Daniel,
when did you first become interested in art? Was there anything that
happened in your life that led you in that direction?
It was 1966 and I
was 13 years old, my older sister’s boyfriend brought over his day-glow
paints and painted psychedelic squiggles on my bedroom light cover. I
thought that was so cool so I bought a brush and paints and went crazy,
painting all over my room (I was a young hippie want-a-be). I was
intrigued by the new art on album covers and concert posters and
emulated it and others admired it. So that was how I found I could get
the admiration and approval I sought (at that young age).
As a self-taught
artist, how did you begin?
Then I took art
class all three years of high school and did well. After high school I
became committed to spiritual seeking as my highest priority and did not
pursue art until 20 years later. I was hearing Joseph Campbell say
“Follow your bliss” and reading books like “Do what you love and the
money will follow” and asked (a kind of prayer) to be shown how I could
get into art (as I figured I had enjoyed art when I was young). Within a
week I got a phone call saying the company I worked for was going out of
business and I took that as a type of answer to my prayer and went to an
art store and told the guy to sell me everything I needed to start
painting oils. I mimicked a very elementary style I had seen (one color
impressionistic) years before and did a silhouette of a dolphin (the
shape based on a T-Shirt I had).
It
was kinda lame but I took it down to the art store guy and he gave me
just enough validation to encourage me to continue. So I just started
painting all kinds of dolphin Silhouettes, and became known as the
dolphin artist in my community (that was all I painted. All in blue
colors.
How would you
describe your evolution as an artist?
Slow. I liked to
do other things as well so mostly did not paint very much. When I did,
they would always be liked and would sell. In hindsight I feel silly
that I did not paint more.
Your work is very
deep; it touches the soul; how did you develop your style of painting,
and how is it related to your spiritual beliefs?
I roughly emulated
the style of other visionary artists, like Gilbert Williams and such.
And over time my inspirational style came through more and more. When a
friend gave me a computer I scanned in photos of my paintings and began
to manipulate and add deeper dimensions to the style. The inspirational
and other dimensional qualities that come through were just what felt
cool to me. Liked exploring other realms of consciousness and seemed to
be able to capture some of those qualities.
Your
work is filled with lots of love and light. Would you say these are the
foundations for all the work that you do?
Well I have always
been a champion of love and light. The Beatles and psychedelia made
early impressions. I took LSD when I was 16 and saw that the world as I
had seen it was illusion and became intensely interested in eastern
philosophy. I read lots of books by Alan Watts and such. Remember, at
that time, John Lennon and the Beatles, and many other bands were into
those things as well. The message of those times (late 60’s) was “wake
up and live a better life of love, peace, equality, fairness, honesty,
and the world can be a better place.” I still believe that. Over the
years I have come to understand the nature of humanity and understand
why people act unkindly, violently and dishonestly. So I shed the
naivety I had in my youth. But the vision and clarity is stronger and
clearer than ever.
You
use a lot of triangles in your work. What does that symbolize to you?
Well the circle
represents the oneness and the triangle represents the apparent split of
point of view of “others” to make a dimension. The simplest geometric
shape to depict or create space.
How do you begin
each piece? Do you have an image in mind or do you just allow it to
evolve?
Both ways. Much is
done with a general idea and as I look at what I have done, more emerges
and more ideas come.
Who or what, has
been the biggest influence in your live as related to your artwork?
Early
on it was psychedelic exploration of consciousness (quite different from
drug escapism). More recent years I would have to say my spiritual
teachers (Gangaji, Eli Jaxon-Bear, John deRuiter, Adyashanti, Candice
O’Denver, Isaac Shapiro and others) – they have helped with
self-realization (to use an old term) and that shows up in the art as I
express what seems to come through. I must also say, Jon Anderson, the
lead singer of YES has been a great inspiration and visionary champion
of mine.
What would you say
have been some of your most rewarding or memorable experiences as an
artist?
Being called by TV
Globo (huge TV network in Brazil) to fly down and work on an animated
intro to a TV show seen by 50 million viewers 5 days a week for 6
months. Loved the people. the culture and the experience.
That's awesome!
Many
good artists would like to transition into the “professional” arena but
never seem to make the leap. How did you do it?
Not sure. Like
they say, believing in your vision and perseverance have a lot to do with
it. I tell young artists to keep creating and their unique style will
emerge and enough people will like it to support you. (And if you are
lucky you will also get some degree of fame or fortune. But those are
not things to go after.)
Where do you see
yourself going with your work? What are your future goals?
Creatively -
developing a new style on canvas that is more abstract but retains the
inspirational qualities. And work wise – doing presentations (with a
projector and sound system) to groups and speaking about what the art is
about and ways to live a more sustainable and spiritually awakened life,
that contributes positively to the whole (others and the world).
Wow, that's
inspiring! Good luck Daniel. I look forward to seeing what comes next.
To view more of Daniel Holeman's
beautiful artwork, please visit his website:
http://www.awakenvisions.com.
**PUBLICITY AGENCY:
VisionsArt (http://visionsart.co.uk )
Penny Frampton,
penny@visionsart.co.uk