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Artist Statement

I believe that an artist must be true to himself, his art, and creative expression, willing to work in the dark while respecting the light. The light being the notoriety, wealth, and the accolades of men. The artist, however, should remain dedicated to finding and developing an artistic visual language unique to their own individuality that expresses them and their own unique ideals. It’s what I have endeavored to do my entire career, to develop my own unique artistic, visual vocabulary. Earth is my preferred primary medium that gives voice to my creative expression, in conjunction with ordinary objects taken from the environment.

It is however, one of the oldest, primordial, natural materials known to mankind. It is essential to life as we know it. It’s an organic material that has always intrigued me even as a child living in Lake Village Arkansas. Even today, I can remember jumping off the front porch of my parents old, dilapidated shotgun house after a summer rain to play in the mud. On a hot summer day, I would draw and scratch in the dry parched, crusty earth with a stick.

This soulish, medieval material through the process of time, has rendered to me a range of remarkable tones, nuances, textures, and gradations. This all happens while revealing a wide range of sophisticated methods and techniques of creativity to me. By giving me a voice to my artistic expression, a visual vocabulary that expresses the perils and the plight of mankind. It is this visual vocabulary that is powerful, thought provoking and beautiful, that will certainly seize the interest of the viewer.

 

Reviews

Fort Dodge Messenger

Greater Des Moines Public Art Foundation, Des Moines, IA

“Despite their simplicity, Madai’s paintings are challenging works of art. The spontaneity or the impression of spontaneity, that characterizes many of these expressionistic works veil their visual and conceptual rigor.

His use of line is emotive and shows a fluidity gained from a lengthy practice of painting. With confidence and bravado, he takes the notion of mood and elevates it to the point of refined visual harmony.

Muted tonalities effortlessly flow from dramatic to mysterious. A remarkably rich-spectrum of warm black, brown, and red oxide hues is gleaned from different mineral constituents: the silt and clay is from different parts of the North and South Americas.

With this unique mixture of sifted dirt and adhesives the artist draws, incises lines into, and builds and wipes away layers of pigment. The buoyant surface is gestural and abstract, and, often, material gets buried under other material.

His work is as intriguing in its technical composition as it is in its multiplicity of meanings. His titles reveal his bent toward the spiritual and the meditative. Always preoccupied with the ring of words, titles play a major part in his work. Whether paradoxical, poetic, reverent, joyful, playful, or melancholic, his titles set up the perspectives from which he wants the works to be seen.

The medium, primarily from the artist’s extensive collection of soil, is part of the artwork’s mystique. The ground symbolically connects to the body because it deals with roots, stability, foundations, nourishment, and growth. The layers of soil hold evidence of our existence and raise the profound spiritual question: Who are we, where are we, and for what purpose are we here? The earthy pigment may contribute to the paintings being perceived, and valued, as pure things in a corrupted world.

However, Madai evokes an ethereal world. His work is a poetic engagement with spirit and matter. He transforms the medium to express the particular sense of his own existence and the strength and fragility of the human spirit.”

Ms. Jessica Rowe, Director and Former Associate Director
Des Moines Art Center
Des Moines, IA