Work samples

  • Surprised by Seeds
    Surprised by Seeds

    Surprised by Seeds, (14" x 14"), Oil on linen on panel

  • Non-polar Solvents
    Non-polar Solvents

    Non-polar Solvents, Oil on canvas, (24" x 24")

  • Galactic Spring
    Galactic Spring

    Galactic Spring, (14" x 14") Oil on linen on panel

  • Veins and Craters
    Veins and Craters

    "Veins and Craters," Oil on canvas, (40" x 36")

About Pamela

Baltimore City

In her paintings, Pamela Crockett imbues inanimate objects with life, and her attention to texture invites the viewer for a closer look. A former fellow in residence at the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts and recipient of the Olssen Faculty Incentive Award, Pamela has been painting and teaching since receiving her Master of Fine Arts and Masters of Arts degrees from the University of Iowa and undergraduate from Grinnell College. Teaching positions include Mt. St… more

POLAR AND NONPOLAR SOLVENTS

Just this year, I have been fascinated by the chemical effects created as I combine polar and nonpolar solvents with my painting media. The process involves some unlikely companions I lay on the canvas to create variable effects: rock salt, sand, silica desiccant, iron oxide, calcium chloride from ice melt, sodium bicarbonate, Iron Oxide, water droplets, beans, seeds, rice, shredded paper, string, and stones.

The effects are at once surprising and exciting, giving a new direction to the images, reflecting the urgency of seasonal change and the fleeting nature of life on earth. As McCoy says about my new work, “Far more than simply depicting autumn leaves, drops of paint bloom like galaxies. The images are meant to evoke both the cycle of the seasons and the interrelationship of all the elements of the cosmos.”

Currently I am in conversation with an AP Chemistry teacher who has been observing the painting results created as I combine polar and nonpolar solvents with my painting media. She has offered the option to her students to get involved in this process. The questions posed are intended to discover how their chemical knowledge of polarity could be useful to the artist. Some of the students are themselves studying art and enjoying the connections they discover between the two disciplines. Naming the chemical bonds gives them a chance to apply their theoretical knowledge to practical applications. They ask: which elements could be used to effect change on polar and nonpolar solutes? How do they work differently? Which compounds have the most ionic bond character? The answers to their questions are helping me to think outside my usual methods of working in the studio. This exhibition could be an opening for chemistry students to apply their education to the discipline of studio painting.

  • Surprised by Seeds
    Surprised by Seeds

    Surprised by Seeds, Oil on linen on panel, *14" x 14"

  • Dark Side Day
    Dark Side Day

    Dark Side Day, Oil on canvas, (20” x 16”), 2024

  • Galactic Spring
    Galactic Spring

    Galactic Spring, Oil on linen on panel, (14" x 14")

  • Nonpolar Solvent
    Nonpolar Solvent

    Nonpolar Solvent, Oil on canvas, (34" x 34")

  • Meridian
    Meridian

    Meridian, Oil on linen on panel, (14" x 14")

  • Consumed by FeO2
    Consumed by FeO2

    Consumed by FeO2 (16" x 16"),  Oil on Linen on Panel

  • Veins and Craters
    Veins and Craters

    Veins and Craters, Oil on canvas, (44" x 42")

  • Sunburst
    Sunburst

    Sunburst, Oil on linen on panel, (14" x 11")

  • Seedscape
    Seedscape

    Seedscape, Oil on linen on panel in box, (12" x 12")

  • Roil
    Roil

    Roil, Oil on linen on panel in box, (12" x 12")

SEASONING: A PALPABLE URGENCY

SEASONING: A PALPABLE URGENCY - Oil paintings on linen, 62" x 36"

The cyclical nature of seasonal change this year introduced a new sensation for me. The natural energy of decay, destruction, and regeneration had a palpable urgency to it. Stirrings created by human division and miscommunication seemed to have an effect on all the images in my studio. I tried to capture this divisive energy in the intimate details and to reproduce them larger than life. The scale is so large and the colors so vivid that one critic claimed they were almost scary; a curator said they were “humorously monstrous.”

