 |
“You recognize their silhouettes against the sky line right away,” says Tom Gilleon, “they are prairie skyscrapers. Grain elevators are a Western icon just as the tipi is. Today most of them are old ruins, but they still tower above the horizon throughout the West. The fact that they still stand is a testament to their utilitarian architecture, designed to contain corn or grain by the ton.
“Because of the light in the window, I’ve been asked if "Cascade High Rise" is a haunted elevator or if it is really abandoned. I don’t know if it is haunted or not, but it is abandoned. The light you see in the window at the top is not radiating from within, but rather illuminated from without. At just the right time of the year the sunrise will be reflected in the remaining panes of glass high up on the structure. It’s the end of an old time and the dawning of another.”
|
 |
 |
“Looking back, I was probably most influenced by the old era art directors and
illustrators who had the amazing ability to quickly and simply tell a story or
convey a feeling with their artwork. I believe that this simplicity and strength
is the key to fine art. Light, color, value, composition and line are paramount
in importance.” – R. Tom Gilleon
R. Tom Gilleon’s art is hard to pigeonhole. His interpretations of the American
West are genuine and unique. His representations of native teepees are
archetypal and primitive in their basic forms yet they are remarkably
contemporary in composition with a sprinkling of personal symbols and humor.
Gilleon’s work is coveted by collectors, increasingly finding homes in prominent
museums and auctions such as the Coeur d’Alene.
Gilleon was born in 1942 and raised in Florida by his grandparents in the tiny
outpost of Starke, near Jacksonville and the storied banks of the Suwannee
River. His grandfather had immigrated to the United States from Scotland and
became a renowned cabinetmaker. His grandmother was a full-blooded Cherokee.
Gilleon earned a scholarship to play baseball at the University of Florida where
he took courses in architecture. He served in the Navy in the early 1960s and
then worked as an illustrator for NASA’s Apollo space program. Eventually, he
went solo as a freelance illustrator based in Orlando and was hired by The Walt
Disney Corporation to deliver conceptual sketches and designs for its Disney
World theme park. Later, he moved to California to work at Disney’s Imagineering
studio which designed Epcot Center and then Gilleon assisted in the planning of
Disneyland Tokyo, Disneyland Hong Kong and Disneyland Paris.
The American West left a mesmerizing impact on him as an artist. Gilleon and his
wife first built a home along the Dearborn River in Montana, and later purchased
a ranch near Great Falls not far from the legendary Old North Trail where native
peoples traveled millennia ago from the Arctic to the desert Southwest. Here
Gilleon found clusters of teepee rings from encampments which inspire him to
contemplate how the camps might have looked centuries ago.
|
 |