Michael Frank Portfolio

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Michael Frank Portfolio

February 17, 2014 - 19:07
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Inspired by the magical ambience in the works of early American artists painting scenes with great attention to detail, color and dramatic light, Michael Frank works layer upon layer on canvas to produce brilliant underwater scenes echoing the sumptuous yet mysterious nature of marine life on reefs and in rivers and streams.

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"I hope my paintings make people aware of the beauty and importance of undersea life—not just the popular large whales and sharks but the smaller less known delicate wildlife of the deep."
-- Michael Frank

X-RAY MAG: Tell us about your background and how you developed your artistic process.

MF : I have been painting for over 35 years. I do not have a formal education in art. Some college and art workshops. I developed my artistic skills mainly from the study of an early American artist group of the mid-19th century known as the “Hudson River School”.

X-RAY MAG: What is your artistic mission or vision?

MF : My artistic vision is to use my imagination to its fullest extent.

X-RAY MAG: What is it about the underwater world and its creatures that inspire you?

MF : My inspiration comes from the vast colorful variations of plant and coral formations and the enormous variety of undersea creatures that many of us have little knowledge of—their beauty and life dramas.

X-RAY MAG: Tell us about your experience in the underwater world, scuba diving or snorkeling. How and why did you start diving/snorkeling?

MF : I have been to the Caymans, Belize, Virgin Islands, Oahu, the Mexican coast of Yucatan and Cozumel. I have not had the courage to scuba dive, but I do snorkel whenever I visit these places. My interest in the underwater world was stirred over the years by TV’s Sea Hunt and movies like The Deep.

X-RAY MAG: What are your favorite dive sites, underwater subjects, locations?

MF : My favorites are the beaches of Barbados and Cozumel. I also like the areas around Mexico’s Cancun and Tulum where you can see a wide variety of fresh and saltwater fish.

X-RAY MAG: Tell us about your paintings. How are they made? Please describe what is unique about your method or concept. How do you compile your underwater scenes? What informs your art?

MF : First I draw several composition sketches. Then I will start to paint with many layers of thin glazes of acrylic paint on canvas. Sometimes I will start with acrylic fluorescent paints to get the brilliant colors needed to portray fish and coral dynamically, then tone them down with darker shades of the same color.

X-RAY MAG: Do you use underwater photography—your own or someone else’s—and how is it incorporated in your art work? If it is your own underwater photography, what camera equipment do you use and why?

MF : My underwater photography is very low tech (disposable plastic encased cardboard cameras). I mainly rely on photos in magazines and the Internet (permission freely given) of individual fish, underwater plant life and coral formations. I then take these many different pieces and arrange them to my liking. Then I add my own background to come up with my own composition with dynamic lighting for each painting (...)

Originally published

on page 92

X-Ray Mag #59

February 17, 2014 - 21:00

South Africa's Sardine Run & Cage Diving; Honduras' Miskito Cays; Mars the Magnificent 16th century wreck in Sweden; Richard Lundgren interview; Washington State's Hood Canal; Namibian Sinkholes; Gary Gentile profile; Ghost Fishing; Basking Sharks; Wide-Angle with Mirrorless Cameras; Scuba Confidential on Breaking the Chain; Tech Talk: Listerners, Watchers and Doers; Michael Frank portfolio; Plus news and discoveries, equipment and training news, books and media, underwater photo and video equipment, turtle news, shark tales, whale tales and much more...

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