My curiosity about the cycle of decay began several years ago as I observed a dried bulb on my friend’s coffee table. In it, I saw an ephemeral beauty. The motion of its twisting, curling leaves told the story of its graceful demise. I kept wanting to look closer and closer, as if nature’s secrets and mysteries might reveal themselves, if only I could get in close enough. To that end I used watchmaker’s lenses to study the complex anatomy of seeds and plants.

Often the images spring from natural forces I observe: the flowing water, animal tracks in the mud, patterns left by the passage of wind, scattering seeds, skittering leaves, bird murmurations, or stars across an open field of color. A curator says, “If you look closely, you can never be sure whether you’re seeing the vastness of the cosmos or the infinity of microscopic worlds.”

  • Flotation Devices in Crisis
    Flotation Devices in Crisis

    Flotation Devices in Crisis, Oil on Canvas, (62" x 36")

    The subject of this painting is at once small enough to fit in the palm of a hand and large enough to exist outside our planet. Its background contains huge cloud formations around Jupiter, and the purple bladder shape comes from the tiny Sargassum seaweed common in the Atlantic Ocean. Its air-filled bladder is helpful in keeping the plant afloat, providing food for ocean life and birds. Ironically, as catastrophic climate change brings flooding, tornadoes, heat waves, and fires, the lifesaving bladder shape offered me hope in its resilience and resourcefulness.

  • Unraveling Sea Oat
    Unraveling Sea Oat

    Unraveling Sea Oat, (Uniola paniculata), Oil on linen, (62” x 36”)

    Inspiration comes from a small, decayed root found in the dunes of the Atlantic coast. Revealed to me in its seeds are the tools for animating a multitude of sea creatures, and the unraveling pattern of one tiny root recalled the delicate balance in our endangered surroundings.

  • NEWS RELEASE: "So Impotent Our Wisdom"

    NEWS RELEASE: from Exhibition at Adkins Arboretum

    "So Impotent Our Wisdom"- (a line from poet Emily Dickinson)

    "Nature is what we know -
    Yet have no art to say -
    So impotent Our Wisdom is
    To her Simplicity" - Dickinson

     

  • Seasoning
    Seasoning

    Seasoning, Oil on canvas, (60" x 42")

    One fall day, a gust of wind blew the leaves from the trees behind my studio. The urgency of the season whispered to me this metaphor as the leaves were making their final descent. There were so many that they appeared to be sprinkling from a giant salt shaker or scattering a handful from a chef’s fingers, seasoning the woods in splendor.

  • Fading Fall
    Fading Fall

    "Fading Fall", Oil on canvas, (42" x 60")  The natural energy of decay, destruction, and regeneration had a palpable urgency to it this year. As my best friend and mentor was losing her memory, it felt as if I were disappearing.

  • Curling Cascade (detail)
    Curling Cascade (detail)

    "Curling Cascade" Oil on canvas, (52" x 36") 

  • Pacific Kelp Tangle
    Pacific Kelp Tangle

    Pacific Kelp Tangle, Oil on Linen, 62" x 36"

    The health of the ocean’s kelp indicates the well-being of the oceans and sea creatures. I was surprised to learn that the kelp that washes up on the beaches of San Francisco changes color, depending on the seasons

  • Kiwi Kniphofia
    Kiwi Kniphofia

    Kiwi Kniphofia, Oil on Linen, (62" x 36")

    Viewed from up close and from far away, the Kniphofia (Red hot poker plant) revealed the passage of time as it decayed from bottom to top in my garden.

  • Pendentive
    Pendentive

    Pendentive (Dogwood Leaves Detail), Oil on canvas, (42" x 58")

  • Sycamore Sweep
    Sycamore Sweep

    "Sycamore Sweep," Oil paint on canvas (42" x 60") 

    "As animated as anything in the animal kingdom, a trio of crinkled sycamore leaves waves joyfully as they tumble across the canvas." - from "News Release" - McCoy

DANCE OF DECAY

DANCE of DECAY

A delicate balance between our environment and our human interaction with it drives my image-making.  This relationship reveals itself to me as I study shapes of decomposition and microbial patterns through watchmaker's lenses. By animating decomposing pods, seeds and aquatic fragments, I find that these rotting remains of life reflect both the fragility and the vitality of the earth and its oceans.

