Art
Portrait of an evolving artist
Charles' work no longer solely focused on violence
David Charles' drawings depict the violence he saw as a kid. (Karen Jackson, Special to The Sun / January 10, 2008)
When you first look
at the early work of artist
David Charles, it can
be a bit off-putting.
Like many artists,
Charles drew and painted what
was around him.
That often meant blistering,
emotional, colorful portraits of
life and death in the Park Heights
community where he grew up.
Some of his first pieces told tales
of violence, gunplay and lives lost
too soon. He saw much of this as a
child growing up near Hayward
and Cordelia avenues.
"I can't say I didn't have nobody
to push me in the right direction
because my father's always been
there. My mother dealt with drug
abuse for years. My brother was
in 'the game,' " says Charles, who
was once involved in drugs.
For most of his teenage years,
Charles says, he was involved in
the drug culture of the 1990s.
That dark snapshot of Charles'
young life is a sharp contrast to the
polite, easygoing, philosophical
personality of the man he is today.
He says life has changed him and
so has his artwork.
"As I started getting older and
stepped away from things, in regards
to the streets, it was like, let
me go ahead and try to better myself,"
says Charles, 28. "I started to
venture outside of where I grew
up. I started to realize there was
more out there."
Vibrant, cartoonlike drawings
that were little more than a hobby
during his teens slowly evolved
into artistic social commentary.
Included in his collection is a
powerful drawing that compares
an image of the American slave
trade with men in a modern
American prison.
Another painting detailing a
young black teenager on a bus
stop bench forces you to study
and consider. At first glance, the
teen's face is awash in despair.
The background is a landscape of
litter, liquor stores and woe. The
boy is dressed in the familiar
"street uniform" of many urban
teenagers: three-quarter-length
shorts, a white tank-top T-shirt and
Timberland boots.
However, when you look again,
you realize the subject isn't a man
at all; he is an angel, perhaps a
guardian angel, pondering the
weight of his work.
Has he given up or is he challenged
by the daunting task before
him? Charles won't say.
"I just think my art is true to life.
It's not sugarcoated," he says. "It's
raw. It's what I felt. It's what I experienced."
His art has become away to supplement
his full-time position as a
teaching assistant for a boys'
group home in Baltimore County.
Charles' work found a wider audience
when he started exhibiting
it at the 5 Seasons club on Guilford
Avenue in 2005. In 2006, he exhibited
at the Eubie Blake National
Jazz Institute and Cultural Center
on Howard Street.
His work shows how he has
evolved; he now has portraits of
jazz musicians and art that revolves
around hip-hop.
"When you get older, the art is
more cultural," says Charles, who
has no formal training as an artist.
"I've traveled some and I've
educated myself on art."
His more current works include
a portrait of a jazz trio. Warm
shades of the smoke-filled room
and cool tones of bebop jazz seem
to leap from the portraits of a pianist,
string bass player and saxophonist.
That jazz creation is one
of a three-piece series.
"Certain things I create now, I
would have never created years
ago," he says. "Like the jazz piece.
I didn't really care about jazz, but
as I've gotten older and my temperament
has kind of cooled off, I
went out to see different things."
Charles' father, mother and
many friends still live in the Park
Heights area. But Charles, like his
art, has moved on. He lives in a
very modest, neat, northeast Baltimore
County apartment, which is a work in progress.
David Charles plans to display his
work at the Black Heritage Art
Show, Feb. 15-17, at the
Baltimore Convention Center. To
see his work online, go to
theillestillustrator.com.
A former anchor for WBFF-TV's Fox 45 Morning News, Harold Fisher earned a bachelor of science degree from Morgan
State University in 1986. After beginning his journalism career at a Washington radio station, he moved to television to work for Cable News 21 in Rockville. He has also worked as a TV anchor and reporter in Florida, Alabama, Missouri, Ohio and New York. He freelances as a reporter for WHUR-FM in Washington.
unisun@baltsun.com
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Copyright © 2008, The Baltimore Sun
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