Artist M. Tobias Hall Celebrates Connection, Presence, and Life

Artist M. Tobias Hall Celebrates Connection, Presence, and Life
Painter, draftsman, and teacher M.Tobias Hall paints in his apartment in New York on April 27, 2018. (Milene Fernandez/The Epoch Times)
Milene Fernandez
6/26/2018
Updated:
9/1/2018

NEW YORK—As he paints, M. Tobias Hall contemplates the changing light of the day interacting with forms. Time can slip by so fast. It’s difficult to be just in the present—without ruminating about the past or being anxious about the future. He’s searching for what many of us yearn for: a way to feel connected with the truth of reality and, simultaneously, with something infinitely greater than ourselves.

He doesn’t take himself too seriously, but, in a sense, he’s on a symbolic quest. Like many artists, his creative process lends itself to self-discovery, to feeling connected, to empathy, and to intimacy. It’s a humbling experience. 

As he paints, it’s as if he’s futilely trying to negotiate a truce with time. “Sometimes it’s a struggle, sometimes it’s more athletic and visceral, sometimes it’s very cerebral, and sometimes everything is in sync, but it’s different from day to day,” he said with palette in hand, looking at his reflection in the mirror of his mantelpiece.

The painting depicts a small figure in a large interior. It is a self-portrait in his north-facing apartment, where he paints during the daytime because his studio has only artificial light. His uncluttered living room feels like a sanctuary—a kind of holding place, reflecting his interior world.

M. Tobias Hall paints his apartment in New York on April 27, 2018. (Milene Fernandez/The Epoch Times)
M. Tobias Hall paints his apartment in New York on April 27, 2018. (Milene Fernandez/The Epoch Times)

There, with the intention of keeping all his senses open, he’s faced with the infinite possibilities of what he could paint. “I constantly feel ideas blooming inside of me, but they are elusive; they evolve faster than I can keep up with, and then they fly away. Sometimes I catch a hold of one,” he said.

Last winter, one day when he was exploring ideas, he made an oil painting sketch of his large painting in progress. “There was a very particular light on that day,” he said. “At this time of year, I only see that light effect at 6 p.m. on a sunny day. Time and space is the subject, and the light effects are always fleeting. I’m trying to speak to all of it,” he said.

A preparatory oil painting sketch for a large painting by M. Tobias Hall, 2018. (Milene Fernandez/The Epoch Times)
A preparatory oil painting sketch for a large painting by M. Tobias Hall, 2018. (Milene Fernandez/The Epoch Times)
Preparatory oil painting sketch and drawing by M. Tobias Hall, 2018. (M. Tobias Hall)
Preparatory oil painting sketch and drawing by M. Tobias Hall, 2018. (M. Tobias Hall)
Oil painting in progress by M. Tobias Hall, 2018. (M. Tobias Hall)
Oil painting in progress by M. Tobias Hall, 2018. (M. Tobias Hall)

While he’s faced with the infinite possibilities of representing and interpreting the space around him and his own reflection in the mirror, every brushstroke he makes is a conscious choice. The works he creates emanate his intentions.

“For me, this process is intended as a deep meditation, an act of love in celebration of being,” Hall said, while he applied a second layer of paint on the large canvas.

M. Tobias Hall paints his apartment in New York on April 27, 2018. (Milene Fernandez/The Epoch Times)
M. Tobias Hall paints his apartment in New York on April 27, 2018. (Milene Fernandez/The Epoch Times)
“In a sense, painting is a mosaic of moments. I see it as a communication of consciousness and experience,” he said, and added more paint to his brush. “I am somewhere in the middle of it, trying to resolve the compositional organization, and then to cycle deeper into my perception with each pass [layer of paint].”

He paints all day until sundown. Some evenings, he visits The Metropolitan Museum of Art to see the works of artists who have been immortalized. It’s like a ritual for him. “I am excited about every square foot of that place,” he said. “In my mind, there is a semblance of true holiness. The Met is so rich in culture and human experience, crystalized but alive. It is an opportunity for intimacy and connection to being and time.”