These images contain my fears and my hopes in response to our current climate crisis. The earth I have always depended on is undergoing dramatic change. And yet, the patterns of decay are constantly surprising me. Although I use close observation, these paintings are not strictly representational. My tendency is to amplify minute details, to pump up color saturation, and to intensify contrast to the point where the image becomes something altogether different. Observation of dead, inanimate objects offers me the challenge to imbue them with movement and activity.

  • Anchovy_Dance
    Anchovy_Dance

    Anchovy Dance, Oil paint on linen, (50” x 38”)

    Dried fish served as the model for this painting. As the anchovies headed toward rot, their colors became more iridescent. I tried to replicate this shimmering through layers of translucent oil paints. The crunchy texture of the anchovies is evident, but unfortunately as I handled the fragile fish, they kept breaking apart and falling to the floor.

  • Canna Seed Baskets
    Canna Seed Baskets

    Canna Seed Baskets, Oil on canvas, (52” x 36”)

    The composition of this painting comes from a dried clump of decaying seeds and leaves of the Canna Lily. After the flowers die off, the regenerative baskets appear. Its woven container, like the one I carry to the farmer's market, is full of black seeds resembling miniature bowling balls about to fall out of frayed burlap sacks.

  • In the galleries_pdf

    Review of solo exhibit, Dance of Decay, at the Honfleur Gallery, Washington, DC, 

    from the Washington Post,"In the galleries: Where the celestial meets the nitty-gritty" by Mark Jenkins

  • Visible_Strings
    Visible_Strings

    Visible Strings, (Magnolia grandiflora), Oil on linen, (62” x 36”)

    Attracted by an unrecognizable bit of decaying matter, I observed the structure and lines of this dried magnolia pod. Working in reverse chronology, this painting shows various points in the passage of time. And, of course the word play on Invisible String Theory is no coincidence.

  • Shapeshifter_Protea
    Shapeshifter_Protea

    Shapeshifter Protea Oil on canvas, (52” x 36”)

    During observation, this specimen went through many transformations: finding its structure proved to be both baffling and intriguing. Ribbons unfurled, pins sprouted, and seeds appeared. Only after completion of the painting did the specimen’s name make sense to me: the mythological Proteus was a shapeshifter.

  • Double_Protea
    Double_Protea

    Double Protea, Oil on canvas, (52” x 36”)

    As we were in the early stages of a pandemic, I began this painting based on the images of Covid-19 there were in the news. But then the painting transformed into a study of the shape-shifting pincushion protea. The image displays simultaneous views, one up close and one farther away.

  • Split_Chestnut_Burr
    Split_Chestnut_Burr

    Split Chestnut Burr, (32” x 20”) Oil paint on linen

    Here the sharp needles protecting the inner sanctum of the chestnut seeds act as protection. The image has been described as "almost scary," humorously monstrous," and "like an alien." In searching for the natural patterns of decay, I am noticing dead plants are not stagnant, but fully animated. Nature is powerful.

  • Twisting_Bulb
    Twisting_Bulb

    Twisting Bulb, Oil on linen, (32" x 20)

    My curiosity about the cycle of decay began several years ago as I observed a dried bulb on my friend’s coffee table. In it, I saw an ephemeral beauty. The motion of its twisting, curling leaves told the story of its graceful demise. I kept wanting to look closer and closer, as if nature’s secrets and mysteries might reveal themselves, if only I could get in close enough. To that end I used watchmaker’s lenses to study the complex anatomy of seeds and plants.

  • Regeneration
    Regeneration

    Regeneration, (Rhododendron), Oil on canvas, (31” x 21”), Oil paint on canvas

    In a vibrant ecosystem, the process of decay is a cyclical dance in which the various agents play their parts. Sun, rain, wind, and insects all have assigned roles and are inscribed into the choreography. Even as the drooping blooms fall, the smallest seed peeks out, hinting at its potential for new growth.

  • Sweet Gumball Surprise_detail
    Sweet Gumball Surprise_detail

    Sweetgum Ball Surprise (detail), Oil on linen, (62” x 36”)

    The very annoying, painful to step on ball from the sweetgum tree is pictured here. While observing and waiting for a green sweetball to open, I received a surprise one day in the studio. The individual sections opened, revealing hundreds of tiny feather-shaped seeds, along with their own fertilizer in the pod.

