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Jesse Bransford

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The Fourth and Fifth Pyramids 2023

In 2013 artist Jesse Bransford produced an exhibition for the Galveston Artist Residency. Titled The Fourth Pyramid, the exhibition was conceived at the prompting of founder/director Eric Schnell. From this prompt Bransford created a ‘spell’ for the city of Galveston, a large, multi-stage installation that operated with explicit magical intent. The work proved to be a watershed moment for the artist, who was completing a multi-year project which magically considered the planets using the perspective of Cornelius Agrippa’s Three Books of Occult Philosophy.

The images and ideas of The Fourth Pyramid were founded on what became a small image book Bransford was constructing when Schnell first contacted him about the project. A limited edition of this book was produced as a companion to the installation in 2013. Calling to the emblem books of the 16th and 17th centuries, the book collected a number of images Bransford had been meditating upon in his personal magical practice at that time. In the text, each image is presented with a number as a footnote to the image, the number corresponding to a motto or statement at the end of the text. Connecting thought, number, and drawing in a triad of relations, each emblem becomes spell-like in their own right.

Coinciding with the tenth anniversary of this exhibition, the original text of The Fourth Pyramid is re-presented, alongside a second text, The Fifth Pyramid, which assembles second set of images that the artist has worked with in the ten years since the first iteration. The two volumes are limited to 400 examples, in a custom box, signed and hand-numbered by the artist.

Available from [NAME] Publications

Jesse Bransford, The Fourth and Fifth Pyramids
Jesse Bransford, The Fourth and Fifth Pyramids

2 volumes, 72 pages each; 108 monochrome images, with notes, in textured grey wrap and slipcase. 9 x 6.3 inches (23cm x 16cm), edition of 400, in collaboration with Fulgur Press.

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Magic Circles 2022

Jesse Bransford, Ashokan Circle
Jesse Bransford, Ashokan Circle

2022, 22x30", watercolor, gouache, and graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Circle to Venus
Jesse Bransford, Circle to Venus

2022, 22x30", watercolor, gouache, and graphite on paper (framed).

Jesse Bransford, Triangulation I
Jesse Bransford, Triangulation I

2022, 26x40, Watercolor and graphite on paper (framed).

Jesse Bransford, 6-7-8 and Protection Cube
Jesse Bransford, 6-7-8 and Protection Cube

2022, 51x33” Watercolor, Gouache, and graphite on paper.

Banded Staves 2019

Jesse Bransford, War Thorns
Jesse Bransford, War Thorns

2019, 7 1/2 x 5 1/2”, Watercolor and graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, To Safely Cross Borders
Jesse Bransford, To Safely Cross Borders

2019, 7 1/2 x 5 1/2”, Watercolor and graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, For the Trees
Jesse Bransford, For the Trees

2019, 9 x 7”, Watercolor and graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Ice Breaker
Jesse Bransford, Ice Breaker

2019, 9 x 7”, Watercolor and graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, For Clear Vision
Jesse Bransford, For Clear Vision

2019, 9 x 7”, Watercolor and graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, For Rain Without Flooding
Jesse Bransford, For Rain Without Flooding

2019, 9 x 7”, Watercolor and graphite on paper.

Mahavidyas 2017-2018

The Mahavidyas (Great Wisdoms) are a group of ten aspects of the supreme feminine principle (Adi Parashakti) in Hinduism. Especially invoked in Tantric practices, these emanations depict the cosmic cycle of birth, evolution, death, and regeneration. For example, Bhuvanesvari is the fourth concept and is the universe at the apex of its development. ‘The entire Universe is said to be her body and all beings are ornaments of her infinite being.’ (Wikipedia). Her yantra here is imagined as a radiant space of light in fullness with the lotus petals carrying the colors of the rainbow.

  Jesse Bransford, Mahavidya One – Kali, 2017, 25 x 39”, Watercolor and graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Mahavidya One – Kali, 2017, 25 x 39”, Watercolor and graphite on paper.

  Jesse Bransford, Mahavidya Two – Tara, 2017, 25 x 39”, Watercolor and graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Mahavidya Two – Tara, 2017, 25 x 39”, Watercolor and graphite on paper.

  Jesse Bransford, Mahavidya Three – Sodasi, 2017, 25 x 39”, Watercolor and graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Mahavidya Three – Sodasi, 2017, 25 x 39”, Watercolor and graphite on paper.

  Jesse Bransford, Mahavidya Four - Bhuvanesvari, 2017, 25 x 39”, Watercolor and graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Mahavidya Four - Bhuvanesvari, 2017, 25 x 39”, Watercolor and graphite on paper.

  Jesse Bransford, Mahavidya Five – Chinnamasta, 2017, 25 x 39”, Watercolor and graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Mahavidya Five – Chinnamasta, 2017, 25 x 39”, Watercolor and graphite on paper.

  Jesse Bransford, Mahavidya Six – Bhairava, 2017, 25 x 39”, Watercolor and graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Mahavidya Six – Bhairava, 2017, 25 x 39”, Watercolor and graphite on paper.

  Jesse Bransford, Mahavidya Seven – Dhumavati, 2017, 25 x 39”, Watercolor and graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Mahavidya Seven – Dhumavati, 2017, 25 x 39”, Watercolor and graphite on paper.


  Jesse Bransford, Mahavidya Eight – Bagalamukhi, 2017, 25 x 39”, Watercolor and graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Mahavidya Eight – Bagalamukhi, 2017, 25 x 39”, Watercolor and graphite on paper.

  Jesse Bransford, Mahavidya Nine – Matangi, 2017, 25 x 39”, Watercolor and graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Mahavidya Nine – Matangi, 2017, 25 x 39”, Watercolor and graphite on paper.

  Jesse Bransford, Mahavidya Ten - Kamala, 2017, 25 x 39”, Watercolor and graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Mahavidya Ten - Kamala, 2017, 25 x 39”, Watercolor and graphite on paper.

A Book of Staves (Galdrastafabók) Deluxe Edition 2018

Jesse Bransford, A Book of Staves (Galdrastafabók), 2018, book bound in full limp vellum, original drawing, in clamshell box, edition of 35. Published by Fulgur Press.

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Moon and Sun 2016

Jesse Bransford, Kali Pujani Yantra
Jesse Bransford, Kali Pujani Yantra

2016, 22 x 30”, Watercolor and graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, “Bala” Supreme Feminine Principle
Jesse Bransford, “Bala” Supreme Feminine Principle

2016, 22 x 30”, Watercolor and graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Chinamasta Pujana Yantra
Jesse Bransford, Chinamasta Pujana Yantra

2016, 22 x 30”, Watercolor and graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Bhereunda Nitya (Lunar Deity of the Brighter Half)
Jesse Bransford, Bhereunda Nitya (Lunar Deity of the Brighter Half)

2016, 22 x 30”, Watercolor and graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Sri Yantra
Jesse Bransford, Sri Yantra

2016, 22 x 30”, Watercolor and graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Surya (Sun God)
Jesse Bransford, Surya (Sun God)

2016, 22 x 30”, Watercolor and graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Vidya Rajni Pujana Yantra (Devi-Tara)
Jesse Bransford, Vidya Rajni Pujana Yantra (Devi-Tara)

2016, 22 x 30”, Watercolor and graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Nitya Nitya
Jesse Bransford, Nitya Nitya

2016, 22 x 30”, Watercolor and graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Anapurna Yantra (Giver of Food and Plenty)
Jesse Bransford, Anapurna Yantra (Giver of Food and Plenty)

2016, 22 x 30”, Watercolor and graphite on paper.

The Emerald Tablet (for The Magic Flute) & Circle to the Four Corners/Elements (for K.S.) 2015-2016

Jesse Bransford, Installation views of The Emerald Tablet (For the Magic Flute), 2015 Dimensions variable, Graphite and latex paint on wall, and Circle to the Four Corners/Elements (for K. S.), 2015-16, Dimensions variable / site specific installation, Graphite and latex paint, skull, humerus, brass candlestick, cast iron cauldron, sculpture Mandroglorie and sculpture Fist on circular platform, Courtesy of the artist, Rebecca Salmon and Weinstein Gallery. Installation at 80WSE, New York (Destroyed)

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Hills Become the Sun 2015

Jesse Bransford, Hills Become the Sun (Three Into Four), 2015, Tempera paint, graphite, four bowls containing: air from the CAMH, soil from GAR, water from Galveston Bay and sand from the Gulf of Mexico. Site specific installation at CAM Houston (Destroyed).

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Sayings of the High One 2014

 

From the Hávamál, notably the Ljóðatal or Charms

Jesse Bransford, Stave against Sorrow (1), 2014, 5 1/2 x 7 1/2”, Watercolor and graphite on paper.
Jesse Bransford, Stave against Sorrow (1), 2014, 5 1/2 x 7 1/2”, Watercolor and graphite on paper.

“Those songs I know, which nor sons of men
nor queen in a king's court knows;
the first is Help which will bring thee help
in all woes and in sorrow and strife.”

 

Jesse Bransford, Stave of Healing (2), 2014, 5 1/2 x 7 1/2”, Watercolor and graphite on paper.
Jesse Bransford, Stave of Healing (2), 2014, 5 1/2 x 7 1/2”, Watercolor and graphite on paper.

“A second I know, which the son of men
must sing, who would heal the sick.”

Jesse Bransford, To Blunt Weapons (3), 2014, 7 1/2 x 5 1/2”, Watercolor and graphite on paper., 2014, 7 1/2 x 5 1/2”, Acrylic and watercolor and graphite on paper.
Jesse Bransford, To Blunt Weapons (3), 2014, 7 1/2 x 5 1/2”, Watercolor and graphite on paper., 2014, 7 1/2 x 5 1/2”, Acrylic and watercolor and graphite on paper.

“A third I know: if sore need should come
of a spell to stay my foes;
when I sing that song, which shall blunt their swords,
nor their weapons nor staves can wound.”

Jesse Bransford, To Escape from Prison (4), 2014, 7 1/2 x 5 1/2”, Watercolor and graphite on paper.
Jesse Bransford, To Escape from Prison (4), 2014, 7 1/2 x 5 1/2”, Watercolor and graphite on paper.

“A fourth I know: if men make fast
in chains the joints of my limbs, 
when I sing that song which shall set me free,
spring the fetters from hands and feet.”

Jesse Bransford, To Stop a Dart of Malice (5), 2014, 7 1/2 x 5 1/2”, Watercolor and graphite on paper.
Jesse Bransford, To Stop a Dart of Malice (5), 2014, 7 1/2 x 5 1/2”, Watercolor and graphite on paper.

“A fifth I know: when I see, by foes shot,
speeding a shaft through the host,
flies it never so strongly I still can stay it,
if I get but a glimpse of its flight.”

Jesse Bransford, Conjured Harm Returns to the Sender (6), 2014, 7 1/2 x 5 1/2”, Watercolor and graphite on paper.
Jesse Bransford, Conjured Harm Returns to the Sender (6), 2014, 7 1/2 x 5 1/2”, Watercolor and graphite on paper.

“A sixth I know: when some thane would harm me
in runes on a moist tree's root,
on his head alone shall light the ills
of the curse that he called upon mine.”

