Meet Shane Walsh

We caught up with the brilliant and insightful Shane Walsh a few weeks ago and have shared our conversation below.

Hi Shane , thank you for being such a positive, uplifting person. We’ve noticed that so many of the successful folks we’ve had the good fortune of connecting with have high levels of optimism and so we’d love to hear about your optimism and where you think it comes from.
I consider myself lucky because my general outlook and attitude toward life is set to extreme optimism. This is essential if you’re going to be a studio artist because rejection and disappointment are such a big part of the journey. You have to have really thick skin and trust that something amazing is just around the next corner. For me the experience of being a painter is all about optimism, new ideas, new forms, new materials and possibilities keep me in a state of constant anticipation and this permeates every aspect of how I view the world.

Thanks, so before we move on maybe you can share a bit more about yourself?

Shane Walsh makes paintings that borrow from historical abstraction and graphic imagery. Approaching painting as a form of collage, he playfully dissects then reconstructs visual languages to arrive at a form of abstract painting that is both autobiographical and historically aware. This cut and paste ethos is a direct result of his experience and involvement with various subcultures of the 1990’s. His omnivorous appetite for visual culture results in a wide array of references, quotations, techniques and materials that ultimately fuse into Frankenstein-like compositions, melded but never seamless.

He received his MFA from the University of Washington in 2006 and presently teaches painting and drawing at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, splitting his time between his studios in Milwaukee and New York City. Represented by Asya Geisberg Gallery in New York and The Alice Wilds in Milwaukee, he has shown work in solo and group shows at galleries and museums in New York, Los Angeles, Miami, Seattle and many others

www.shanewalshpaintings.com

If you had to pick three qualities that are most important to develop, which three would you say matter most?
Being resilient, being curious about others and the world around you, and not being a jerk are the 3 most important qualities if you’re going to make a go of being an artist.

All the wisdom you’ve shared today is sincerely appreciated. Before we go, can you tell us about the main challenge you are currently facing?
Carving out enough time to be fully engaged in the studio is always the number one obstacle in most artists lives. You have to be really self disciplined and committed, sometimes this is really tough especially if you want to live a well rounded life. Making time for the people in your life and balancing your obligations but also being somewhat selfish with you time is necessary if you’re going to make a life in the arts.

Contact Info:

Suggest a Story: BoldJourney is built on recommendations from the community; it’s how we uncover hidden gems, so if you or someone you know deserves recognition please let us know here.
Portraits of Resilience

Sometimes just seeing resilience can change out mindset and unlock our own resilience. That’s our

Perspectives on Staying Creative

We’re beyond fortunate to have built a community of some of the most creative artists,

Kicking Imposter Syndrome to the Curb

This is the year to kick the pesky imposter syndrome to the curb and move