Interview with Barbara Takenaga for DC Moore Gallery / by Liz Riviere

Please enjoy this glimpse inside my studio created for DC Moore Gallery!

I hope everyone is safe out there. My life seems suddenly full of disinfecting – my keys, door knobs, and phone have never been so clean.
As artists, many of us are finding the lockdown solitude oddly familiar, as we often spend so much time alone in the studio. I love my time there, painting and listening to audible books. I’m lucky to have my little dog, Andy, with me as I work -- as Edith Wharton wrote “…a heartbeat at my feet.”

Barbara Takenaga studio

Barbara Takenaga studio

I have a lot of work in progress, paintings are just started and others that have been “finished” for months/years but sit there, still needing a little as-yet-to-be-found something.

Close-up of wall in Barbara Takenaga studio.

Close-up of wall in Barbara Takenaga studio.

That drawn out end time reflects my process – a lot of waiting for the image to tell me what to do. Learning to relinquish control when I’m a control freak. Learning to adapt and accept randomness when I hate change. I know, who knew? All of this is the underlying, invisible aspect of my work, trying to go with the (paint) flow in a mindset that adamantly wants things to stay still and structured. A very apt dilemma in these difficult days, when everything is in flux.

 So here are a few details of large paintings rather than the full image. It’s a preview but allows me to avoid putting half-baked work out there that may haunt me online. Letting go and holding on.

Top: Detail of Fan Out, 2020. Acrylic on linen, 45 x 54 inches. Bottom: Detail of Work in Progress, 2020. Acrylic on linen, 60 x 70 inches.

Top: Detail of Fan Out, 2020. Acrylic on linen, 45 x 54 inches. Bottom: Detail of Work in Progress, 2020. Acrylic on linen, 60 x 70 inches.

And a few small ones.

Little Green/Blue, 2020. Acrylic on wood panel, 6 x 6 inches.

Little Green/Blue, 2020. Acrylic on wood panel, 6 x 6 inches.

Left: Gray/Violet, 2020. Acrylic on wood panel, 12 x 10 inches. Right: Swimmer, 2020. Acrylic on wood panel, 12 x 10 inches.

Left: Gray/Violet, 2020. Acrylic on wood panel, 12 x 10 inches. Right: Swimmer, 2020. Acrylic on wood panel, 12 x 10 inches.

Also, details of the studio. My view of my shoes and my stash of used paint cups. The work table where I write down random notes that get abraded and fade away over time, like a loosening memory.

Left: Barbara Takenaga work table in studio. Right: Barbara Takenaga studio with used paint cups.

Left: Barbara Takenaga work table in studio. Right: Barbara Takenaga studio with used paint cups.

Visible there, a quote from the writer Hilary Mantel, “The evening, dove-like, is circling itself to rest.”

Barbara Takenaga studio

Barbara Takenaga studio