Jesse Bransford, Protection from Fire (7), 2014, 7 1/2 x 5 1/2”, Watercolor and graphite on paper.
Jesse Bransford, Protection from Fire (7), 2014, 7 1/2 x 5 1/2”, Watercolor and graphite on paper.

“A seventh I know: if I see a hall
high o'er the bench-mates blazing,
flame it ne'er so fiercely I still can save it, --
I know how to sing that song.”

Jesse Bransford, To Bring Peace Between Quarrelers (8), 2014, 7 1/2 x 5 1/2”, Watercolor and graphite on paper.
Jesse Bransford, To Bring Peace Between Quarrelers (8), 2014, 7 1/2 x 5 1/2”, Watercolor and graphite on paper.

“An eighth I know: which all can sing
for their weal if they learn it well;
where hate shall wax 'mid the warrior sons,
I can calm it soon with that song.”

 

Jesse Bransford, To Calm the Ocean (9), 2014, 7 1/2 x 5 1/2”, Watercolor and graphite on paper.
Jesse Bransford, To Calm the Ocean (9), 2014, 7 1/2 x 5 1/2”, Watercolor and graphite on paper.

“A ninth I know: when need befalls me
to save my vessel afloat,
I hush the wind on the stormy wave,
and soothe all the sea to rest.”

 

Jesse Bransford, To Trap Shape-Shifted Witches (10), 2014, 7 1/2 x 5 1/2”, Watercolor and graphite on paper.
Jesse Bransford, To Trap Shape-Shifted Witches (10), 2014, 7 1/2 x 5 1/2”, Watercolor and graphite on paper.

“A tenth I know: when at night the witches
ride and sport in the air,
such spells I weave that they wander home
out of skins and wits bewildered.”

Jesse Bransford, To Aid Allies in Battle (11), 2014, 7 1/2 x 5 1/2”, Watercolor and graphite on paper.
Jesse Bransford, To Aid Allies in Battle (11), 2014, 7 1/2 x 5 1/2”, Watercolor and graphite on paper.

“An eleventh I know: if haply I lead
my old comrades out to war,
I sing 'neath the shields, and they fare forth mightily
safe into battle,
safe out of battle,
and safe return from the strife.”

Jesse Bransford, To Speak to a Hanged Man (12), 2014, 7 1/2 x 5 1/2”, Watercolor and graphite on paper.
Jesse Bransford, To Speak to a Hanged Man (12), 2014, 7 1/2 x 5 1/2”, Watercolor and graphite on paper.

“A twelfth I know: if I see in a tree
a corpse from a halter hanging,
such spells I write, and paint in runes,
that the being descends and speaks.”

Jesse Bransford, Sprinkled Water Prevents Harm (13), 2014, 7 1/2 x 5 1/2”, Watercolor and graphite on paper.
Jesse Bransford, Sprinkled Water Prevents Harm (13), 2014, 7 1/2 x 5 1/2”, Watercolor and graphite on paper.

“A thirteenth I know: if the new-born son
of a warrior I sprinkle with water,
that youth will not fail when he fares to war,
never slain shall he bow before sword.”

Jesse Bransford, To Distinguish Between Gods and Men (14), 2014, 7 1/2 x 5 1/2”, Watercolor and graphite on paper.
Jesse Bransford, To Distinguish Between Gods and Men (14), 2014, 7 1/2 x 5 1/2”, Watercolor and graphite on paper.

“A fourteenth I know: if I needs must number
the Powers to the people of men,
I know all the nature of gods and of elves
which none can know untaught.”

Jesse Bransford, The Wisdom of the Sage (15), 2014, 7 1/2 x 5 1/2”, Watercolor and graphite on paper.
Jesse Bransford, The Wisdom of the Sage (15), 2014, 7 1/2 x 5 1/2”, Watercolor and graphite on paper.

“A fifteenth I know, which Folk-stirrer sang,
the dwarf, at the gates of Dawn;
he sang strength to the gods, and skill to the elves,
and wisdom to Odin who utters.”

Jesse Bransford, To Have a Woman’s Heart (16), 2014, 7 1/2 x 5 1/2”, Watercolor and graphite on paper.
Jesse Bransford, To Have a Woman’s Heart (16), 2014, 7 1/2 x 5 1/2”, Watercolor and graphite on paper.

“A sixteenth I know: when all sweetness and love
I would win from some artful wench,
her heart I turn, and the whole mind change
of that fair-armed lady I love.”

Jesse Bransford, All Women Will Respond (17), 2014, 7 1/2 x 5 1/2”, Watercolor and graphite on paper.
Jesse Bransford, All Women Will Respond (17), 2014, 7 1/2 x 5 1/2”, Watercolor and graphite on paper.

“A seventeenth I know: so that e'en the shy maiden
is slow to shun my love.”

Jesse Bransford, Stave for the Unspoken Charm (18), 2014, 7 1/2 x 5 1/2”, Watercolor and graphite on paper.
Jesse Bransford, Stave for the Unspoken Charm (18), 2014, 7 1/2 x 5 1/2”, Watercolor and graphite on paper.

“These songs, Stray-Singer, which man's son knows not,
long shalt thou lack in life,
though thy weal if thou win'st them, thy boon if thou obey'st them
thy good if haply thou gain'st them.

An eighteenth I know: which I ne'er shall tell
to maiden or wife of man
save alone to my sister, or haply to her
who folds me fast in her arms;
most safe are secrets known to but one-
the songs are sung to an end.”

**

Now the sayings of the High One are uttered in the hall
for the weal of men, for the woe of Jötuns,
Hail, thou who hast spoken! Hail, thou that knowest!
Hail, ye that have hearkened! Use, thou who hast learned!”

–edited and translated by Olive Bray, 1908

The 4th Pyramid 2013

Light and heat are the easiest, most accessible and defined energies we have at our metaphorical disposal. Electricity, to an extent harnessed and understood, but more mysterious. Gravity surely presents us with an energy that is harder to grasp. It entails another remove, an abstraction from direct sense. That first abstraction led us to the maths that govern our control of the material energies. But in the interest of this rationalization, this externalization, something of the speculative sense of wonder in the world has been excluded, and the stern assumption that we know deafens us to possibility. This possibility opens a space to the poetic, to metaphor, which I say have as much purchase on consciousness and reality as heat, light electricity and even gravity. 

Light is a metaphor to approach when mechanizing The Fourth Pyramid. A vintage timepiece is also a mental picture. A light-clock if you will. How do you wind a light clock? By walking around it of course. Making and looking at the central mandala of The Fourth Pyramid involves hundreds of perambulations. We carry an infinite potential in our minds, and it is constantly spilling out, effervescing into the space between. The piece is meant on one level to absorb that excess, to point our light into the world.

There are other energy potentials.

The days of the week originally personified points of light in the night sky, just as the months of the year demarcate the constellations of the zodiac. The planets are their own path makers, moving on roads different from those of the rest of the night sky. Their personalities are much like our own, and they too shed potential. The light-clock is tuned to draw those energies to it’s center as well. If we had to characterize these energies in relation to the energy that we give to the engine, these are subtle and refined, as opposed to our bright light, a light that we barely believe in, let alone control. Their refinement gives them particular qualities that we have some knowledge of that pass through the names themselves: Venus; love, Jupiter; luck, etc. Each of the seven wanderers have talismans that have come to represent them. Some of the talismans represent specific personas that are contained within the planet. Angels, Daimons, Spirits and Intelligences, the personification of these forces into beings gives our light a direct interface with their light; the winding is accelerated and focused to points.

This space must be protected. Not from evil, but from confusion, from the distortion of the quotidian. This is not normal. Rules are being changed, if for only a moment. The door is blocked, and entry is given either in a breech of the image space or in a new path through other entries. Either way, the Angelic talismans guarding the entrance protect and seal the interior space.

To the southwest, a corner projects forward a series of rotating and concentric triangles. Evocative of gender and it’s associations, these triangles primarily point down, invoking the feminine, passive and generative energies of the universe. Here they draw energy into the vortex of the central mandala, adding to and amplifying the human and planetary energies in play. 

The mandala itself pulls the energy into itself, differentiating planetary forces by color and shade. Deeper in the interior of the mandala a rotation occurs and the energies are directed to elemental force, those of air, earth, fire and water: a second distillation as force travels to center. At the central golden bindi, the energy coalesces, just as gold is said to coalesce at the center of the great alchemical work. But it it not finished. The point is a fulcrum, a mirror/lens/gearbox, both of the self, who observes this spectacle, and of the whole. A gestalt shift from microcosm to macrocosm. Cosmos revealed, and the energies repurpose to a point to the east. The cube revealed as a cross, the fulcrum of all spiritual energy, here containing many secret signs to transmigrate the energy and cast it towards the east wall, the fourth pyramid, where the spell is completed, and the energy given to the space and the region. Surely an auspicious gift for an auspicious moment. Metaphor released.

 

Jesse Bransford, detail of The Fourth Pyramid, 2013, Dimensions variable, Tempera paint on wall and floor, panels and paper, Installation at Galveston Artist Residency.
Jesse Bransford, detail of The Fourth Pyramid, 2013, Dimensions variable, Tempera paint on wall and floor, panels and paper, Installation at Galveston Artist Residency.
Jesse Bransford, detail of The Fourth Pyramid, 2012, 4.25x7", Printed soft cover book, edition of 200.
Jesse Bransford, detail of The Fourth Pyramid, 2012, 4.25x7", Printed soft cover book, edition of 200.
This image and below: Jesse Bransford, detail of The Fourth Pyramid, 2013, Dimensions variable, Tempera paint on wall and floor, panels and paper, Installation at Galveston Artist Residency.
This image and below: Jesse Bransford, detail of The Fourth Pyramid, 2013, Dimensions variable, Tempera paint on wall and floor, panels and paper, Installation at Galveston Artist Residency.
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VII (Saturn) 2011-2013

Jesse Bransford, Lamen Shield (Saturn)
Jesse Bransford, Lamen Shield (Saturn)

2013, 6.75” diameter, archival inkjet print on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Awareness is Transformation
Jesse Bransford, Awareness is Transformation

2013, 50.5x32,” Acrylic, ink, watercolor and graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Rings of Saturn (Black Rainbow)
Jesse Bransford, Rings of Saturn (Black Rainbow)

2013, 38.75x24.5,” Acrylic, ink, watercolor and graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Magic Squares (Aleph in Saturn, Jupiter, Mars)
Jesse Bransford, Magic Squares (Aleph in Saturn, Jupiter, Mars)

2013, 29.25x21.5,” Acrylic, watercolor and graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Binah (for D.C.S.)
Jesse Bransford, Binah (for D.C.S.)

2013, 29.5x21.75,” Acrylic and graphite on paper. Collection of the Artist.

Jesse Bransford, “66”
Jesse Bransford, “66”

2013, 22x29.75,” Acrylic, ink, watercolor and graphite on paper. Collection of the Artist.

Jesse Bransford, Lake Reflection, Magnetic Coils, 2013
Jesse Bransford, Lake Reflection, Magnetic Coils, 2013

50.25x38.75,” Acrylic, watercolor and graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Shabathai
Jesse Bransford, Shabathai

2013, 5.5x8.5,” Ink, watercolor and graphite on paper. Collection of the Artist.

