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Erik
was born in 1968 in Fort Collins, Colorado and
raised in Wyoming where he recalls first drawing
seriously at the age of thirteen: “My mother is
an artist so I was exposed to art at an early age.
I did quite a lot of drawing before thirteen but
it never really meant anything to me. It was just
something to do when there wasn't anything else to
do. Then one day it went from 'something to do' to
'something I had to do.' I wanted to draw people,
especially girls. I wanted to be able to make the
beauty that I was beginning to see. The thought of
being able to 'make beauty' was very exciting.
It's still what drives me to do artwork today and
oddly enough, with every work I've ever done, I
feel like I haven't achieved this goal. I spent a
great deal of time at the library reading books
about the masters and becoming further inspired by
their work. Growing up in Wyoming had its
drawbacks for a young artist with such
inspirations; it seemed somewhat taboo to draw
nudes. For this reason, spent much of my
early years limited to drawing from whatever
popular adult publications II could find and from
my sister's fashion magazines left laying about. It
also meant that I spent a lot of time, in classes
and for family,drawing things that I didn't wish
to be drawing.” Erik
enrolled at the Colorado Institute of Art in 1997.
It was at the institute that he would finally get
the chance to draw from live models: “I probably
learned more in the first six months at the
Institute than i did in my whole life previous to
that time. Before we were able to draw from an
actual model, we spent many sessions drawing
nothing but skeletons. I remember being somewhat
discouraged and started to feel like I was wasting
my time with drawing nothing but bones.Then when
we began working with live models, the benefits of
understanding the model from a workingperspective
made all those previous hours very much worth
every second.”Erik
received his degree from the Institute in the
summer of 1989. "I was very anxious to start
living and working as an artist when I
graduatedErik continued to paint in his spare time
when he was in the service, but for all practical
purposes he felt that he had no future in art and
it would remain a hobby for him. Ironically it was
in the service that his art career received its
biggest boost: "A Fellow Marine had liked my
work and asked if I would do a commission for him.
I was somewhat surprised that someone would want
to pay me for my art so I gladly accepted. It was
my first commission so I worked quite hard at
making sure everything was just right. He was
pleased with the finished work and to my surprise
he was apparently pleased enough to show the work
around the baseErik moved back to Wyoming:
“Quite a few years went by were i seemed to have
lost interest in art. I bought a good bike and
spent most of my available hours riding around the
hillsides of Colorado and Wyoming. But as it turns
out, I couldn’t stay away from my passions
forever. In 1998, I started back up with a new
fervor to 'make beauty' and I have no plans of
stoping ever again.
drudwyn-arts.com
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