Picture perfect
Alex Coolman
NEWPORT BEACH -- Scott Kennedy is at home around boats.
His shop on Shipyard Way is a bright little enclave of art on a street
that is otherwise home to a shipyard, Olympic Boat Centers and Pedigree
Marine.
For the people who come to buy Kennedy’s paintings, the location is
probably off the beaten path; but for Kennedy, it’s the perfect place to
be.
All his life, he said on a recent morning, he’s been fascinated by the
way boats work and the way the marine environment has shaped their
design. Having a studio next to a shipyard is an extension of that
fascination, an attempt to stay close to what matters to him.
“What attracts me is the aesthetics,” of the vessels, the 49-year-old
artist said. “Over the ages, it’s been refined. Form has followed
function.”
In Kennedy’s paintings and sketches, this attention to the physical
details of boats is evident. Aspects of boats’ rigging are delineated
with clarity, even if the sea and sky are often rendered in an
impressionistic style. Minor mechanical details are treated with
enthusiasm rather than haste.
But the emotional meaning of boats is also something that Kennedy
values. He has been involved for years in sail training -- using sailing
trips to build character in young people.
The value of these trips is the kind of community they create among
the people who experience them.
“The ships, to me, provide that,” he said, by giving their young
sailors responsibility, focus and a new experience.
Lately Kennedy has been working on a pen-and-ink project to document
the creation of two tall ships that will be used for sail training. The
boats -- a pair of 90-foot brigantines -- are the work of the Los Angeles
Maritime Institute in San Pedro. Kennedy has created an extended series
of pictures illustrating the handcrafting that is going into their
creation.
“He’s the best of his field, in my own set of prejudices, in his
ability to capture what’s really going on,” said Jim Gladson, president
of the institute.
“So many artists, especially artists dealing with things
marine-related, are so unfamiliar with the processes going on that they
have difficulty with depicting it in a way that resonates with the people
who do it,” Gladson added.
That’s not the problem for Kennedy. The only criticism Gladson can
find of his work is that he sometimes gets so absorbed in it that he
neglects the business end of things.
“We try to play fair with him and make him take a little bit of profit
now and then,” Gladson said.
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