Jesse Bransford, Gunas
Jesse Bransford, Gunas

2013, 5.5x8.5” (2 pieces), Acrylic, ink and graphite on paper. Collection of Sam Handley and Amanda Majeski.

Jesse Bransford, The Third and Final
Jesse Bransford, The Third and Final

2013, 39.75x25,” Acrylic, ink, watercolor and graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, The Spiral of Consciousness I
Jesse Bransford, The Spiral of Consciousness I

2013, 5.5x8.5” (2 pieces), Ink, watercolor and graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, The Spiral of Consciousness II
Jesse Bransford, The Spiral of Consciousness II

2013, 5.5x8.5” (2 pieces), Ink, watercolor and graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Cutting the Cord
Jesse Bransford, Cutting the Cord

2013, 50.25x38.75,” Acrylic, ink, watercolor and graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Saturnine Talismans
Jesse Bransford, Saturnine Talismans

2011, 5x8" (9 pieces), Watercolor and graphite on paper. Private Collections.

Δε Σοφíα (Towards Wisdom) 2013

Jesse Bransford, Δε Σοφíα (Towards Wisdom), 2013, Hand-Painted Glazed Terra Cotta, Commissioned by the NYC Department of Education and the NYC School Construction Authority Public Art for Public Schools Program, in collaboration with the NYC Department of Cultural Affairs Percent for Art Program. Collection of the NYC Department of Education.

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VI (Jove) 2011

 Jesse Bransford,  JOVE = 27 (Variant) , 2011, 22x29", Acrylic, ink and graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, JOVE = 27 (Variant), 2011, 22x29", Acrylic, ink and graphite on paper.

 Jesse Bransford,  Organic Veil IV , 2011, 75x48", Acrylic and graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Organic Veil IV, 2011, 75x48", Acrylic and graphite on paper.

 Jesse Bransford,  Brihaspati , 2011, 72x43", Acrylic, ink, watercolor and graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Brihaspati, 2011, 72x43", Acrylic, ink, watercolor and graphite on paper.

 Jesse Bransford,  Cardinal Points , 2011, 70x48", Acrylic, ink, watercolor and graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Cardinal Points, 2011, 70x48", Acrylic, ink, watercolor and graphite on paper.

 Jesse Bransford,  Four-fold Bringer of the Waters , 2011, 50x30", Acrylic, ink, watercolor and graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Four-fold Bringer of the Waters, 2011, 50x30", Acrylic, ink, watercolor and graphite on paper.

 Jesse Bransford,  Jove , 2011, 39.75x25.25", Acrylic, ink, watercolor and graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Jove, 2011, 39.75x25.25", Acrylic, ink, watercolor and graphite on paper.

 Jesse Bransford,  Expanding From a Single Point (Saturn, Mars, Jupiter) , 2011, 39.75x25.25", Acrylic, ink, watercolor and graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Expanding From a Single Point (Saturn, Mars, Jupiter), 2011, 39.75x25.25", Acrylic, ink, watercolor and graphite on paper.

 Jesse Bransford,  Magic Square (Jupiter) , 2011, 39.75x25.25", Acrylic, ink, watercolor and graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Magic Square (Jupiter), 2011, 39.75x25.25", Acrylic, ink, watercolor and graphite on paper.

 Jesse Bransford,  In Jupiter's Wake , 2011, 29.75x22", Acrylic, ink, watercolor and graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, In Jupiter's Wake, 2011, 29.75x22", Acrylic, ink, watercolor and graphite on paper.

 Jesse Bransford,  Jovian Yantra , 2011, 22x29", Acrylic, ink and graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Jovian Yantra, 2011, 22x29", Acrylic, ink and graphite on paper.

 Jesse Bransford, Bindi (al ab), 2011, 29.75x22", Acrylic, ink, watercolor and graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Bindi (al ab), 2011, 29.75x22", Acrylic, ink, watercolor and graphite on paper.

 Jesse Bransford,  Organic Veil III , 2011, 16x12.25", Acrylic, ink and graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Organic Veil III, 2011, 16x12.25", Acrylic, ink and graphite on paper.

 Jesse Bransford, Lamen Shield (Jupiter), 2011, 6.75" diameter, Acrylic and graphite on board.

Jesse Bransford, Lamen Shield (Jupiter), 2011, 6.75" diameter, Acrylic and graphite on board.

Assorted Murals and Floor Works 1998 - Present

 Jesse Bransford,  Circle to the Four Corners (Kali, Hecate, Ishtar, Lilith) ,  2016, Dimensions variable, Tempera paint on floor, installation for Spring Break 2017 (Destroyed).

Jesse Bransford, Circle to the Four Corners (Kali, Hecate, Ishtar, Lilith),  2016, Dimensions variable, Tempera paint on floor, installation for Spring Break 2017 (Destroyed).

 This and below: Jesse Bransford, detail of  Aqua/Sal (For David Shaw) , 2013, Dimensions variable, Tempera paint on wall and floor, salt water in Prague crystal, Installation at Feature Inc. (Destroyed).

This and below: Jesse Bransford, detail of Aqua/Sal (For David Shaw), 2013, Dimensions variable, Tempera paint on wall and floor, salt water in Prague crystal, Installation at Feature Inc. (Destroyed).

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 This and below: Jesse Bransford,  Three Pillars , 2009, Dimensions variable, Acrylic, graphite and varnish on wall, site specific installation at the Straus Institute for the Advanced Study of Law & Justice.

This and below: Jesse Bransford, Three Pillars, 2009, Dimensions variable, Acrylic, graphite and varnish on wall, site specific installation at the Straus Institute for the Advanced Study of Law & Justice.

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 This and below: Jesse Bransford, Past ( ) Future (The Apocalypse of the Everyday), 2008, Dimensions variable, Acrylic, latex and graphite on wall, Installation at the Busan Biennale, Busan Korea (Destroyed).

This and below: Jesse Bransford, Past ( ) Future (The Apocalypse of the Everyday), 2008, Dimensions variable, Acrylic, latex and graphite on wall, Installation at the Busan Biennale, Busan Korea (Destroyed).

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 This and below: Jesse Bransford, installation views of Einstein-Rosen Bridge (Variant), 2004, dimensions variable, latex and graphite on wall, installation at PPOW Gallery, New York, NY (Destroyed).

This and below: Jesse Bransford, installation views of Einstein-Rosen Bridge (Variant), 2004, dimensions variable, latex and graphite on wall, installation at PPOW Gallery, New York, NY (Destroyed).

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 This and below: Jesse Bransford, Einstein-Rosen Bridge, 2002, Dimensions Variable, Latex and graphite on wall. Installation at Richard Telles Fine Art (Destroyed).

This and below: Jesse Bransford, Einstein-Rosen Bridge, 2002, Dimensions Variable, Latex and graphite on wall. Installation at Richard Telles Fine Art (Destroyed).

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 This and below: Jesse Bransford, Imaginos, 2001, 2003, Dimensions variable, Latex, marker and graphite on wall. Installation at Feature Inc. (Destroyed), Installation at The CCA Wattis Museum, San Francisco, CA (Destroyed).

This and below: Jesse Bransford, Imaginos, 2001, 2003, Dimensions variable, Latex, marker and graphite on wall.
Installation at Feature Inc. (Destroyed), Installation at The CCA Wattis Museum, San Francisco, CA (Destroyed).

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 This and below: Jesse Bransford, The Void-Pit (Re: Jupiter and Beyond the Infinite), 2000, Installation view, Ink, graphite and acrylic on wall. Installation at Feature Inc. (Destroyed).

This and below: Jesse Bransford, The Void-Pit (Re: Jupiter and Beyond the Infinite), 2000, Installation view, Ink, graphite and acrylic on wall. Installation at Feature Inc. (Destroyed).

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 This and below: Jesse Bransford, Paranoia Land, 2000, 16'x56.5', Acrylic, marker and graphite on wall, site specific installation at P.S. 1 Contemporary Art Center (Destroyed).

This and below: Jesse Bransford, Paranoia Land, 2000, 16'x56.5', Acrylic, marker and graphite on wall, site specific installation at P.S. 1 Contemporary Art Center (Destroyed).

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V (Venus) 2010

 Jesse Bransford,  Lamen Shield (Venus) , 2010, 10" diameter, Acrylic and graphite on board.

Jesse Bransford, Lamen Shield (Venus), 2010, 10" diameter, Acrylic and graphite on board.

 Jesse Bransford,  Ishtar Gate , 2010, 40x26", Acrylic and graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Ishtar Gate, 2010, 40x26", Acrylic and graphite on paper.

 Jesse Bransford,  Kukulcan , 2010, 75x47", Acrylic, watercolor and graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Kukulcan, 2010, 75x47", Acrylic, watercolor and graphite on paper.

 Jesse Bransford,  Venus Drawing Power From The Moon , 2010, 65x41", Acrylic and graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Venus Drawing Power From The Moon, 2010, 65x41", Acrylic and graphite on paper.

 Jesse Bransford,  Organic Veil II , 2010, 22x30", Acrylic and graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Organic Veil II, 2010, 22x30", Acrylic and graphite on paper.

 Jesse Bransford,  Of the Intelligence of Venus , 2010, 40x26", Acrylic and graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Of the Intelligence of Venus, 2010, 40x26", Acrylic and graphite on paper.

 Jesse Bransford,  A Celestial Model , 2010, 22x45", Acrylic and graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, A Celestial Model, 2010, 22x45", Acrylic and graphite on paper.

 Jesse Bransford,  Wasp Star , 2010, 22x28", Acrylic and graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Wasp Star, 2010, 22x28", Acrylic and graphite on paper.

 Jesse Bransford,  Organic Veil I , 2010, 30x22", Acrylic and graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Organic Veil I, 2010, 30x22", Acrylic and graphite on paper.

 Jesse Bransford,  Epicycles (Wandering Star) , 2010, 20x30", Acrylic and graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Epicycles (Wandering Star), 2010, 20x30", Acrylic and graphite on paper.

 Jesse Bransford,  Libations to Ishtar , 2010, 24x12", Acrylic and graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Libations to Ishtar, 2010, 24x12", Acrylic and graphite on paper.

 Jesse Bransford,  Untitled , 2010, 12x16", Graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Untitled, 2010, 12x16", Graphite on paper.

 Jesse Bransford,  Kali , 2010, 16x12", Graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Kali, 2010, 16x12", Graphite on paper.

 Jesse Bransford,  Organic Veil III , 2010, 12x16", Graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Organic Veil III, 2010, 12x16", Graphite on paper.

 Jesse Bransford,  Every Man and Woman is a Star , 2010, 16x12", Graphite and ink on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Every Man and Woman is a Star, 2010, 16x12", Graphite and ink on paper.

 Jesse Bransford,  Kali , 2010, 12x9", Graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Kali, 2010, 12x9", Graphite on paper.

 Jesse Bransford,  Mars and Venus , 2010, 12x16", Graphite on paper. Collection of Susan Aberth.

Jesse Bransford, Mars and Venus, 2010, 12x16", Graphite on paper. Collection of Susan Aberth.

