InkSpired Magazine Issue No. 34 | Página 20

Picture fine art. Picture a fine artist. Crumple those pictures and toss them, because they don’t look anything like Ian Robert McKown or his art. In 2003, Mckown managed restaurants; he was a corporate cog in Boulder’s cuisine machine; and he hated it. One afternoon, while getting some tattoo work done, he asked the artist, a tattooer named Chris Smith, how he’d gotten started. Are you interested? Smith asked. “I’d really never thought of it,” says McKown, “but I said, ‘Yeah, sure,’ so I ended up taking a few days to draw up some ideas I thought would be good tattoo art, you know? And—I guess he really liked it. I put in my two weeks notice and walked away from the corporate world and just kind of became a tattooer. I started apprenticing under Chris right away. I was 30 years old.” This decision + immediate action equation would later result in McKown trying his hand at fine art. Once again, an impulsive choice fueled by emotional resonance had a profound impact on his life and art. Five years after becoming a tattoo artist, while on his way into an art shop for supplies, McKown passed a news rack and saw, on a magazine cover, a still life by David Leffel, an American-born painter who works in the Dutch/Flemish Old Master style. “It was a still life on the cover of, maybe Fine Art America,” says McKown, “and I remember seeing it, and, for the first time in my life, I had an emotional register with a piece of art—I actually felt what I was seeing. That was the moment of impact, the ground zero, as it were . . . I’d never realized you could capture something like he does . . . capture a moment in that way. I went out and got some oils and decided to learn how to paint Dutch/Flemish realism, you know? It was 2008, and that’s when I first started painting.” 18 INKSPIREDMAGAZINE.COM