FACULTY GUEST BLOGGER: Lynn Pauley
Lynn Pauley: “Why can’t your finished paintings be more like the pages in your sketchbook?,” J. Porter, an Art Director for YANKEE magazine, once asked me while I was working on an editorial assignment for him some years back. My sketchbooks are private, almost sacred spaces where secrets scribbles, blasts of paint, pasted found items and notes about my life are stored, collages and cataloged.
My heroes are David Park and Richard Diebenkorn both members of the San Francisco School of Figurative Painters. Legend has it that Park was an ‘adequate and hardworking’ (his description )1950’s American abstract painter. Sensing a new figurative direction in his work, Park strapped every abstract painting he could find and drove his car to the dump and unloaded. Park left abstraction to paint large lush,’ sure’ figures. Following some interior intuition, he ‘gave himself permission’ to try something new.
Diebenkorn’s large scale figurative works also gave me permission to ‘wreck’. I was thrilled to realize that where one of his paintings might start as a portrait of a seated woman his process allowed for him to completely paint over the work and reconstruct it as a standing man.
But possibly the biggest moment of permission I received was in graduate school watching 5 year olds paint at the Children’s Museum in New York City. Our thesis professor let us watch as each child was given 3 pots of paint; red, yellow, and blue, a piece of large craft paper and one brush. Without hesitation, each child smashed their brush into the pot and started making a picture. They then took the same brush without cleaning it and jammed it into the second jar of paint and then the third. Their paintings were raw, immediate, joyous and without censor.
I think we all worry about what people will think. I think that the true courage, in making art is to give yourself permission to experiment, grow and fail. Let the painting and work lead you intuitively into the next phase. That is where the joy for me lies. Let yourself have it.
In the “breaking” comes the breakthrough; a shining light illuminating the path ahead.
Lynn Pauley is a working artist and illustrator. She is the new Associate Professor and Area Coordinator in Illustration at Marywood University. This past fall she was awarded one of four exhibition prizes The Northeastern Biennial.
Pictured here, Pauley is currently completing a suite of large scale figurative pieces for her December 2016 one woman show at ARTWORKS Gallery in Scranton, PA.
You can see more of her work at www.lynnpauley.com/thevisualamerican

