Art

Abstract painter Ken Tate painting The Poet’s Dilemma



A video of neo-abstract expressionist Ken Tate painting a triptych titled The Poet’s Dilemma. Each piece is 4′ x 6′ feet.
music by Galen Bremer: www.galenbremer.com

Ken Tate

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24 thoughts on “Abstract painter Ken Tate painting The Poet’s Dilemma
  1. Truly inspiring. Call it what you will, but the most expensive painting ever sold in the WORLD looks a lot like Ken's work. $3.3 MILLION. Who's the talentless and deluded one exactly?

  2. In response to the cowardly criticism of Ken's art, in my experience people who mock abstract art usually have no idea about the abstract process. Without realizing it, whenever someone says " a child can paint that" they are actually praising the art work as it can take years for an adult artist to paint as brilliantly as a child. Google Picasso!

  3. Really love these paintings and loved watching you make them. Great color harmony and movement. I was wondering however if what you used for the black circular lines was an oil stick?

  4. I really like these: they are bright and fun. Most people don't know how hard it is to paint like this until you've TRIED, believe me it's far harder than you think. Well done Ken – wish I had the space where I could do big like that, afford the materials and make a mega mess – and be able to close it off and NOT look at it all the time!

  5. Reminds me of Rauschenberg. The transparency of the paints makes me think of the screens he used in some of his paintings. As far as Picasso's later work…well it was a Picasso. His later work was valued as art because it was a "Picasso" not because it was art. At that point in his career he could've just as well have sold his used TP and it would've sold as "art." Picasso eventually became more of a brand name towards the end of his life.

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