• ABOUT BRUCE
  • ELDER LEAF DRAWINGS
  • CONTACT
mcreative.studiomcreative.studio
mcreative.studio
  • ABOUT BRUCE
  • ELDER LEAF DRAWINGS
  • CONTACT

Bruce McClain recounts how this series of drawings began when he noticed a fallen leaf and recognized an elderly face in its wrinkled surface. Within that face he found an imagined life full of memories and associations that inspired a drawing. The leaf had absorbed a spring and summer of sun and rain to feed the tree, then fallen to feed the soil, a nutritious mulch for the next year of the tree. Autumn leaves marked by the weather of their seasons become a metaphor for lifetimes of experience traced in this collection of art and poetry.

In this series of 34 narratively rich images, Bruce captures varied and distinct faces of people whose histories we are called to imagine. From the foliage, their eyes emerge to address the onlooker, reflect on their past, grieve, ask expectantly, hope, endure with dignity. In some pictures, hands clutch, reach, lift, or transform into branches, a pencil, a bird’s perch. Woven into the drawings are objects and creatures that may play a part in the person’s past or signify something of the person’s character. Recurrent images of birds, roses, bells, insects, boarded-up buildings, and clocks without hands suggest a deep symbolism underlying the art.

Art and Its Purpose

Art lends voice to both human tragedy and its discourse. To be truly creative, one must have the courage to step outside the boundaries of what is visually pleasing to the eye, to create images that evoke feelings that are of real life. Disparity, pity, sadness, fear and anger are often the pathos that come with aging. Elder Leaf is a series of graphite drawings that pay tribute to often unseen and vulnerable population—the elderly.

Any art that echoes with truth will naturally cause a reaction, touching on the delicate senses of our humanity. Elder Leaf can be loud and shocking, and at times jump out at you or whisper that eventual reality. My intentions are to stimulate discussion, controversy and conflict.

The faces are etched in wood that bear stories that speak louder than words, revealing memories broken by time. The illustrations depicting withering trees, gnarled limbs, splintered branches, and ebbing leaves typifying the plight of human frailty. But too, it intimates strength and resolve in the Autumn of life.

—Bruce McClain

Laurie Jean Weil
A Conversation Between an Oak Tree and a Man Lynched Among Its Limbs

Maril Crabtree
Anthropocene Dream

Shirley Fessel
Encased

Wendell Smith
Last Reach

Silvia Koffler
Crossings

H. C. Palmer
Green Man in an Artillery Crater

His Floral Crown drawing

Annie Klier Newcomer
His Floral Crown

I Once Wished for Wings drawing

Debbie Theiss
I Once Wished for Wings

In My Youth I Stood on a Railway Platform Drawing

Alice White
In My Youth I Stood on a Railway Platform

Jess's Reach for the Sky drawing

Jan Way
Jess’s Reach for the Sky

Mother Earth drawing

K.W. Perry
Mother Earth

Precarious drawing

Phil Franklin
Precarious

Retreat drawing

Laura Chalar
Retreat

The End Is In Sight drawing

Clinton Jarrett
The End Is In Sight

The Face In The Tree drawing

Cameron Morse
The Face in the Tree

The musician, the master, and the maple drawing

Rachel, Franklin
The Musician, the Master, and the Maple

Tinnitus drawing

Marcia L. Hurlow
Tinnitus 

Warsaw Ghetto – Never Forget drawing

Tina Hacker
Warsaw Ghetto—Never Forget

His Phantom Queen

Bruce McClain
His Phantom Queen

Bruce McClain
Whistle Stop

Hilary Adams
I Unravel.

© 2024 Bruce McCain