 This and Below: Jesse Bransford,  Untitled I (In Two Parts) , 2010, 16x12" and 14x20", Graphite on paper.

This and Below: Jesse Bransford, Untitled I (In Two Parts), 2010, 16x12" and 14x20", Graphite on paper.

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 This and Below: Jesse Bransford,  Untitled II (In Two Parts) , 2010, 16x12" and 14x20", Graphite on paper.

This and Below: Jesse Bransford, Untitled II (In Two Parts), 2010, 16x12" and 14x20", Graphite on paper.

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 This and Below: Jesse Bransford,  Untitled III (In Two Parts) , 2010, 16x12" and 14x20", Graphite on paper.

This and Below: Jesse Bransford, Untitled III (In Two Parts), 2010, 16x12" and 14x20", Graphite on paper.

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 This and Below: Jesse Bransford,  Untitled IV (In Two Parts) , 2010, 16x12" and 14x20", Graphite on paper.

This and Below: Jesse Bransford, Untitled IV (In Two Parts), 2010, 16x12" and 14x20", Graphite on paper.

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 This and Below: Jesse Bransford,  Untitled V (In Two Parts) , 2010, 16x12" and 14x20", Graphite on paper.

This and Below: Jesse Bransford, Untitled V (In Two Parts), 2010, 16x12" and 14x20", Graphite on paper.

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 This and Below: Jesse Bransford,  Untitled VI (In Two Parts) , 2010, 16x12" and 14x20", Graphite on paper.

This and Below: Jesse Bransford, Untitled VI (In Two Parts), 2010, 16x12" and 14x20", Graphite on paper.

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 This and Below: Jesse Bransford,  Untitled VII (In Two Parts) , 2010, 16x12" and 14x20", Graphite on paper.

This and Below: Jesse Bransford, Untitled VII (In Two Parts), 2010, 16x12" and 14x20", Graphite on paper.

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IV (LUNA) 2008-2009

Jesse Bransford, "Sic Itur Ad Astra", 2009, 76x48", Acrylic, watercolor and ink and on paper.
Jesse Bransford, "Sic Itur Ad Astra", 2009, 76x48", Acrylic, watercolor and ink and on paper.

Private Collection.

Jesse Bransford, Hecterion, 2009, 53.5x49.25", Acrylic, watercolor and ink and on paper.
Jesse Bransford, Hecterion, 2009, 53.5x49.25", Acrylic, watercolor and ink and on paper.

Collection of the Artist.

Jesse Bransford, Rising Moon (Malcha Betharsithim Hed Beruah Schehakim), 2009, 49.5x30", Acrylic, watercolor and ink and on paper.
Jesse Bransford, Rising Moon (Malcha Betharsithim Hed Beruah Schehakim), 2009, 49.5x30", Acrylic, watercolor and ink and on paper.

Collection of the Artist.

Jesse Bransford, Rosy Cross Blue, 2009, 25.5x39.75", Gouache and ink on paper.
Jesse Bransford, Rosy Cross Blue, 2009, 25.5x39.75", Gouache and ink on paper.

Collection of the Artist.

Jesse Bransford, The Fifth World, 2009, 25.75x21.25", Acrylic, watercolor and ink and on paper.
Jesse Bransford, The Fifth World, 2009, 25.75x21.25", Acrylic, watercolor and ink and on paper.

Collection of the Artist.

Jesse Bransford, The Door (Atu 18), 2009, 39.75x25.5", Acrylic, watercolor and graphite on paper.
Jesse Bransford, The Door (Atu 18), 2009, 39.75x25.5", Acrylic, watercolor and graphite on paper.

Collection of the Artist.

Jesse Bransford, Luna, 2009, 39.75x21.75", Acrylic, watercolor and ink and on paper.
Jesse Bransford, Luna, 2009, 39.75x21.75", Acrylic, watercolor and ink and on paper.

Collection of the Artist.

Jesse Bransford, Cybelle's Reverie, 2009, 29.5x21.25", Acrylic, watercolor and ink and on paper.
Jesse Bransford, Cybelle's Reverie, 2009, 29.5x21.25", Acrylic, watercolor and ink and on paper.

Collection of the Artist.

Jesse Bransford, Gematria Sub Luna, 2009, 46x46", Acrylic, watercolor, ink and graphite on paper.
Jesse Bransford, Gematria Sub Luna, 2009, 46x46", Acrylic, watercolor, ink and graphite on paper.

Collection of the Artist.

Jesse Bransford, Ἑκάτη (The Stars are Our Destination), 2009, 48x48", Acrylic, ink, watercolor and graphite on paper.
Jesse Bransford, Ἑκάτη (The Stars are Our Destination), 2009, 48x48", Acrylic, ink, watercolor and graphite on paper.

Collection of the Artist.

Jesse Bransford, Installation of Untitled with Ἑκάτη (The Stars are Our Destination), 2009, 48x48", Acrylic, ink, watercolor and graphite on paper, Latex and graphite on wall.
Jesse Bransford, Installation of Untitled with Ἑκάτη (The Stars are Our Destination), 2009, 48x48", Acrylic, ink, watercolor and graphite on paper, Latex and graphite on wall.

Installation at Kevin Bruk Gallery (Mural Destroyed).



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The Jungle (For Norma) 2007-2009

Interview with Hudson 03.28.10

Hudson: .when/how did you first learn of ayahuasca?

Jesse: I guess I was 16 or 17 when I first heard about ayahuasca, but that wasn't the name I knew it as. I read the Yage Letters about that time after reading Naked Lunch. I had of course started reading Burroughs by reading Queer and Junky, so I was really interested in what happened that could cause the rupture that is Naked Lunch. In retrospect I also realize that the Yage Letters functioned as an extension of my childhood adventure narratives; what fascinated me at the time was that the book was not Middle Earth or Starfleet, this was 'real,' it was in the world. It opened up a lot of possibilities for me.

I learned about the physical properties of ayahuasca later, in the mid/late 90's. I was gathering images of psychotropic molecules and found dimethyltryptamine, which was new to me. It was being talked about in terms of plant-based shamanism and they kept talking about ayahuasca. When I learned part of the mixture was made from a vine I realized it had to be the same thing as Burroughs' Yage. It was interesting because this was pre internet and I remember how slow it was getting those two points into convergence.

.is this the first plant to enter your vocabulary?

I had been thinking a lot about plants in general since about 2001. Friends of mine were getting very involved with naturalism and being outdoors (a few amateur mycologists among other interests). I spent a lot of time outside camping and hiking as a kid, but since moving to NY the focus had been pretty confined to art and books and thinking. These friends started getting me plants and I really enjoyed taking care of them, and it got me thinking about being outside. So with these friends and their outdoor activities, I was finding myself outside more and more. I guess the real trick has been getting that part of my life into my thinking, reintegrating it after all of this city life. Going to the jungle and working with Norma certainly did that.

.seems this is your most analytical body of work yet?

Ha! I was imagining this being my 'loosest' work yet, but I suppose you can meet it at either end of the spectrum. Whichever end it lands on, it is definitely I think my most ‘on a limb’ project to date. I got back from Peru and three weeks later I was still stunned (I'm still stunned actually). I thought at the time "I have to document this." I was really confused about a lot of things and yet felt a clarity I had not felt in a long, long time. I decided to pause in the long-term project I've been working on for the past 5 years and explore the confusion/clarity in as many ways as I could. Perhaps the feeling of analysis is my natural self (heady, verbal) trying REALLY hard to let go and get to the other side of something.

.well the paint application is definitely looser than it has been, more expressive too. was that going on pre Peru or did it all develop post Peru?

When I started all this work about the planets as symbolic structures I began applying washes as a way to question the star fields. It had been washes up until 2007 and I had been thinking about them as abstract effects like in pre-digital film. Well, after Peru when I went back to the studio I saw this use of material in a completely different light. Put succinctly, the washes were material again! I couldn't see them as anything other than things on the paper that were traces of my body. Which of course has been in the work all along, but seeing it this way made the washes have a presence I had not been seeing in them before. I also realized that there was an opportunity to really play with how the images I was using were made, and this led to all sorts of new recognitions.  Graphite lines, for example, took on a new relation, becoming a layering tool as well as a way to talk about the way I was drawing the image over a period of time. All obvious stuff, and it sounds dumb on the page, but I think it looks different than it sounds.

.the ayhuasca experience, despite your reading and research/ was it different than you expected?

The experience was like nothing I could have imagined. Simultaneously more actual and concrete than I expected and wholly alien and otherworldly. Most of what I expected to see/feel is what they call chuma (drunkenness),  which is commensurate with what I understood as psychedelic experience. A sort of disorientation that amplifies over time and creates visual field distortions, synesthesia etc. The chuma is also where the nausea and vomiting typically occurs. What follows the chuma are generally called pinturas (paintings), and this was completely off the scale of what I knew or expected. The visions were tangible and present in a way I could not have imagined. They were (and I have to say still are) objectively real to me. An aspect of the experience I completely (and naively) underestimated was the presence of the shaman. Norma was extremely present, singing, chanting and talking, as well as performing various rituals in and around the group. How present she was at any given moment had an enormous effect on my mental state, both visually and psychologically. When she was singing, for example, the image repertoire of the pinturas was completely different. I found out later that different songs are supposed to evoke different pinturas. Some songs are evocative of certain plants, animals etc. There would also be periods where we were left alone to our own thoughts, and the cast of the pinturas would become more personal, and the image repertoire would change again. The control Norma exercised over what went on was pretty unbelievable. In retrospect I feel like an idiot for underestimating that aspect of the experience. It is actually what has had the most staying power. The way her images merged with mine created a whole new universe for me.

.the visual anomaly in this body of work are the dice drawings. will you comment on how they interface?

Looking at my work after my return from Peru I realized that the chance relations in the work had been pretty hidden by the other ideas I was trying to get into. I wanted to reinvent the terms of my appropriation, of how people imagined the connections were being made (they are made in all sorts of ways). Games have always been a nexus for thinking about these issues for me, and I liked how the roll of a pair of dice could free my linear thinking up, force me to be even more disjointed. I wanted to try to capture the spontaneity I feel when I work with images.  It seemed like a really dumb thing to do so I knew that I must be on to something. The index cards, in their note-taking associations, really connected with the montage style of thinking I was trying to get across. So the experiment became a habit and I kept doing them, but I didn't realize how much they informed the work until I started showing them to people. For all of the chance built into the structure and the thinking, a surprisingly coherent structure still evolves, it always does, but it was a surprise how visible it was to people looking at them: I feel like this is the subterranean process by which a lot of the meaning we come to is made.

.around 1994, while at the new school, you made a decision to get a ba in the history of sciences. is what you thought that would lead you to where you have gone?

I had always intended to get a BA concurrent with my BFA, but the decision to pursue the history of the sciences was a strange one. I realized in High School that I didn’t have the mathematical chops for science, but I understood enough to be inspired by the sense of wonder that drove my interest. One of my mentors in that study really encouraged what he called my philosophical temperament so I found science pushing further and further into what I guess we would call the mystical. I also recognized how separated the arts had generally become from this kind of thinking. While I think I’m probably pretty far from what most people think of as science, I got here via the empiricism of the enlightenment and all of the problems that line of thinking brings to the fore. Looking at the pre-Socratics through to Hume traces a line that on one hand champions where we have gotten with science and materialist thinking, but on the other hand these thinkers would probably be horrified at the barren place existentialism leaves the self. So, for this self anyway, it has become about trying to imagine the paths not taken for possible ways of looking at and thinking about our being here. So I guess its leading in a pretty clear path in that sense...