M. Tobias Hall (C)  teaches a figure drawing class at Studio Escalier in Argenton-Chateau, France, in June 2018. (Peter Söderbaum)
M. Tobias Hall (C)  teaches a figure drawing class at Studio Escalier in Argenton-Chateau, France, in June 2018. (Peter Söderbaum)

At the end of May, he put his large painting aside. It’s on hold for the summer while he teaches at Studio Escalier in France, in Argenton-Chateau and also in Paris. He has been teaching there every summer since 2011.

Learning and Working From Life

While outside factors and forces—like a one-man exhibition or the market—can pinpoint a milestone by which an artist becomes readily recognizable, the quest of an artist like Hall is endless. It’s not necessarily about wanting recognition. It’s more of a spiritual and philosophical practice.

Hall’s quest presupposes genuine intentions. And while he is more intent on the process than the end result, he still has to reconcile with the fact that he has to make a living. It’s a common challenge for artists. As the rock star Iggy Pop said in 2014 during his John Peel Lecture at the BBC, “How do you engage society as an artist and get them to pay you? Well, that’s a matter of art. And endurance.”

The Brooklyn Museum of Art's card and catalog showing M. Tobias Hall's drawing of Iggy Pop. (Milene Fernandez/The Epoch Times)
The Brooklyn Museum of Art's card and catalog showing M. Tobias Hall's drawing of Iggy Pop. (Milene Fernandez/The Epoch Times)

Hall was one of the participating artists in the exhibition “Iggy Pop Life Class by Jeremy Deller” that took place at the Brooklyn Museum from Nov. 4, 2016 to June 18, 2017. His drawing of Iggy Pop was used for the museum’s exhibition brochures. The luminosity in that museum-worthy drawing is simply arresting.

More recently, his figure drawing titled “Push and Pull” was shown in the “On Paper, An Exhibition of Drawings” at The Florence Academy of Art–U.S. gallery in Mana Contemporary, located in Jersey City, New Jersey. The way he has represented his understanding of anatomy, how the light interacts with the forms in the figure, is dazzling. 

"Push and Pull" by M. Tobias Hall. Graphite and charcoal on paper, 18 inches by 24 inches. (The Florence Academy of Art–U.S.)
"Push and Pull" by M. Tobias Hall. Graphite and charcoal on paper, 18 inches by 24 inches. (The Florence Academy of Art–U.S.)

Hall completed his MFA at the New York Academy of Art in the fall of 2017 and since has been building up his body of work. Each study for his upcoming projects and each finished work has a recognizable and unique combination of qualities.

These qualities are best seen face-to-face. Though they still look remarkable in photographic reproductions, they look even more so in person. That’s a good indication that what he’s communicating visually in his drawings and paintings is created directly from his own perception.

“Presence, empathy, and the potential for connectivity to nature, to others, and to myself is what I find to be the most profound part of the creative process. That’s why it is important for me to paint and draw from life. In my mind, it opens up the opportunity for deep experience and a sense unity in multiple levels,” he said.

M. Tobias Hall shows his portfolio of drawings in his apartment on April 27, 2018. (Milene Fernandez/The Epoch Times)
M. Tobias Hall shows his portfolio of drawings in his apartment on April 27, 2018. (Milene Fernandez/The Epoch Times)

“All my teachers tend to prioritize working from life. I have absolutely nothing against working from photographic references, but if my goal is to sync my imagination with nature, working from life seems to be the most personally fulfilling pursuit,Hall explained.

In New Mexico, Hall studied with Anthony (Tony) Ryder, a most esteemed draftsman, teacher, and the author of the best-selling treatise on contemporary classical drawing, “The Artist’s Complete Guide to Figure Drawing.” He also studied with the couple Timothy Stotz and Nicole Michelle Tully, who together with Ryder founded Studio Escalier in France.

