The Warhol Corner of Studio Eidolons
One hit requires another, very quickly, or you fast start to lose altitude. . . . So we’re the song factory. We start to think like songwriters, and once you get that habit, it stays with you all your life.
Keith Richards, Life
Factory is as good a name as any. A factory is where you build things. This is where I make or build my work. In my artwork hand painting would take much too long, and anyway that’s not the age we live in. Mechanical means are today, and using them I can get more art to more people. Art should be for everyone.
Andy Warhol, quoted in Factory Made: Warhol and the Sixties, by Steven Watson
Ever the mutable,
Ever materials, changing, crumbling, re-cohering,
Ever the ateliers, the factories divine,
Issuing eidólons.
Walt Whitman, “Eidólons”
I like to call my special room Studio Eidolons, inspired by Walt Whitman’s poem. But I also feel a connection when I read Keith Richards’ testimony of cranking out songs, or Warhol’s life in the Factory at 231 East Forty-Seventh Street in New York City, or Walt Whitman composing poems to complete his burgeoning Leaves of Grass.
Before I attended a gallery talk in one of the hotels at D/FW airport years ago, I was cranking out about ten watercolors a year. The gallerist from Arizona challenged the audience, asking “How prolific are you? How many works do you produce in a year?” We had assembled to learn what it takes to be featured in galleries. That day I made a promise to make at least thirty pieces a year. As it turned out, I’ve averaged over a hundred a year since that promise. Currently I am proud to have in my possession ninety framed gallery-worthy watercolors, and one of my resolutions this year is to get them out of my house. I don’t want to allow a large quantity of paintings in my possession to provide an excuse to lag in my production.
Thanks for reading.
















