Michael Dominick
Nor' Easter No.1Nor' Easter No.2Nor' Easter No.3Dumbo TriptychTrenton #1Trenton #2Trenton #3Binghamton #1 Binghamton #2Binghamton #3Georgia State University #1Georgia State University #2Georgia State University #4Georgia State University #5Georgia State University #6Dragon's Breath (the day after creation)Dragon's BreathBig Red No.1Kiss My Action! at WORK GalleryKiss My Action! at WORK GalleryKiss My Action! at WORK GalleryKiss My Action! at WORK GalleryBlue No.1Blue No.2Blue No. 3Blue No. 4Blue No. 5Blue No. 6White Oil No. 1White Oil No. 2White Oil No. 3Untitled No. 101Untitled No. 102Untitled No. 103Untitled No. 004Untitled No. 005Untitled No. 005 (detail)Untitled No. 006Untitled No. 006 (detail)Zen and the Art of Liquid Fire (Cream No. 1)DETAIL - (Cream No.1)Zen and the Art of Liquid Fire (Cream No. 2)DETAIL - (Cream No.2)Zen and the Art of Liquid Fire (Grey No. 1)DETAIL - (Grey No.1)Zen and the Art of Liquid Fire (Grey No. 2)DETAIL - (Grey No.2)Zen and the Art of Liquid Fire (White No.1)DETAIL - (White No.1)Zen and the Art of Liquid Fire (White No.2)DETAIL - (White No.2)Texas Firehouse Diptych No.1DETAIL - Texas Firehouse Diptych No.1Texas Firehouse Diptych No. 1 (The Creation)April 19, 2008 (Numbers 1 -5)April 19, 2008 (No. 1)April 19, 2008 (No. 2)April 19, 2008 (No. 2) - close upApril 19, 2008 (No. 3)April 19, 2008 (No. 4)April 19, 2008 (No. 5)Feel the Heat - Installation View
Molten Iron Paintings
On April 19, 2008 I made my first 5 MOLTEN IRON PAINTINGS at William Patterson University. I treat the archival paper with a liquid compound of my own creation making it remarkably resistant to the 2800 degree molten iron. The resulting gestural strokes and splashes, my persuasion of the liquid fire on its collision course with the picture plane, creates beautiful and unpredictable marks that not only scorch the surface but also burn down into the depths of the layered paper and plaster support structure. No two are the same, and each one successfully captures the creative moment in a dynamic, spontaneous and visually compelling manner. The molten iron acts as a brush, not as paint, leaving behind complex, scorched gestures that permanently seal the instant of their making. Each drawing bears the marks of the controlled chaos that brought it into existence.
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