MM
JT
The Misery of Men
Time passes because you don’t know the art--
the dark makes all hands numb,
empty as speech, mute as a mustard seed.
© Karen Morris, Poet / Collaborating Author • 2017
Comments about the Drawings
Karen Morris, poet, psychoanalyst, collaborator, friend • Narrowsburg, NY • September 6, 2016
Blake and Turner are your truer ancestors. I wonder what makes me say that? Your drawings articulate the difficulty of the artist's position as being vulnerable. Loving anything in this day and age is, well, very risky.
Lynn Charlton-Blore, friend • Wales, UK • June 6, 2015
responding to Dominique Nahas' essay on John Tomlinson for the drawing BIG show he curated and in which he exhibited, June 12 to July 4, 2015:
"...and now I see through a glass darkly - love that haematite/ obsidian squeakiness sheen quality of graphite like a bloodline mirror. Would work well printed in glass and even layered John. Ha like a coney island house of mirrors stretching each emotion...fabulous integrity here John -it's the resonance of the brush strokes and calloused calculation of the fingers.
Suzanne Bybee, artist, art writer • Washington, DC • 2015
There is light but there is also image, and together, beaming with intent, John Tomlinson’s drawings reach across the room to see if you are paying attention.
Dominique Nahas, art writer & critic • New York • 2015
John Tomlinson's mark making and imagery plunge us into the depths of his self-reflections and self-disclosures. His visual work alternates between mordant self portraits and a flurry of word+image poems, this part logorrheic / part glossolaic verbal stream + images have neck-bracing emotional velocity. Tomlinson's work is unique in its combinatory power. It recalls the incantatory textual-visual work of the likes of Antonin Artaud, Nancy Spero, Tracy Emin, William Kentridge ( and in terms of intensity reminds us also of the fierce Visionary Heads of William Blake).
Iesha Anglin, artist • May 2017
I've seen your Night Watch drawings on Instagram! They're really intriguing images. They disturbed me at first glance, but are mesmerizing and less confrontational the longer I sit with them. It's a good quality your work has! I get bored with art that makes me feel indifferent, and your work has no room for any indifferences at all. I have to share them with a friend, who uses ink in ways you use graphite. He would really benefit from seeing them (now that I'm thinking about it). Just out of curiosity, is "The Misery of Men: Rage Series" a current body of work in-progress? lol Also, I could sit with your animation "Festering Rage" on repeat, and have a lot to talk about. It's a very clever integration of technology and drawing. I love it!! It's pretty amazing!
Allan Rubin, artist, friend • Cochecton, New York, January 14, 2015
You certainly have mastered this drawing technique. But what I most admire is how you have injected drama into these so they rise above the mundanity of most drawings.
Lakea Shepard, artist • North Carolina, February 8, 2015
The Misery of Men...the title alone- wow. From someone who does not believe in complying to the rules of "Art", your work is so inspiring. The thing about working in one medium is that you are constantly being challenged on how to keep the viewers attention, and you do just that.
Robert Yi, artist & art educator • Washington, DC, November 6, 2012 - February 1, 2015
You have enriched my life in countless ways. You are a true artist, educator, mentor and friend. We all look up to you as model of a true human being. I look forward to seeing more of your work. In the drawing class I help teach at American University I show your work to my students. Ten thousand years of fortunate to our dear John Tomlinson!
Jerry Saltz, art critic • New York, June 1, 2010
" I always think ...'John is such a good writer.' "
Danial Nord, artist • San Pedro, California, October 24, 2009
Hi John,
Finally back in the swing of things in LA and spent some time on your website. Glad I did!
Was really pleased to see your beautiful work, combining technical skill with provocative subjects. The real drawing/animation techniques were inspiring. Just wanted to touch base to tell you so, and also to say hello and thank you again for your support during the New York Studio Residency Program visit. All the best, Danial