Jesse Bransford, Animal, Vegetable, Mineral, 2008, 74x43.5, Acrylic, watercolor and graphite on paper.
Jesse Bransford, Animal, Vegetable, Mineral, 2008, 74x43.5, Acrylic, watercolor and graphite on paper.
Jesse Bransford, Head (Norma Panduro), 2007, 18x24”, Acrylic and graphite on paper. Collection of Karsten Krejcarek.
Jesse Bransford, Head (Norma Panduro), 2007, 18x24”, Acrylic and graphite on paper. Collection of Karsten Krejcarek.
Jesse Bransford, Hallucination/Hologram, 2008, 39.25x24”, Acrylic, watercolor and graphite on paper. Collection of Michael Taussig.
Jesse Bransford, Hallucination/Hologram, 2008, 39.25x24”, Acrylic, watercolor and graphite on paper. Collection of Michael Taussig.
Jesse Bransford, Plant Consciousness, 2007, 76x26”, Acrylic, watercolor and graphite on paper.
Jesse Bransford, Plant Consciousness, 2007, 76x26”, Acrylic, watercolor and graphite on paper.
Jesse Bransford, Through The Veil (Hyperbolic Landscape), 2003-08, 60x40”, Acrylic, watercolor and graphite on paper.
Jesse Bransford, Through The Veil (Hyperbolic Landscape), 2003-08, 60x40”, Acrylic, watercolor and graphite on paper.
Jesse Bransford, Ayahuasca Flower, 2008, 57.75x23.25”, Acrylic, watercolor and graphite on paper.
Jesse Bransford, Ayahuasca Flower, 2008, 57.75x23.25”, Acrylic, watercolor and graphite on paper.
Jesse Bransford, Flowering, 2008, 39.25x24.25”, Acrylic, watercolor and graphite on paper.
Jesse Bransford, Flowering, 2008, 39.25x24.25”, Acrylic, watercolor and graphite on paper.
Jesse Bransford Icaro, 2008, 39x24”, Acrylic, watercolor and graphite on paper.
Jesse Bransford Icaro, 2008, 39x24”, Acrylic, watercolor and graphite on paper.
Jesse Bransford, Emergent Entopic Forms, 2008, 57.75x23.25, Acrylic, watercolor and graphite on paper.
Jesse Bransford, Emergent Entopic Forms, 2008, 57.75x23.25, Acrylic, watercolor and graphite on paper.
Jesse Bransford, Telepathy (Karsten/Karsten), 2007, 24x18” (1 of 5 pieces), Acrylic and graphite on paper.
Jesse Bransford, Telepathy (Karsten/Karsten), 2007, 24x18” (1 of 5 pieces), Acrylic and graphite on paper.
Jesse Bransford, Telepathy (Karsten/Norma), 2007, 24x18” (1 of 5 pieces), Acrylic and graphite on paper.
Jesse Bransford, Telepathy (Karsten/Norma), 2007, 24x18” (1 of 5 pieces), Acrylic and graphite on paper.
Jesse Bransford, Telepathy (Norma/Norma), 2007, 24x18” (1 of 5 pieces), Acrylic and graphite on paper.
Jesse Bransford, Telepathy (Norma/Norma), 2007, 24x18” (1 of 5 pieces), Acrylic and graphite on paper.
Jesse Bransford, Telepathy (Norma/Jesse), 2007, 24x18” (1 of 5 pieces), Acrylic and graphite on paper.
Jesse Bransford, Telepathy (Norma/Jesse), 2007, 24x18” (1 of 5 pieces), Acrylic and graphite on paper.
Jesse Bransford, Telepathy (Jesse/Jesse), 2007, 24x18” (1 of 5 pieces), Acrylic and graphite on paper.
Jesse Bransford, Telepathy (Jesse/Jesse), 2007, 24x18” (1 of 5 pieces), Acrylic and graphite on paper.
Jesse Bransford, Untitled (Ayahuasca Vision), 2008, 29.25x18", Acrylic, watercolor and ink and on paper. Collection of Laruence A. Rickles.
Jesse Bransford, Untitled (Ayahuasca Vision), 2008, 29.25x18", Acrylic, watercolor and ink and on paper. Collection of Laruence A. Rickles.
Jesse Bransford, Untitled (Ayahuasca Vision), 2008, 29.25x18", Acrylic, watercolor and ink and on paper. Private Collection.
Jesse Bransford, Untitled (Ayahuasca Vision), 2008, 29.25x18", Acrylic, watercolor and ink and on paper. Private Collection.
Jesse Bransford, Home-grown Icaro, 2009, 12x16", Acrylic, watercolor and ink and on paper. Collection of the Jason Leinwand.
Jesse Bransford, Home-grown Icaro, 2009, 12x16", Acrylic, watercolor and ink and on paper. Collection of the Jason Leinwand.
Jesse Bransford, Home-grown Icaro, 2009, 12x16", Acrylic, watercolor and ink and on paper. Collection of the David Shaw.
Jesse Bransford, Home-grown Icaro, 2009, 12x16", Acrylic, watercolor and ink and on paper. Collection of the David Shaw.
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Jesse Bransford, Dissolution and Disintegration, 2007, 39.25x24”, Acrylic, watercolor and graphite on paper.
Jesse Bransford, Dissolution and Disintegration, 2007, 39.25x24”, Acrylic, watercolor and graphite on paper.

III (Mercurius) 2007

Interview with Hudson 05.26.07

Hudson: .Is there a philosophy or theory on the nature of reality that you ascribe to?

Jesse: Hmmm. That’s a tough question for someone who’s always mashing things together. The things I keep finding myself drawn to are ultimately about the relationship between a part and its whole. I think there are a few theories of the universe bound up in that idea, although I would not say I have a very coherent description of those relationships yet.

.Your setting is seemingly constant, the stars, outer space, the heavens... what’s that about?

I actually tried to remove the stars from my vocabulary at one point a few years ago and it was extremely difficult. I think the stars remind me (and hopefully the viewer) that the backdrop I’m thinking about is everything, that these are ideas I’m working with. In my studio I often find an image or subject that I try to back away from for whatever reason and the stars remind me that if it is a part of the universe then I can use it. These ‘problem’ ideas or images usually produce the most interesting results.

.I understand that you are systematically arranging your bodies of work around an investigation of the planets. How did you come to use them as an organizing principle?

The easy answer is reading. My reading over the years has continually returned to them, in historical, magical, scientific, fantasy and sci-fi reading, the planets were always there. I realized that they have always been there in the sky to spark our imaginations, no matter what world view you are approaching them from. So in that sense they are operating as a constant for my investigations to be directed in and around.

.Is astrology lurking?

Absolutely, though I have to confess that I haven’t even had my chart done yet. Every time I try to get involved I get confused immediately by some controversy (tropical or sidereal, for example) and I never know which way to go. Someone asked if the shows were in confluence with the planet that I was referring to and no, if they were the meaning could be fixed on that point and I’m avoiding that sort of fixity as much as possible.

.Most of your references seem rather antiquated - why look to the past?

It’s funny, I always think of these images as absolutely now. I blame that on the internet. I think culturally we are in a strange relationship with the future at the moment. All of our models of the future seem antiquated. Even my references to the space program are fifty years old. I’ve been focusing most of my thinking on places in the past that looked something like our own, the 2nd Century A.D. for example. I’ve been looking at that moment in time for a while now, and it gets a little more relevant with each social/political catastrophe I live through.

.I expect most people don’t know so much about most of your images and references. How important is the understanding of the information to the appreciation of the art?

I don’t know everything about the images I’m using, that’s honest, and I think true of any of the historical personages who have used them. For me the use of them is an exploration, and what I hope for from the viewer is a similar sense of wonder and potential that I feel when I use them, maybe even a sense of curiosity that leads them to an internet terminal when they get home...

.Your palette here is limited and quite specific. Is this as to the planet, the body of work, evoking an emotional state, the...?

Color has always been the most difficult aspect of the work for me. I learn something every time I put down a tone and it is very confusing, but it has also recently been very rewarding. For several almost arbitrary reasons Mercury is orange. That said, other colors are used, but always in reference to orange. In the same way that the topic has focused my use of images and ideas, the planet is making color decisions as well.

.For at least three years, the column has been a floating project; would you say something about its significance and function in the body of work?

A column is a support structure and as such becomes a representation of power. A freestanding column is in this sense functionless and suggests a ruin, the endgame in any play with power. This idea of power is I think one of the great secrets that various teachings impart. I think it is one of the first that I learned (if I have learned any ‘secrets’). The freestanding column is a monument not to a lost seat of some power, but to an idea that survives and is dormant, waiting for people who look for them.

 Jesse Bransford,  Herald , 2007, 75x46”, Acrylic, watercolor and graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Herald, 2007, 75x46”, Acrylic, watercolor and graphite on paper.

 Jesse Bransford,  Quicksilver , 2007, 75x47”, Acrylic, watercolor and graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Quicksilver, 2007, 75x47”, Acrylic, watercolor and graphite on paper.

 Jesse Bransford,  Friendship 7 (8) , 2007, 75x47”, Acrylic, watercolor and graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Friendship 7 (8), 2007, 75x47”, Acrylic, watercolor and graphite on paper.

 Jesse Bransford,  Spirits & Intelligences: Mercury , 2007, 65x41”, Acrylic, watercolor and graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Spirits & Intelligences: Mercury, 2007, 65x41”, Acrylic, watercolor and graphite on paper.

 This and Below: Jesse Bransford,  Installation Views of Transmission (111+65 - 260 - 369+175 - 34-15) , 2007, Dimensions Variable, Latex and graphite on wall, and Statue á l'impossible (for C. B.), 2007, 99x22.5x22.5", UV varnished enamel on Du

This and Below: Jesse Bransford, Installation Views of Transmission (111+65 - 260 - 369+175 - 34-15), 2007, Dimensions Variable, Latex and graphite on wall, and Statue á l'impossible (for C. B.), 2007, 99x22.5x22.5", UV varnished enamel on Durastone column. Installation at Feature Inc. (Mural Destroyed).

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 Jesse Bransford,  Mercurius for Sol , 2007, 23.5x15”, Acrylic, watercolor and graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Mercurius for Sol, 2007, 23.5x15”, Acrylic, watercolor and graphite on paper.

 Jesse Bransford,  Ragnarök (Taphthartharath) , 2007, 23.5x15”, Acrylic, watercolor and graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Ragnarök (Taphthartharath), 2007, 23.5x15”, Acrylic, watercolor and graphite on paper.

 Jesse Bransford,  Tiriel , 2007, 23.5x15”, Acrylic, watercolor and graphite on paper. Collection of Gean Moreno.

Jesse Bransford, Tiriel, 2007, 23.5x15”, Acrylic, watercolor and graphite on paper. Collection of Gean Moreno.