SO IMPOTENT OUR WISDOM: SURPRISED BY SEEDS

A scientific study of the structure of plants and seeds led me to this series. I kept wanting to look closer and closer, as if nature’s secrets and mysteries might reveal themselves, if only I could get in close enough. To that end I used watchmaker’s lenses to study the complex anatomy of seeds and plants. A poem by Emily Dickinson was the source of my latest exhibition at the Adkins Arboretum:

“Nature is what we know -
Yet have no art to say -
So impotent Our Wisdom is
To her Simplicity” – Emily Dickinson

Repurposed boxes, drawers, and card catalogues contain the seeds, nuts, and pods I observed in the large oil paintings for "Dance of Decay." People were interested to see the original inspirations for the abstracted images in my “Dance of Decay.” Combining natural objects and smaller paintings of the magnified seeds revealed similar patterns.

  • Alien Seed Pod
    Alien Seed Pod

    Alien Seed Pod, Oil on canvas, (36" x 22")

  • Canna_Creature
    Canna_Creature

    Oil paint on panel, acrylic medium, canna seed pods dipped in varnish,, netting, wire, and black beads, (14" x 14")

  • Canna Seed Baskets Magnified
    Canna Seed Baskets Magnified

    Oil paint on linen on panel, (14" x 14")

  • Sargassum Seaweed Drawer
    Sargassum Seaweed Drawer

    Flotation Devices Stored in Drawer 11.5" x 8"

    Repurposed Drawer containing oil paint on panel, Sargassum seaweed dipped in varnish, Mandarin orange netting, foam, sponges, and thread

  • Sweetgum Balls with Netting
    Sweetgum Balls with Netting

    Oil on panel, Sweetgum Balls dipped in varnish, mandarin netting (12" x 12") Structure of the Sweetgum Balls reminds me of the netting used to contain mandarin oranges.

  • Sweetgum Ball Magnify
    Sweetgum Ball Magnify

    Sweetgum Ball Painting

    Oil on linen on panel, (12" x 12")

  • Magnolia Pod Magnified
    Magnolia Pod Magnified

    Oil paint on linen on panel, (14" x 14")

  • Lion's Tail
    Lion's Tail

    Lion's Tail, Oil paint on linen on panel (14" x 14")

  • Protea Pins Magnified
    Protea Pins Magnified

    Protea Pins Magnified, Oil paint on linen on panel, (14" x 14")

  • Protea Pins
    Protea Pins

    Protea Pins, Oil paint on linen on panel, (14" x 14")

MEMORY DRAWINGS

The memory drawings are found object collages with mixed media on Rives BFK paper. Included materials are cardboard slide mounts, sewn threads, antique hat pins, souvenirs, photos, and buttons. The repurposed objects are the odd bits and pieces that settle to the backs of household drawers, surviving the sifting of what gets used and what gets thrown away. They contain the memories and stories of their migration. The embroidery stitches control the movement in the drawings, and they attach the cardboard slide mount, an object obsolete today, yet essential for artist submissions in the past.

  • Key to the Interior
    Key to the Interior
    26" x 21", Mixed Media on Rives Paper: Ink, Colored Pencil, Slide Mounts, Thread, House Key
  • Helical Motion
    Helical Motion
    24" x 16", Mixed Media on Rives BFK Paper: Ink, Colored Pencil, Slide Mounts, Thread, Souvenir broom, Pearl buttons
  • Geisha Memories (detail)
    Geisha Memories (detail)
    (21" x 21"), Mixed Media Drawing,: Ink, colored pencil, pastel, red and gold thread, slide mount, photo, and souvenir Geisha comb on BFK paper.
  • Cascade in Purple
    Cascade in Purple
    26" x 18", Mixed Media on Rives BFK Paper: Ink, Colored Pencil, Slide Mounts, Thread, Bell, Beads, Cheerleader Pin
  • Fountain
    Fountain
    22" x 18", Mixed Media on Rives BFK Paper: Ink, Colored Pencil, Slide Mounts, Phots pieces
  • Slide Inside
    Slide Inside
    25" x 17", Mixed Media on Rives BFK Paper: Ink, Colored Pencil, Thread, Slide Mounts, Souvenir Drum, Buttons, Wire
  • Brown Penny
    Brown Penny
    30" x 22", Mixed Media on Handmade Paper: Three Pennies, Ink, Colored Pencil, Paint, Slide Mounts, Thread
  • Checks and Balances
    Checks and Balances
    20" x 15", Mixed Media on Rives BFK Paper: Ink, Colored Pencil, Slide Mounts, Thread
  • SEWING BRANCHES
    SEWING BRANCHES
    Mixed Media Drawing, (14" x 12"), Ink, colored pencil, pastel, red and gold thread, slide mount, photo, beads on BFK paper.
  • Geisha Memories
    Geisha Memories
    21" x 21", Mixed Media on Rives BFK Paper: Ink, Colored Pencil, Slide Mount, Photo, Thread, Souvenir Geisha hairpiece, Buttons

