Saturday, December 13, 2008

From The Russell Center for Creative Arts website

When Hansen Clarke was in third grade, an observant teacher recognized his artistic ability and urged his mother Thelma to provide him with lessons. Private lessons were out of the question on his mother's salary, but being a resourceful person, she was able to arrange for the Detroit Institute of Arts to pay for the lessons through a grant. Clarke's hard work and innate artistic ability eventually lead to a scholarship offer from Cornell University. By his senior year at Cornell, Clarke decided to set aside his art to pursue a profession in law. After graduating from Georgetown Law School and passing the bar, Clarke returned to Detroit where his career has been on a rapid rise. He was elected three times to the Michigan House of Representatives. In 2002, he was elected to the Michigan State Senate by defeating an incumbent.

Today, Clarke has come full circle. After being away from his craft for eighteen years, he recently returned to his painting. Recently, he donated a painting to COTS (the Coalition On Temporary Shelter), a program that houses the homeless, addresses their needs and supports them in moving from homelessness to housing and stability. Senator Clarke is also setting up a scholarship fund that will help send disadvantaged inner city youths to a college prep school. Named after his mother, the Thelma Clarke Opportunity Program is his way of giving back to society. "That's what makes this country so great. We have an opportunity to invest in one another."

"Of Art and Politics" by Nick Sousanis from The Detroiter

http://www.thedetroiter.com/july05/clarkeart.html

Of Art and Politics
Hansen Clarke: Politician/Painter
by
Nick Sousanis

Our lives are a series of choices - a balancing act between our desires, our obligations, and the realities within which we find ourselves. Each decision we make, each path we choose, necessarily affects and eliminates other potential paths. State Senator Hansen Clarke's choices as a young man and his recent decision to run for mayor of Detroit are a powerful illustration of the effect our choices have on the course our lives take.

As a young man, Clarke was a strong artist, and this ability led to him receiving a scholarship to attend Cornell University. While he eventually did receive his Bachelor of Fine Arts in Painting there, at the time he felt there was little financial future for an artist. He turned instead towards law, in his words, "This is what the world recognized as being an accomplishment for a man." Thus he abandoned his passion for art and headed off to Law School at Georgetown. His law degree brought him back to Detroit, and once home, he worked his way into significant positions of public service in order to give back to his community, a role he does not regret in the least.

This fork in the road taken, Clarke would not return to making art for 18 years. Yet the call stayed with him all that time, every single day. Finally in 2002 he made a brief return to art, but his run for the Senate curtailed this once again. Settling into his role at the Senate, Clarke found a way to study painting evenings and Fridays and reacclimate himself to this world he'd left behind nearly two decades previous. In instructor Roumen Boudev, he found a strong teacher and a source of inspiration. Boudev shared these words with Clarke (before knowing of his student's Senate position), "It's easier to be a prime minister than a painter." The road to reclaiming his painting skills was not an easy one, but a challenge he always looked forward to.

In April of 2005, Clarke felt he was getting close to being comfortable showing his work. It was at this same time that he was thinking that he would have to run for mayor. People were calling on him to run, and the desperate state of the city presented an unavoidable pull. He hesitated as he knew that this would mean once again putting his art on hold. But by late April he determined that his city needed him too much, and so he put his brushes down again to attempt to serve Detroit in the larger capacity that the mayor's office could bring.

However, he did make this promise to himself, "For me to run, I couldn't give up painting again. I have to find a way to integrate it as part of my life." Clarke also points out the balance that an outlet like painting provides, "I think if I painted more I'd be more open as an elected official. Painting made me more sensitive to issues happening around me."

Should Clarke be elected this fall, we sincerely hope that he is able to find time for both of his passions - the city of Detroit and its people, and his art. Let it not be another 20 years before an exhibition of his art work hangs proudly in the city he long put it aside for in order to serve.

(For our interview with Clarke, please click here. For his campaign website, please click here.)

- Nick Sousanis

"New Spirit of Detroit"



"New Spirit of Detroit"
Watercolor, ink, and marker on Arches paper
9in x 12in
2008
SOLD

"Orange Woman"



"Orange Woman"
Acrylic on canvas
18in x 24in
2007
SOLD

"Yellow Flower"



"Yellow Flower"
Oil on canvas
16in x 20in
2006
SOLD

"Yellow Rose"



"Yellow Rose"
Oil on canvas
30in x 40in
2006
SOLD

Friday, December 5, 2008

"Mask"



"Mask"
Oil on canvas
16in x 20in
2006
SOLD