 Jesse Bransford,  Mariner , 2007, 23.5x15”, Acrylic, watercolor and graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Mariner, 2007, 23.5x15”, Acrylic, watercolor and graphite on paper.

 Jesse Bransford,  Gravity Well (Mercury) , 2007, 23.5x15”, Acrylic, watercolor and graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Gravity Well (Mercury), 2007, 23.5x15”, Acrylic, watercolor and graphite on paper.

 Jesse Bransford,  Thrice-Great , 2007, 23.5x15”, Acrylic, watercolor and graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Thrice-Great, 2007, 23.5x15”, Acrylic, watercolor and graphite on paper.

 Jesse Bransford,  Raphael (Octopus) , 2007, 23.5x15”, Acrylic, watercolor and graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Raphael (Octopus), 2007, 23.5x15”, Acrylic, watercolor and graphite on paper.

 Jesse Bransford,  Ars, Scientia, Magia , 2007, 23.5x15”, Acrylic, watercolor and graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Ars, Scientia, Magia, 2007, 23.5x15”, Acrylic, watercolor and graphite on paper.

 Jesse Bransford,  Statue á l'impossible (for C. B.) , 2007, 99x22.5x22.5", UV varnished enamel on Durastone column.

Jesse Bransford, Statue á l'impossible (for C. B.), 2007, 99x22.5x22.5", UV varnished enamel on Durastone column.

II (Mavors) 2005-2006

 Jesse Bransford,  Guardian (Mavors In Potentia) , 2006, 65x41", acrylic, watercolor, graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Guardian (Mavors In Potentia), 2006, 65x41", acrylic, watercolor, graphite on paper.

 Jesse Bransford,  As Above, So Below (Martian Invasion) , 2006, 75x47", acrylic, watercolor, graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, As Above, So Below (Martian Invasion), 2006, 75x47", acrylic, watercolor, graphite on paper.

 This and Below: Jesse Bransford,  Details of Magic Square: Mars (For Albertus Magnus) , 2006, Dimensions Variable, Latex, marker and graphite on wall. Installation at Galerie Schmidt Maczollek (Destroyed).

This and Below: Jesse Bransford, Details of Magic Square: Mars (For Albertus Magnus), 2006, Dimensions Variable, Latex, marker and graphite on wall. Installation at Galerie Schmidt Maczollek (Destroyed).

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 Jesse Bransford,  Dog (Diamonds and Rust II) , 2006, 23.5x15", acrylic, watercolor, graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Dog (Diamonds and Rust II), 2006, 23.5x15", acrylic, watercolor, graphite on paper.

 Jesse Bransford,  5 into 6 (Mavors) , 2006, 23.5x15", acrylic, watercolor, graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, 5 into 6 (Mavors), 2006, 23.5x15", acrylic, watercolor, graphite on paper.

 Jesse Bransford,  Graphiel and Barzabel , 2006, 23.5x15", acrylic, watercolor, graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Graphiel and Barzabel, 2006, 23.5x15", acrylic, watercolor, graphite on paper.

 Jesse Bransford,  11-24-7-20-3 , 2006, 23.5x15", acrylic, watercolor, graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, 11-24-7-20-3, 2006, 23.5x15", acrylic, watercolor, graphite on paper.

 Jesse Bransford,  Mars Avatar: Thor , 2006, 23.5x15", acrylic, watercolor, graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Mars Avatar: Thor, 2006, 23.5x15", acrylic, watercolor, graphite on paper.

 Jesse Bransford,  Dogs of War , 2006, 23.5x15", acrylic, watercolor, graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Dogs of War, 2006, 23.5x15", acrylic, watercolor, graphite on paper.

 Jesse Bransford,  Mars Avatar: Nergal , 2006, 70x46", acrylic, watercolor, graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Mars Avatar: Nergal, 2006, 70x46", acrylic, watercolor, graphite on paper.

 Jesse Bransford,  Martian Spirits , 2006, 75x47", acrylic, watercolor, graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Martian Spirits, 2006, 75x47", acrylic, watercolor, graphite on paper.

 Jesse Bransford,  Untitled , 2006, 75x47", acrylic, watercolor, graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Untitled, 2006, 75x47", acrylic, watercolor, graphite on paper.

 Jesse Bransford,  Mavors Adamasto , 2006, 23.5x15", acrylic, watercolor, graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Mavors Adamasto, 2006, 23.5x15", acrylic, watercolor, graphite on paper.

 Jesse Bransford,  Right Hand Manifest , 2006, 23.5x15", acrylic, watercolor, graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Right Hand Manifest, 2006, 23.5x15", acrylic, watercolor, graphite on paper.

 Jesse Bransford,  Vulture (5 X 12…) , 2006, 23.5x15", acrylic, watercolor, graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Vulture (5 X 12…), 2006, 23.5x15", acrylic, watercolor, graphite on paper.

 Jesse Bransford,  Talisman , 2006, 12x12", acrylic, watercolor, graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Talisman, 2006, 12x12", acrylic, watercolor, graphite on paper.

I (Sol) 2005

Interview with Gean Moreno

Gean: Let’s begin with the narrative that underlines this exhibition and explain how it relates to future ones?

Jesse: The works in this exhibition are one group in a series of seven. Each set is organized around one of the observable planets of the solar system. This show is the 'sun' or 'solar' approach. All of my previous interests are here in the work – science, science fiction, the occult, etc. – but there has been a definite shift into what I call the Renaissance magical tradition. It is a totalizing system, yes, but it tries to unify ideas rather than debunk and usurp them. I also find this moment and the ideas I'm using as the foundation for the project to be a chiasmus of the ideas we as a culture have 'discarded' and the ones we so irresponsibly hold on to. Science and religion and magic were once the same thing. The more I research these ideas the more convinced I am that we need to re-examine the moment when our culture's categories became discreet.
 

Can you talk more specifically about these sun narratives that you are dealing with?

The Renaissance magical tradition for me is one of the West's first conscious attempts at a kind of pluralism. Pico de la Mirandola, Marsilio Ficino, John Dee, but especially for me Giordano Bruno and Cornelius Agrippa were these weird wandering academics who sought to unify the world's belief systems in a time of wars of religion. Very idealistic, and almost totally forgotten in the normal historical narratives. This has been my starting point, and from there I've done more research into other areas. It's not so much astrology as it is a combination of astrology, astronomy, number theory, magic, and comparative religion. The research has taken me to all of the world’s civilizations and I was especially surprised to see the Orient and Mesoamerica enter into the systems.
 

Can you explain the Renaissance magical tradition? 

Magic's a tricky term. I guess for me the interest is in a sense of direct agency. Whether or not somebody believes in it is beside the point. I think of it in a similar way that I think of science fiction. It's a portal into other territories. Renaissance magic is the 'last' moment in Western thought when magic was considered part of the world of knowledge (in a sense other than 'sociological' or 'anthropological'). I find it to be one of the last attempts by the West at a synthesis of other systems of thought. Now everything has to admit to scientific materialism, a state of affairs I have issues with. So for me the Renaissance magical tradition represents a kind of agency, created or not, that stands as a historical record of things we as a society have supposedly turned our backs on. But of course in reality these ideas have parlance, even if only in the margins.
 

An important aspect of your project is its concern with what can be called counter-narratives of knowledge, the knowledge that didn't quite make into the Cartesian structuring of discourse and consciousness. You create these Borgesian counter-encyclopedias of "discarded" knowledge.

Borges is always on my mind. So many of his stories talk about discarded knowledge. I probably have a different take on him than some. I find stories like 'The Library of Babel' really hopeful and joyous - the idea that no matter how hard we try nature and the Real are always going to wriggle out from under our thumb. That's what I find so compelling in these 'counter-narratives' I keep coming back to. Not only do they continue to exist and object to their obsolescence, most have an un-finishable quality that really puts the screws to our culture's assumptions about its privileged status. Not that these systems don't have their own set of limitations... 
 

An interesting aspect in Borges is that he often sought an architectural or spatial analog for the concept that he set out to explore in a story. There is the Library in "The Library of Babel," the ancient amphitheater in "The Circular Ruins," etc. I was wondering if you could say something in the shift in your project from wall paintings to larger enveloping environmental efforts and how this relates to the situation of the viewer.

I want the viewer implicated in their experience of the work. After all, they are the other half (third?) of the equation completing the circuit. I don't think I'm directing the viewer's experience, mostly due to the arcane nature of what I'm working with. All I can do is hope that one of the routes of entry I provide is actually available to them. From there I'm just as interested to hear how the viewer digests the work as anyone - a tenet of most of these counter-narratives is that the process IS the end.  
    When I found myself drawing on the walls, I was forced to think about architecture in a literal, concrete way. The word ‘architecture’ was coming up more and more as I thought about our changing relationship to our bodies with the computer and the internet. What struck me was how un-architectural 'computer architecture' is and how physical actual architecture is. As I made more and more wall works, I realized that I wanted the experience to relate this un-architectural feeling with the physical experience of an architectural site. In my head this simultaneity makes many of the broad concepts (counter-narrativity among them) literal on the formal level as well as the concept level. 
 

How do you feel about misreadings?

Misreadings are a part of the process for me. To be honest I've realized over the years that I've even misread some of the symbols. This goes back to what I was saying about process over product. I'm much more interested in the image/symbol's life in consciousness, and that means that it's always changing. There are always going to be preposterous misreadings, but I feel those kinds of misreadings, in their spectacular distortion, have plenty to say about whatever image I'm using. This relationship changes when the work starts being seen through the medium of language (reviews, essays etc.), but that seems different to me...
 

Your work tip-toes on the line between the semiotic and the visual. By this I mean that your materials are less the paints and inks that you use than a series of arcane sign systems, symbols, and mediated imagery.

These signs and symbols have lives and histories of their own and an image gets reapplied, reused and re-articulated over time. What I'm most interested in is that this reuse doesn't destroy the images capacity for meaning, but rather that it increases its use value and when you become aware of the historical dimension of an image, the reality of the image changes. I guess you could call it a kind of hyper-reality. Sun (and all the other visible planets for that matter) have meanings in every culture we've ever known about - by poking and prodding I've found several versions of the idea of sun that aren't so prevalent in the present moment. This introduces a notion of hyper-reality that isn't just critical of 'reality' but actively perturbs 'reality's' foundations. The viewers preconceived notions they bring to an image get challenged and potentially modified.
 

In closing, let’s talk about the idea of scripted spaces, sites that have a narrative inscribed in the architecture, like, say, Tomorrowland or Medieval Times. Obviously, your work doesn’t employ a pop cultural narrative of this sort, but it seems to borrow the 'scripted space' logic of entertainment design, i.e., it strives to turn architecture (or the exhibition site) into narrative. 

I studied information architecture and design in the late 90s, originally in relation to the web and the internet, but I increasingly felt a relation to my thinking about the work. It's funny how Disneyland is always invoked as the 'ideal' for experience design. I actually see some of the best 'architectural narratives' in Medieval architecture. The idea is also explicit in Renaissance garden design. I think we don't think of them first because the 'scripts' that are being presented in these places we no longer understand.  When I first started thinking about murals and architecture it was mostly in relation to the 'unreality' of what I was depicting. I was very interested in actualizing an illusion in a space that is not only illusory in its relation to physical space, but also to reality in general. It's funny, I just realized this, but the connection between the entertainment spaces we think of in experience design and the historical analogs I mentioned is an idea of ritual or magic - in every case the subject's verbal, visual and somatic faculties are directed through a series of experiences in the interest of a goal.