WINDOWS FOR OLIVER SACKS

Like selected works in my “Tactile Memories” series, some of these paintings have been included in "tactile" exhibitions, where the participants are encouraged to use sequential touch in exploring the artworks. Dedicated to writer and neurologist Oliver Sacks, the windows are inspired by one of his stories. During a residency at the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts in Sweetbriar, VA, I experimented with ways to mix the visual and the tactile. The neurologist's experience with various patients included one man who was virtually blind at an early age; later he had his vision restored as an adult. The story raised questions about how someone with limited vision might experience visual clues.

I began by placing on the panels various tactile objects such as sand, string, gauze, cotton, and fabrics. After layers of gesso and sanding, the textures were then covered with oil paint. The actual textures on the top of the oil-painted windows were complemented by the illusionary texture on the paper drawings below. With eyes closed, I began by rolling textured objects soaked in paint across large rolls of BFK paper. I moved the objects (e.g. nuts, seeds, sponges) through the paints without knowing what they looked like. Later, I cut the paper in sections and paired them with the oil paintings. The juxtaposition of the upper textured panels with the lower illusionary textures on paper is designed to challenge our usual modes of perception.

According to Sacks, "The rest of us, born sighted, can scarcely imagine such confusion . . . .we make our world through incessant experience, categorization, memory, reconnection . . . . But what [the man] saw had no coherence." (To See and Not See," The New Yorker May 10, 1993.) It was difficult to understand a simultaneous view when one was accustomed to a sequential view of the world.

  • Beyond the Pane Window
    Beyond the Pane Window

    Beyond the Pane, Paritally open Window

    (16" x 24") Oil paint on panel with mixed media textures (top), Blind drawings on BFK (bottom)

  • Window One for Sacks
    Window One for Sacks
    (22" x 16"), Oil paint on textures (top) Ink, pastel, and colored pencil on BFK paper (botton)
  • Window Two for Sacks
    Window Two for Sacks
    (22" x 16"), Oil paint on textures (top) Ink, pastel, and colored pencil on BFK paper (botton)
  • Window Three for Sacks
    Window Three for Sacks
    (22" x 16"), Oil paint on textures (top) Ink, pastel, and colored pencil on BFK paper (botton)
  • Heart Fly Window
    Heart Fly Window
    (16" x 24") Oil paint on panel with mixed media textures (center), Blind drawings on BFK (sides)
  • Hidden Pearl Window
    Hidden Pearl Window
    (22" x 16) Oil paint on panel with mixed media textures (top), Blind drawing on BFK (bottom)
  • Apricot Window
    Apricot Window
    (22" x 16) Oil paint on panel with mixed media textures (top), Blind drawing on BFK (bottom)
  • Bulb Shoot Window
    Bulb Shoot Window
    (22" x 16) Oil paint on panel with mixed media textures (top), Blind drawings on BFK (bottom)
  • Triple Window Two for Oliver Sacks
    Triple Window Two for Oliver Sacks
    Three windows from the Series
  • Triple Window One for Oliver Sacks
    Triple Window One for Oliver Sacks
    Three windows from the Series

EVERYDAY RELICS


 The images in this series are metaphorical containers for memories. Often personal, the embedded objects represent stories of family and friends. Included, for example, are fragments of souvenirs my grandparents brought me as a child. Several panels hold items I salvaged while emptying my mother’s apartment after she died. These everyday relics are the odd bits and pieces that settle to the backs of household drawers, surviving the sifting of what gets used and what gets thrown away.

