Artist Statement Self Evident Truths


My work is a series of allegories that simultaneously reveal its overt messages and hidden meanings that challenge notions about the collective journeys of all people but those of the diaspora in particular. I paint these collective and often historical allegories, both affirmed and disputed, giving them a framework to challenge the struggles of identity, power and self actualization. My subjects are in classical pictorial representations using delineations of factual chronicles and imagined mythology replete with persuasive imagery that defies the common visual library and the often polemic misrepresentations of diasporic people. I use contrasting narratives with symbolism hidden in plain view that feeds discourse in an attempt to shed light on the weaponization of race and it's hypocritical progeny. 

These illustrated and often wordless stories use stark uncompromising realism as a catalyst for eroding the conventionally assigned racial archetypes. As a result of varying degrees of subtlety in the hidden and not so hidden symbolism in each artwork, a web of truths are revealed in the fabric of our historic racial synecdoche by actually creating initial allegories in the minds of the viewers that often change and evolve with subsequent views.

The stories I paint range from historical to mythological to anecdotal and beyond. Recently I have been creating imagery that reveals psychological journeys that are often metaphysical. In a quest to reaffirm the higher self in what is often a panoply in paint, I seek to reveal positive remonstrations to the notions of historic brutality, self loathing and the mass psychogenesis of societal apathy. My endeavor is to embue the allegories with symbols of forgivness, love and compassion in a visual balance to the darker counterparts using archaic and modern symbols, composition and even tropes that I can only hope communicates a message of personal apotheosis amid a world that can sometimes be a miasma of proffered fears.


 

 

S. Ross Browne, American, b. Mt. Vernon, NY

All Artwork ©1991-2019 S. Ross Browne

Photo by Kelly Boston

S. Ross Browne studied Communication Art and Design at Virginia Commonwealth University, in Richmond, VA and Photography at The Corcoran School of the Arts in Washington, DC. He is also an alumnus of The Miller School of Albemarle in Charlottesville, Virginia.

Browne is a professional studio artist with over 23 years experience. With an emphasis on painting, he has exhibited domestically and internationally in over 70 gallery and museum exhibitions and is in multifarious private and public collections including the permanent collection of the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts. He has been the subject of print and video media from various news outlets including Style weekly, Baltimore Style, WCVE/Virginia Currents, MSNBC’s The Griot, The Huffington Post, The Washingtonian, Ebony, Richmond Times Dispatch, Richmond Free Press, The Washington Post, The International Review of African American Art, Grid Magazine, WTVR/CBS, Harlem Interviews, Urban Views Magazine and the Tom Joyner Foundation.

As an educator Ross was the Art Specialist for the VCU Health System where he practiced art therapy for and taught art to his various patients with an emphasis on pediatric hematology/oncology, infectious disease, brain injury and elder care. He was also an art educator for various support groups including Living Well for pediatric cancer support and the Richmond Brain Tumor Support Group.

Browne was also an instructor for the Resident Associate Program at the The Smithsonian Institute in Washington, DC. and has taught art and design for inner city and at risk youth for the Fresh Air Fund of New York City, Weed and Seed, Project Ready and Art 180 of Richmond, VA.

His most recent adjudication was for the Alliance for Young Artists & Writers: Scholastic Art Awards.

As an illustrator his work has graced book covers from St. Martin’s Press and he has been a featured artist on the Directory of Illustration website and publication.

Browne, a recipient of numerous awards and honors, paints and writes out of his studio in Richmond, Virginia.

Photo, Regina Boone, Detroit Free Press

S. Ross Browne