Ruchell Alexander
was a year old when he and his family settled in Northern New Mexico.
He moved here directly from southern Mexico where he had lived most of
his life thus far. Soon after arriving, Ruchell and his family were
among the dozen or so original members of the Magic Tortoise Commune
which was established in 1973 on Lama Mountain, between San Cristobal
and Questa.
It was his good fortune,
artistically speaking, that another of the original members of Magic
Tortoise was an erstwhile New Yorker named Bill Gersh who in 10 years
would emerge as a renowned Southwest painter and sculptor.
It
is undeniable that from his earliest age Ru was inspired and stimulated
by Bill Gersh to become an artist. As Ru grew up in the "one big
family" ambience of the commune, he spent more and more time in Bill's
studio, chatting, observing, asking and answering questions and much of
the time making magic-marker drawings while Bill was painting.
And
as Ru matured--all the while living, jiving, and eating and working, in
his fashion, side-by-side with his pal Bill it was inevitable that Bill
became his mentor--although the influence of Bill's subject matter and
technique is hard to see in Ru's early work. Only in the last two or
three years has Ru been integrating Bill's powerful influence into his
own art.
For Ruchell's art there was
his "early magic-marker" period which was followed--because he wouldn't
give up the glorious spontaneity it allowed--by a long "late
magic-marker" period which lasted into his early manhood.
Eventually
the near-immediacy that acrylic paints allow convinced Ruchell that he
could mature his art without totally breaking with it's "raison-d'etre"
of spontaneity.
The result is
Ruchell Alexander's art of today: larger, multi-figured canvasses with
dramatic, autobiographical subjects including indications of the
centrality of Bill Gersh -- both personally and artistically in his
formation as both a man and artist.
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