  • Barbecue Rust
    Barbecue Rust

    Barbecue Rust, (16" x 13")

    Oil paint on wood panel with found objects including Bryan's rusted metal barbecue box

  • Tumbling Crates
    Tumbling Crates
    (16" x 13") Oil paint on wood panel with mixed media
  • Sumerian Lyre
    Sumerian Lyre
    (16" x 13") Oil paint on wood panel with found objects including copper wire
  • Beach Comber
    Beach Comber
    (16" x 13") Oil paint on wood panel with found objects including souvenir comb, cheesecloth, q-tip
  • Mary's Garden
    Mary's Garden

    (16" x 13") Oil paint on wood panel with found objects including mother's coin collection, quilting and sewing pins, plasti-dip

  • Memory Melt
    Memory Melt
    (16" x 13") Oil paint on wood panel with found objects including watch parts, beads, copper wire, q-tip, cheesecloth
  • Everyday Relic
    Everyday Relic
    Oil on Panel with found objects including copper and enamel rings
  • Arc Angle Relic
    Arc Angle Relic
    Oil on Panel with found objects including calligraphy pen nibs
  • Frozen in Time (for SeYeong)
    Frozen in Time (for SeYeong)
    (16" x 13") Oil paint on wood panel with mixed media
  • Blue Bloch Filter
    Blue Bloch Filter

    Blue Bloch Filter

    Oil on panel (16" x 13")

    Inspired by filtered light in the Bloch wing of the Kansas City Art Museum

ACTIVE STILL LIFE (NOISY SE-BUTSU)

Active Still Life: Noisy Se Butsu

These photographs were completed while attending a summer residency at the Kansas City Art Institute. The works on paper are inspirations for my paintings and convey the "Active Still Life."

Many academic artists work from arbitrary objects, which they place on a table, in order to observe the effects of light, shadow, form, and color. In English, we call this collection of objects a “Still Life.” In French it is called “Nature Morte.” An art student I met told me the Japanese translation for still life is “Se-Butsu,” which roughly means “quiet objects.” The somewhat oxymoronic nature of these terms intrigues me. I call my still life studies “Noisy Se-Butsu” because for me, the still life is active, the quiet objects are noisy, and dead nature still has life in it.
 

  • Three Chairs: Se Butsu
    Three Chairs: Se Butsu
    "Three Chairs" is an archival Epson inkjet print in three panels, each is 28" x 16"
  • Tumbling Red Crates 2
    Tumbling Red Crates 2
    “Tumbling Crates” captures the point of perfectly balanced milk crates that were teetering of the edge of collapse. Adding one more crate to the stack resulted in its falling. I tried to capture the static balance and the tumbling movement at the same time. Balance is not static.
  • Tumbling Red Crates 1
    Tumbling Red Crates 1
    "Tumbling Red Crates" is a series of archival Epson inkjet prints. Measuring 28" x 16", the prints convey the "Active Still Life." I was interested in finding the point of perfectly balanced milk crates that were teetering of the edge of collapse. Adding one more crate to the stack resulted in its falling. I tried to capture the static balance and the tumbling movement at the same time.
  • Three Chairs: Se Butsu (detail 3)
    Three Chairs: Se Butsu (detail 3)
    "Three Chairs" is an archival Epson inkjet print in three panels, each is 28" x 16. “Nataraja’s Belt” - While driving down the highway, I noticed a moving truck that had two blue packing straps caught in the back doorway. As the truck drove along, the two blue straps were flapping in a frenzied dance together. I loved the movement they created, and tried to reproduce it by flipping two blue ribbons in front of the stacked dormitory furniture as I shot the photos.
  • Three Chairs: Se Butsu (detail 2)
    Three Chairs: Se Butsu (detail 2)
    "Three Chairs" is an archival Epson inkjet print in three panels, each is 28" x 16"
  • Three Chairs: Se Butsu (detail 1)
    Three Chairs: Se Butsu (detail 1)
    "Three Chairs" is an archival Epson inkjet print in three panels, each is 28" x 16"