 Jesse Bransford,  Lion of the Sun , 2005, 75x47", Acrylic, ink, watercolor and graphite on paper. Collection of Kevin Bruk.

Jesse Bransford, Lion of the Sun, 2005, 75x47", Acrylic, ink, watercolor and graphite on paper. Collection of Kevin Bruk.

 Jesse Bransford,  Altar , 2005, 78x42", Acrylic, ink, watercolor and graphite on paper. Collection of Jeffrey Pechter.

Jesse Bransford, Altar, 2005, 78x42", Acrylic, ink, watercolor and graphite on paper. Collection of Jeffrey Pechter.

 Jesse Bransford,  Gnostic Stone , 2005, 6x9", Acrylic, ink, watercolor and graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Gnostic Stone, 2005, 6x9", Acrylic, ink, watercolor and graphite on paper.

 Jesse Bransford,  Solar Deity , 2005, 65"x41", Acrylic, watercolor and graphite on paper. 

Jesse Bransford, Solar Deity, 2005, 65"x41", Acrylic, watercolor and graphite on paper. 

 Jesse Bransford,  Labyrinth , 2005, 70x38.5", Acrylic, watercolor and graphite on paper.Collection of John and Sara Slesinger.

Jesse Bransford, Labyrinth, 2005, 70x38.5", Acrylic, watercolor and graphite on paper.Collection of John and Sara Slesinger.

 Jesse Bransford, Radiance Study, 2005, 16x12", Acrylic, ink, watercolor and graphite on paper.

Jesse Bransford, Radiance Study, 2005, 16x12", Acrylic, ink, watercolor and graphite on paper.

 Jesse Bransford,  Untitled (Flare) , 2005, 22.25x14", Acrylic, ink, watercolor and graphite on paper. Collection of Kevin Van Gorp.

Jesse Bransford, Untitled (Flare), 2005, 22.25x14", Acrylic, ink, watercolor and graphite on paper.
Collection of Kevin Van Gorp.

 Jesse Bransford,  Radiance , 2005, Dimensions variable, Latex paint, and graphite on wall. Installation at Kevin Bruk Gallery (Destroyed).

Jesse Bransford, Radiance, 2005, Dimensions variable, Latex paint, and graphite on wall. Installation at Kevin Bruk Gallery (Destroyed).

 Jesse Bransford,  Radiance , 2005, Dimensions variable, Latex paint, and graphite on wall. Installation at Kevin Bruk Gallery (Destroyed).

Jesse Bransford, Radiance, 2005, Dimensions variable, Latex paint, and graphite on wall. Installation at Kevin Bruk Gallery (Destroyed).

Jesse Bransford / Lorenzo De Los Angeles: Collaborations 2002-2003

A suite of drawings made over a two year period. Shown at Feature Inc. in NY and M du B, F, H & g, Montreal, both exhibitions in 2004.

Jesse Bransford and Lorenzo De Los Angeles, Untitled (04) (for A. P.), 2003, 16 1/4"x19 7/8", Colored pencil, ink and acrylic on paper. Private Collection.
Jesse Bransford and Lorenzo De Los Angeles, Untitled (04) (for A. P.), 2003, 16 1/4"x19 7/8", Colored pencil, ink and acrylic on paper. Private Collection.
Jesse Bransford and Lorenzo De Los Angeles, "Untitled (01)", 2002, 40 1/4"x20 5/8", Colored pencil, ink and acrylic on paper. Private Collection.
Jesse Bransford and Lorenzo De Los Angeles, "Untitled (01)", 2002, 40 1/4"x20 5/8", Colored pencil, ink and acrylic on paper. Private Collection.
Jesse Bransford and Lorenzo De Los Angeles, Untitled (02), 2002, 40 1/4"x20 1/2", Colored pencil, ink and acrylic on paper.
Jesse Bransford and Lorenzo De Los Angeles, Untitled (02), 2002, 40 1/4"x20 1/2", Colored pencil, ink and acrylic on paper.
Jesse Bransford and Lorenzo De Los Angeles, Untitled (03), 2002, 40 1/4"x21 5/8", Colored pencil, ink and acrylic on paper.
Jesse Bransford and Lorenzo De Los Angeles, Untitled (03), 2002, 40 1/4"x21 5/8", Colored pencil, ink and acrylic on paper.
Jesse Bransford and Lorenzo De Los Angeles, Untitled (05), 2003, 18 7/8"x15", Colored pencil, ink and acrylic on paper. Collection of Seth and Liz Kelly.
Jesse Bransford and Lorenzo De Los Angeles, Untitled (05), 2003, 18 7/8"x15", Colored pencil, ink and acrylic on paper. Collection of Seth and Liz Kelly.
Jesse Bransford and Lorenzo De Los Angeles, Untitled (06), 2003, 14"x12 3/8", Colored pencil, ink and acrylic on paper.
Jesse Bransford and Lorenzo De Los Angeles, Untitled (06), 2003, 14"x12 3/8", Colored pencil, ink and acrylic on paper.
Jesse Bransford and Lorenzo De Los Angeles, Untitled (07), 2003, 24.25"x42.75"", Colored pencil, ink and acrylic on paper.
Jesse Bransford and Lorenzo De Los Angeles, Untitled (07), 2003, 24.25"x42.75"", Colored pencil, ink and acrylic on paper.
Jesse Bransford and Lorenzo De Los Angeles, Untitled (08), 2003, 23.5x12.25", Colored pencil, ink and acrylic on paper.
Jesse Bransford and Lorenzo De Los Angeles, Untitled (08), 2003, 23.5x12.25", Colored pencil, ink and acrylic on paper.
Jesse Bransford and Lorenzo De Los Angeles, Untitled (09), 2003, 40x20.75", Colored pencil, ink and acrylic on paper.
Jesse Bransford and Lorenzo De Los Angeles, Untitled (09), 2003, 40x20.75", Colored pencil, ink and acrylic on paper.
Jesse Bransford and Lorenzo De Los Angeles, Untitled (10), 2003, 40.25x21", Colored pencil, ink and acrylic on paper.
Jesse Bransford and Lorenzo De Los Angeles, Untitled (10), 2003, 40.25x21", Colored pencil, ink and acrylic on paper.

B.Ö.C. 2000-2001

Interview With Hudson 11.15.01

Hudson: .Why work on the wall or on big paper and not stretched canvas? Why draw and not paint?

Jesse: I think there is a big difference between the way a drawing and a painting read. I have a feeling that the distinction is purely historical, but a painting has an unquestionable quality that a drawing does not. I was never interested in these pieces saying something definitive - I'm more interested in suggestions - and drawings do that in a way that painting just can't. It's as if the drawing is only a suggestion of what the image could be.

.Seems you've got sexual aggression dominating the penetration of space; is it horror vaccuii?

For me aggression is sexual by definition. I think the moment I started demarcating spatial relationships is when aggression entered the picture. Space and distance are the real reason we have created the awful boundaries that make up the 'social' connection between sex and aggression. That allows for the relation of 'us' and 'them,' the basic structure of a power relationship. Once you get issues of power on the table it becomes impossible to suppress the sexual content that exists between any two or more objects in a visual frame. As for horror vaccuii, I guess the trend toward visual multiplicity reflects an urge to show how much more there is between a subject and object.

.How were you introduced to B.Ö.C, why the focus, and what are some of the things in their music which sustained your year long project?

I had known about the Blue Öyster Cult since childhood, but I never knew any of the music beyond the two radio hits. About two years ago I started trying to find the 'origin' of the heavy metal genre, something deeply connected to my teen years. The B.Ö.C. came up early on, and I had a really hard time with them. They are so weird - possibly one of the strangest bands of all time. That to me made them extremely attractive from the outset. As I learned more and more about them (and got completely sucked in) I found all of these points of convergence with other ideas I had been thinking about. The most fascinating aspect of the band for me is the cosmology that they fashioned for themselves, a cosmology mapped out most clearly in their album "Imaginos". It's trans-historical and non-linear, and deals with many of the thought-worlds I've been working with. It seemed for awhile that every interest I have is referenced somewhere by the Öyster boys, a fact that honestly sort of frightens me.

Those interested in further info on the B.Ö.C. I would direct to the B.Ö.C. FAQ at: http://www.hotrails.co.uk/bocfaq/

Why such a limited and specific palette?

Color was an extremely difficult transition to make from black and white. I had to have a reason for it that was not purely visual. Experiment after experiment led me to the realization that color could be used as another graphic element, that it could carry information the same way the images themselves are. I've also been using it as a way of distinguishing objects that are on top of one another and making the idea of layering visually important.

.Has your conception of time, especially linear time, been eroding as to what happens in your art making?

The more I work, the more blurred distinctions become, particularly temporal ones. This was the root of the problem that let me stumble into the B.Ö.C. as a subject matter in the first place. At the point I started these I had thoroughly contaminated the subjects I was pulling the imagery from (Star Trek, Heaven's Gate, etc.). I was totally paranoid in my thinking and I had lost my bearings as to how these images related to one another (a holistic meltdown, where everything means everything...). I was no longer separating the imagery by subject or historical context. The images were perilously close to becoming empty, purely visual. Ultimately the problem was a productive one in that I had to tear everything back down before I could begin again.

Jesse Bransford, (B.Ö.C.) Astronomy
Jesse Bransford, (B.Ö.C.) Astronomy

2001, 48x85", acrylic and ink and on paper. Collection of the Albright Knox Gallery, gift of Eileen and Michael Cohen.

Jesse Bransford, (B.Ö.C.) Black Blade
Jesse Bransford, (B.Ö.C.) Black Blade

2000, 48x85", acrylic and ink and on paper. Collection of the Artist.

Jesse Bransford, (B.Ö.C.) Dominance and Submission
Jesse Bransford, (B.Ö.C.) Dominance and Submission

2001, 48x85", acrylic and ink and on paper. Collection of the RISD Museum.

Jesse Bransford, (B.Ö.C.) The Red and the Black
Jesse Bransford, (B.Ö.C.) The Red and the Black

2000, 48x85", acrylic and ink and on paper. Collection of the Artist.

Jesse Bransford, (B.Ö.C.) 7 Screaming Diz-Busters
Jesse Bransford, (B.Ö.C.) 7 Screaming Diz-Busters

2001, 48x85", acrylic and ink and on paper. Collection of Jed Kapplan.

Jesse Bransford, (B.Ö.C.) Stairway to the Stars
Jesse Bransford, (B.Ö.C.) Stairway to the Stars

2001, 48x85", acrylic and ink and on paper. Collection of the Artist.

Jesse Bransford, (B.Ö.C.) Workshop of Telescopes
Jesse Bransford, (B.Ö.C.) Workshop of Telescopes

2001, 48x85", acrylic and ink and on paper. Collection of Norman Dubrow.