(L–R) Timothy Stotz, M. Tobias Hall, and Nicole Michelle Tully at Studio Escalier in Argenton-Chateau, France, in June 2018. (Shan Peng)
(L–R) Timothy Stotz, M. Tobias Hall, and Nicole Michelle Tully at Studio Escalier in Argenton-Chateau, France, in June 2018. (Shan Peng)

In New York, he studied with Michael Grimaldi, another admired draftsman and a faculty member at The New York Academy of Art.

Hall expressed much gratitude toward all of his teachers, starting with Ryder. “I feel as though I came into myself when I began studying with Tony,” he said. 

“Tony is about light. He was more of a spiritual presence for me in [imparting] this process and this practice. Tim [Stotz] woke me up and provided me the toolset to consider things conceptually. He’s about the mind. Michelle [Tully] is grace and movement, a poet of color. I see her as the heart.”

“Michael [Grimaldi] brought a physicality to my work. He is about the body: the structural and physical presence of form with an emphasis on anatomy and perspective. That is his strength,” he said.

Hall admits he has not fully absorbed everything he has been offered, but he is doing his best to be himself relative to what he has learned. “I feel very fortunate to have been exposed to different perspectives and the various strengths of my teachers,” he said.

M. Tobias Hall (R) and his former teacher Michael Grimaldi at the opening of “On Paper, An Exhibition of Drawings” at The Florence Academy of Art–U.S. in Jersey City, N.J., on April 29, 2018. (Milene Fernandez/The Epoch Times)
M. Tobias Hall (R) and his former teacher Michael Grimaldi at the opening of “On Paper, An Exhibition of Drawings” at The Florence Academy of Art–U.S. in Jersey City, N.J., on April 29, 2018. (Milene Fernandez/The Epoch Times)

When he is painting (or drawing), especially when he’s painting another person, he’s in a hyper-aware state—physically, emotionally, and spiritually. It’s an intimate exchange. Both he and the sitter, or model, are vulnerable. It’s a profound connection. 

“For people who look at art, they want to feel that connection too. So we all want to be unique, but also be connected,” he said. 

Detail of M. Tobias Hall's work in progress, 2018. (M. Tobias Hall)
Detail of M. Tobias Hall's work in progress, 2018. (M. Tobias Hall)
M. Tobias Hall's work in progress, oil on canvas, May 2018. (M. Tobias Hall)
M. Tobias Hall's work in progress, oil on canvas, May 2018. (M. Tobias Hall)

He also reflected on how his strength as a dreamer can also be his weakness, and he strives to find a balance. When he paints, time slips away, and he inadvertently may skip a meal.

“I am aware of my tendency to be in denial of certain things. The shadow of that dreamer’s luminosity can lead to the avoidance of certain challenges. I think it’s important to acknowledge it. Sometimes painting can be an escape from anxiety; an antidote to fear. Even though the waves of the creative process present their own set of anxieties, it’s a rhythm that somehow seems more manageable. The process echoes life,” he said.

In the broad terrain of contemporary art, Hall, along with many other classically trained draftsmen and painters, is an outlier. Quixotic in his nature and faithfully dedicated to his art, he works relentlessly. He’s been fortunate to dedicate most of his time to learning and creating art, with the support and generosity of his parents, teachers, and anonymous patrons.
“Every step I take is with gratitude for this experience. It’s important for me never to take it for granted, to always honor the opportunity that I have been given,” Hall said.

“I feel like I am definitely where I am supposed to be—fulfilled and inspired in my pursuit,” he said.

M. Tobias Hall paints in his apartment in New York on April 27, 2018. (Milene Fernandez/The Epoch Times)
M. Tobias Hall paints in his apartment in New York on April 27, 2018. (Milene Fernandez/The Epoch Times)
Milene Fernandez is on Instagram @milenejf
Feature writer contributing to the Arts & Culture section of The Epoch Times, online and in print. Email: [email protected]
Related Topics