Ryan Crawley: Meet the Artist
Q: How did you get involved with Lions and Rabbits?
A: A friend years ago when yoga was in the gallery.
Q: Run us through your creative process: Medium? How do you start, flow and finish?
A:I start by creating a color field, with typically no more than two or three colors. When it’s a piece for myself, I allow the layers to tell me when to stop.
Q: What themes/ideas are highlighted in your work? Intentions?
A: Lately it has been journal entries. Each layer of the painting is completed in a day. I call these work therapy conversations. Other items: Animals (habitat loss), abstract landscapes, or cityscapes.
Q: Can you share more about how your career as an artist began?
A: I started, after college, thinking I’d never make money. I fell into the biggest trap creatives fall into, by believing in what others tell you. When I actually started making strides in my artist career I started working with artists who are living that dream. It was the birth of my daughter that really set me up to challenge myself. I want her to know that nothing is impossible, but it will take hard work to make something out of nothing.
Q: What mistakes have you made? What obstacles have you encountered throughout your career as an artist?
A: Always myself. Be that with creative work, updating my website, or moods. It seems that I’m my biggest obstacle. It’s easy to make an excuse about something that is externally causing issues, but I’m being real. Nothing gets in our way like ourselves.
Q: Who/what are your biggest inspirations that play a key role in your work?
A: That’s hard to say. I really like Duchamp, Monet, Van Gogh. Though I’ve been really bad at seeking contemporary artists out. Local artists that blow my mind are Nick Nortier, Esan Sommerall, Edwin Andersen, Guillermo Sotelo, Kyle DeGroff, Elliot Chaltry, Brad Goff, Jasmine Bruce, Chelsea Michal. I know there is more, but I'm forgetting at the moment and I appreciate every single one of you.
Q: Do you feel supported by your community as an artist? In what ways could you feel more supported?
A: I feel that’s going to be on going. I feel that local people need to understand more why being a collector is beneficial. The art in Grand Rapids is amazing, more people just need to see the “value” behind it and then start putting the money where the comments of “o I like that” are, it’s a tough transition. Though I believe it can happen.
Q: What is the function of artists in society? What does being an artist mean to you?
A: Challenge our current perceptions of the everyday world. Seriously, I’d love to hear more people look at the mundane and understand that it is art. Creativity isn’t limited to traditional methods.
Q: Describe a moment when you felt most proud of yourself
A: My first mural, it’s amazing to have my daughter say “Daddy you made that.”
Q: What are you currently working on or looking forward to?
A: Nothing set as of yet, part of why I need to get in gear 😂
Q: BONUS: if you could choose any vehicle to travel, real or imaginary what would it be?
A: This is hard, probably a fighter jet!
Follow more of Ryan’s work on www.rcrawley.com as well as Instagram.com/Rcrawleyart
Thank you for checking out this week’s Meet the Artist, be sure to check out more artist stories dropping weekly on our blog!
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