
JaZzArT
I think I’ve said these things before, but for those who have not read previous posts, I would like to explain about my art. My work is shaped by the three core principles of Jazz: improvisation, the artist as composer, and swing (meaning rhythm). Though I begin with planning and sketches, I ultimately allow the piece to “speak” as it evolves. Guided by intuition and response, each composition completes itself in its own rhythm—moving, shifting, and swinging with the same freedom and vitality that define Jazz.
JaZzArT…(which is what I call my art, especially my drawings)…is born from the spirit of Jazz, i.e. its improvisation, its insistence that every player is also a composer, and its unmistakable swing (rhythm) that turns sound into motion. I carry these principles into my visual art. While each piece begins, like I said, with a plan and a vision with many sketches, and a sense of direction, I never ask a work to remain confined to the first idea. Instead, I invite it to converse with me. And it does. It speaks and I listen…
As colours meet, lines shift, and gestures find their own momentum, the artwork begins to reveal its own logic, its own pulse. This creates a dialogue to the which I respond immediately, allowing the composition to reshape itself, to expand, and to surprise me. Even mistakes, like the ones Bob Ross called “happy accidents”, serve to enhance the composition. What emerges is not simply an image but a moment of co-creation: part structure, part choreography, and not of truly of chance, but to controlled spontaneity. If this sounds like a contradiction in terms, just think of it as “relaxed concentration.”
In the end, every piece must swing with energy. Every painting/drawing must be alive and must represent the spirit of the day, the times, the epoch. The work must be true to the moment of its making, if not it is dead in the water (as we said in the Coast Guard). My art becomes a visual guitar riff, a dance between intention and improvisation, where the final form is discovered rather than dictated. This is the essence of JaZzArT: creation that listens as much as it speaks, and finds its reality by following the music within.
ARTIST STATEMENT
JaZzArT emerges from the elemental language of Jazz—its devotion to improvisation, its recognition of the maker as both player and composer, and its subtle, irresistible rhythm (the old jazz players called it “swing”). These principles guide my hand as rules as well as currents. Each work begins with structure: sketches, notes, the clear architecture of an idea. Yet the moment the piece takes shape, the dialogue shifts.
In the studio, I listen. Colours scream out, lines hesitate or push forward, forms lean toward one another in ways I would have never imagined. The work guides itself towards its chosen direction, gently…and at times quite violently…undoing my certainties. I follow these impulses as one might follow a tune, trusting my instincts, (and yes, humans have instincts), allowing the never imagined to surface.
What results is not predetermined; it is discovered. The composition forms itself through its dialogue with me. Sometimes it dances with folkloric charm or syncopated rhythms, but it always seeks that intangible condition I think of swing. This vitality cannot be forced, but it can be invited.
JaZzArT is my way of honouring the moment of discovery. It is art shaped by intention and intuition and by attentive listening. I believe a work comes fully alive only when it’s allowed to guide its own becoming. Through each piece, I seek to create a visual experience that invites viewers into that same sense of movement, spontaneity, and quiet revelation.
CHEERS
Enjoyed the review, Francisco.
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Thank you so much Pat!
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Very welcome Francisco.
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What a brilliant and deeply insightful artist statement. Your explanation of JaZzArT doesn’t just describe a style—it reveals an entire philosophy of creation. I love how you bridge the world of Jazz with visual art so seamlessly, carrying forward the soul of improvisation, the freedom of composition, and that unmistakable swing that gives every piece its pulse.
The way you speak of your artwork “conversing” with you is both poetic and profoundly true to the creative process. It beautifully captures that rare space where intuition meets intention, where structure yields to discovery, and where so-called “mistakes” become essential moments of truth.
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Thank you so much Sir for your commentary, so precise and so thorough. Yes, I truly believe engaging in art is engaging in a conversation and that the artist must allow the painting the «right» to speak and then be courteous enough to listen. I associate my painting with jazz music because I love jazz music and its principle for creativity and thought it would work well with paintings as well. I am searching, Sir, the «truth» is not yet mine, but…
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Your words reflect such sincerity and depth, and it’s truly a joy to read the way you describe your artistic journey. The parallel you draw between painting and jazz is not only insightful but beautifully intuitive—both art forms thrive on improvisation, conversation, and an openness to discovery.
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Thank you kindly Sir!
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I love your art, Francisco! It’s so beautiful. I definitely feel the jazz through your work.🎷🎶
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Thank you so much Shaun! I truly appreciate it.
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You’re welcome!🌸
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