Lum
art of the here & now
art of the here & now
Tom Pazderka at his solo show at Santa Barbara Center for Art Science and Technology. Photo: Debra Herrick
Tom Pazderka is a painter, installation artist and writer. His work interrogates ideology, loss, belonging and nostalgia in a black and white palette of ash and oil. He is a founding contributor of Lum Art Magazine and his writings have appeared in The Philosophical Salon, Sublation Magazine and 3:AM Magazine. His work has been reviewed and published in LA Weekly, New American Paintings, Dark Mountain, Santa Barbara Literary Journal and Daily Serving among others. He publishes a semi-regular Substack art and theory newsletter A Secret Plot. tompazderka.com, IG: @Tompazderka, Twitter: @PazderkaTom, Substack: tompazderka.substack.com
All revolutions have the (un)fortunate side effect of altering much more than what they’ve initially set out to change. Whether we’re talking about a political act or a scientific breakthrough, a revolution begins with a magical act. What was previously seen as impossible, in a moment, is overcome. Spontaneous outbursts of mass movements (often accompanied by violence) cause major political upheavals, innovations in science and medicine cause humans to live longer or reach other planets, while artistic revolutions cause us to perceive and see in radically different ways. Revolutionary moments happen quickly. But their aftereffects can be felt for many years.