There are many ways to enjoy the LEGO hobby; of course you can build all kinds of creations with LEGO bricks, but how about using LEGO as a medium for fine-art? Below I will introduce you to the LEGO art of Josh Talbott. Josh mainly focuses on fine-art, murals and portraits, but sometimes our beloved LEGO minifigs also sneak on his canvas to communicate with us and convey their unique message. 😉
Below Josh will introduce you to his world as an artist and a LEGO fan. This may inspire you to look at LEGO from another perspective and expand your view on how it can be used to express yourself:
The story of my life as an artist and LEGO-lover is a round about one; I have recently realized how much I have in fact returned to my roots. I am the oldest of eight children and due to the strains of managing so many kids my parents often dropped us off at my grandmother’s house. A quiet little basement apartment that opened out into her vegetable-garden. It was warm and cozy and there was always something cooking. We were free of the chores required of us at home. We were free to play. There were art-projects, collages, pencils and markers – and of course, a giant box of LEGO. The sound of them pouring onto the floor still resonates with me. These vacations to Grandmother’s house have greatly shaped my life…
It was no accident that I became an artist. My mother is a painter and doll-maker – among other things – and her father was a sign painter. My adventure into the world of art really began when I moved to New Orleans. I was chasing work as a scenic-painter for film when I met a couple of characters selling their paintings on the fence of an old cathedral on Royal Street. We were fast friends and then roommates and then inseparable. They inspired and effected great change in the way I saw myself and my paintings. We painted all the time and often where we were set up displaying our work we would paint and talk to the string of tourists as they happened by. It was a very good time…
I was painting one day – a painting of bugs as jazz musicians – and I needed something bright and inorganic to balance my composition. The peanut gallery was quiet and so after a bit of musing I had it; a LEGO! Bright and red in contrast to all the green in the painting. And then it hit me! The body of work that followed was LEGO figures in battle with ants and was greatly received. It seemed I had hit on something that really stirred people and brought them joy. It felt like a good idea, a bottomless well. And then things changed, as they often do…
Hurricane Katrina, and a string of other challenges changed my direction again. I bounced around, lost. My paintings were rather severe and heavy, in contrast to the bright eternal smiles of a LEGO head. I found Santa Fe and showed with a gallery there for a while and then I was in Los Angeles and showed paintings there. I lived in Los Angeles for a while. And then I discovered my current home…
It was dreamlike. Such beauty, quiet, and serenity. I planted my first vegetable-garden, and began cooking my grandmother’s recipes. At any moment now I have a casserole in the oven or the refrigerator. Those nostalgic smells were medicinal, and having a garden became hugely symbolic. It occurred to me that something funny was happening. Then I got a call from my friend Phil from New Orleans. He is now in Miami and wanted me to do some LEGO paintings for his gallery there. I was hesitant, but agreed. The response to the paintings has once again been great and I enjoy doing them more than ever…
I recently began going out, setting up and painting in public again, like we did in New Orleans. In talking to people about my work I realized something; I realized that I have rebuilt my grandmother’s house for myself as an adult. The smells of baking, the playing with LEGO and collages, painting, and that warm safe feeling of a home. I would say that in my life I have had two homes; the first was my grandmother’s house when I was a young one, and the one I am now so fortunate to have. And it seems LEGO have been an integral part of both…
You can see my recent LEGO paintings on my website. Limited edition prints are available. I also take commissions, so if you have something you would like painted (LEGO or otherwise) I would be happy to talk to you about it. Or if you just have an idea that you think would make a cool painting don’t hesitate to say. The LEGO paintings I am doing now playfully view the line between their world and ours. I like incorporating the real much more than making their environment a sterile one of their own. Please enjoy, and let me know what you think!
You can visit Josh at his website at JoshTalbott.com, and he also lists some of his LEGO art at his eBay store: Talbott Fine Art. And if you like LEGO art and using LEGO in creative ways, you may also want to check here: