unfortunate and untimely end.

Mystic Dream” (Rocky Mountain National Park, 2019) by Jare Israel.
Light Within” (Denver, 2021) by Jare Israel.
Self-portrait of Jare Israel.
HINTOLOGY
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Additional photographs from Jare Israel curated by Charles David Corbin.

…about Hintology

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New digital magazine that seeks to portray the abstract photography scene and the human-beings behind the pictures in all their depth and diversity.

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Hintology

New digital magazine that seeks to portray the abstract photography scene and the human-beings behind the pictures in all their depth and diversity.