Jesse Bransford, Imaginos
Jesse Bransford, Imaginos

2001, 2003, Dimensions variable, Latex, marker and graphite on wall. Installation at Feature Inc. (Destroyed), Installation at The CCA Wattis Museum, San Francisco, CA (Destroyed).

imaginos-02.jpg

Gestalt Drawings 1997-2000

Pictured Information
Visual information can allow for a nonlinear interpretation of any given element. Instead of one word following another in a narrative, any single image can interface with any other image in the visual field. That’s not to say there aren’t visual systems that have their own ‘language,’ and that’s something I’m thinking about a lot when I incorporate two or more specific visual systems, like a technical schematic and a computer interface.

The World Wide Web
Something I think has been misunderstood about the web is this notion of all information being equal there. My experience of the medium suggests not a leveling of information, but a reorganization of the way we interface it. I remember when I was a kid spending hours in the library, learning how to find things there: originally we learned the Dewey Decimal System, which organized all of the books into general categories. It took a long time to learn how the system worked, and even then I still did a lot of the navigation by space rather than the actual system. Then the library switched to the Library of Congress system, which has many, many more categories than the DD system did. It was cataclysmic in that I could no longer find anything. As frustrating as it was, I stumbled on a lot of really interesting things I don’t think I would have found otherwise. I think that is where we are with the web right now, that point before the organizational system is really in place. I think it’s a temporary condition, but amazing things have come of it, personally speaking.

Abstraction
I’m really interested in the moment of realization that occurs when your assumptions about something are destroyed by actually looking at what is in front of you. The ‘is it two black faces or one white chalice’ images from visual psychology really strike me in the way that something visual can be one thing one instant and then be something completely different the next. What fascinates me is that the image can never be both, it’s always one or another, and that we can see both only in time, by actually focusing on what it is we are looking at, and then realizing that there is more than one visual system at work. That’s what abstraction is to me, the act of bringing an image forth and allowing it to reveal its fractured nature.

Space
Creating a sense of depth or volume in a two-dimensional plane has always been, to me, the everlasting paradox: I always think of the book Flatland, a story about a being in two dimensions given the revelation of three... I try not to consciously create a space, and I’ve learned how objects themselves create a space in relation to one another by our visual assumptions. By ignoring traditional Western perspective and using imagery that refers to space in a schematized manner, perceived ‘space’ will collapse on itself given further inspection.

Timelessness
It’s a notion I can only begin to relate to when I think of ideas. I mean, you can’t imagine a body or a thing in those terms, it’s a very metaphysical concept. It becomes interesting when you look at the history of ideas, then you realize that it was all there from the beginning, that every ‘new’ idea has an analog somewhere in the past. It jars the here-and-now attitude, the obsession with the contemporary. I like wrestling with the notion because it puts our immediate surroundings on the same level as any daydream, novel or half-baked what-if scenario.

Stuart Davis’s Paintings
I had never thought of making a direct connection with his work, but I can see some connections, especially with reference to abstraction. I could never really pay attention to the subject of his work because I was so inundated with what other people thought his work represented. There always seems to be a Mondrian in the eyeshot of one of Davis’s works in a museum, and I remember having that ‘what is abstraction’ revelation making the transition between the two.

Archaic/Present/Future
This goes back to the idea of timelessness from before. If you look at our attempts to represent information visually, you recognize how similar the languages and the content are throughout time. Astrological charts from the Middle Ages look strikingly similar to modern astronomy maps, partly because there is a history linking them, but also because the diagram attempts to present the information in the most efficient manner. When you look at these similarities and differences in the context of time, the ‘facts’ presented become so seated in their time, so subjective. As for the future, I love how bound our dreams are to our present and past. The differences between the original Star Trek and The Next Generation for example, both worlds have such different visions of the same ‘future.’

Why draw on the wall?
When I started working on the large scale paper, I simply covered my entire studio wall and began working. They seemed so overwhelming in the studio confines. It was something I really liked, the way my field of vision couldn’t encompass the entire scene. It very much reminded me of the Mexican muralists or the government sponsored murals of the WPA. I also remembered as a kid going to the Smithsonian Air and Space Museum and standing in front of the “space” mural. When I first saw the large drawings in a gallery context, I was struck at how the space could actually contain them. The wall piece seemed to be a way of recapturing the all-over feeling of the drawings in my closet studio.

Handmade/Graffiti/Found
The way people invent themselves is fascinating. I was infinitely moved by the Heaven’s Gate/Hale Bopp events. Here was an example of a self created belief system using all manner of found symbols and events to rationalize and justify their actions. The use of the black Nike shoes was really profound to me: they understood the symbolism of the product better than the marketers did. What’s more, they weren’t the ones who started the rumor of Hale Bopp hiding a UFO, the web was rife with rumors and explanations of an anomalous second tail on the comet long before they acted on this information, so the use of the comet wasn’t just symbolic, it was another found object in that sense. The ability to mold symbols and ideas to invent a reality was so profoundly apparent in this situation, but it happens everywhere. What we believe, it’s made by us...

Sometime back you described your drawings as a “drawn clash of esoteric belief systems.” I keep wondering, what’s the clash?
Most of the imagery I’m using is from what I call un-popular culture. Some hide themselves, some are high profile, some are virtually American institutions, but they are all marginalized to some degree. I was fascinated with the idea that all these sub-cultures constituted the reality of American culture, not the so-called consumer culture. I was amazed how much the imagery from these seemingly disparate groups spoke to each other.

Information becomes life
I think people are becoming more actively engaged in the information they receive. There’s so much information available, from so many sources, that people are becoming very conscious of how constructed information is. The press has characterized this new consciousness as the “death of trust,” but I think it’s one of the greatest things to happen. People are finally realizing that things are never as they seem, and that’s making people have a more active relationship to their environments.

As interviewed by Hudson 09.03.98

Jesse Bransford, Detail of Gestalt No. 12 (The Left and Right Hands), 1998, 96x78", Pen and ink on paper. Private Collection.
Jesse Bransford, Detail of Gestalt No. 12 (The Left and Right Hands), 1998, 96x78", Pen and ink on paper. Private Collection.
Jesse Bransford, Gestalt No. 3 (V'GER as the Lamb), 1997, 60x65", Pen and ink on Paper. Collection of the Artist.
Jesse Bransford, Gestalt No. 3 (V'GER as the Lamb), 1997, 60x65", Pen and ink on Paper. Collection of the Artist.
Jesse Bransford, Gestalt No. 4 (Tiamat as the Lamb), 1997, 60x66", Pen and ink on paper. Private Collection.
Jesse Bransford, Gestalt No. 4 (Tiamat as the Lamb), 1997, 60x66", Pen and ink on paper. Private Collection.
Jesse Bransford, Another Satellite (For Dennis Cooper), 1997, 60x68", Pen and ink on paper. Collection of the Artist.
Jesse Bransford, Another Satellite (For Dennis Cooper), 1997, 60x68", Pen and ink on paper. Collection of the Artist.
Jesse Bransford, Gestalt No. 5 (The Thirty Nine), 1997, 60x76", Pen and ink on paper. Collection of Kevin Bruk.
Jesse Bransford, Gestalt No. 5 (The Thirty Nine), 1997, 60x76", Pen and ink on paper. Collection of Kevin Bruk.
Jesse Bransford, Gestalt No. 10 (The City In the Clouds), 1998, 76x80", Pen and ink on Paper. Collection of the Artist.
Jesse Bransford, Gestalt No. 10 (The City In the Clouds), 1998, 76x80", Pen and ink on Paper. Collection of the Artist.
Jesse Bransford, Gestalt No. 11 (Drowning By Numbers), 1998, 60x80", Pen and ink on paper. Collection of John and Sara Slesinger.
Jesse Bransford, Gestalt No. 11 (Drowning By Numbers), 1998, 60x80", Pen and ink on paper. Collection of John and Sara Slesinger.
Jesse Bransford, Gestalt No. 14 (The Final Frontier), 1998, 78x99", Pen and ink on Paper. Collection of the Artist.
Jesse Bransford, Gestalt No. 14 (The Final Frontier), 1998, 78x99", Pen and ink on Paper. Collection of the Artist.
Jesse Bransford, Gestalt No. 18 (The Empire Never Ended), 1998, 66x80", Pen and ink on paper. Collection of the Artist.
Jesse Bransford, Gestalt No. 18 (The Empire Never Ended), 1998, 66x80", Pen and ink on paper. Collection of the Artist.
Jesse Bransford, Gestalt No. 24 (Apocalypse: Abraxas Annihilation), 1999, 40x65", Pen and ink on paper. Lost and presumed destroyed.
Jesse Bransford, Gestalt No. 24 (Apocalypse: Abraxas Annihilation), 1999, 40x65", Pen and ink on paper. Lost and presumed destroyed.
Jesse Bransford, Gestalt No. 25 (Apocalypse: The Tower), 1999, 40x65", Pen and ink on paper. Collection of Adam Putnam.
Jesse Bransford, Gestalt No. 25 (Apocalypse: The Tower), 1999, 40x65", Pen and ink on paper. Collection of Adam Putnam.
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Back to Jesse Bransford: Work
Jesse Bransford, The Fourth and Fifth Pyramids
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The Fourth and Fifth Pyramids
Jesse Bransford, Ashokan Circle
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Magic Circles 2022
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Banded Staves 2019
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Mahavidyas 2017-2018
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A Book of Staves (Galdrastafabók) Deluxe Edition 2018
Jesse Bransford, Kali Pujani Yantra
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Moon and Sun 2016
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The Emerald Tablet (for The Magic Flute) & Circle to the Four Corners/Elements (for K.S.) 2015-2016
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Hills Become the Sun 2015
Jesse Bransford, Stave against Sorrow (1), 2014, 5 1/2 x 7 1/2”, Watercolor and graphite on paper.
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Sayings of the High One 2014
Jesse Bransford, detail of The Fourth Pyramid, 2013, Dimensions variable, Tempera paint on wall and floor, panels and paper, Installation at Galveston Artist Residency.
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The 4th Pyramid 2013
Jesse Bransford, Lamen Shield (Saturn)
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VII (Saturn) 2011-2013
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Δε Σοφíα (Towards Wisdom) 2013
 Jesse Bransford,  JOVE = 27 (Variant) , 2011, 22x29", Acrylic, ink and graphite on paper.
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VI (Jove) 2011
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Assorted Murals and Floor Works 1998 - Present
 Jesse Bransford,  Lamen Shield (Venus) , 2010, 10" diameter, Acrylic and graphite on board.
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V (Venus) 2010
Jesse Bransford, "Sic Itur Ad Astra", 2009, 76x48", Acrylic, watercolor and ink and on paper.
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IV (LUNA) 2008-2009
Jesse Bransford, Animal, Vegetable, Mineral, 2008, 74x43.5, Acrylic, watercolor and graphite on paper.
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The Jungle (For Norma) 2007-2009
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III (Mercurius) 2007
 Jesse Bransford,  Guardian (Mavors In Potentia) , 2006, 65x41", acrylic, watercolor, graphite on paper.
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II (Mavors) 2005-2006
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I (Sol) 2005
Jesse Bransford and Lorenzo De Los Angeles, Untitled (04) (for A. P.), 2003, 16 1/4"x19 7/8", Colored pencil, ink and acrylic on paper. Private Collection.
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Jesse Bransford / Lorenzo De Los Angeles: Collaborations 2002-2003
Jesse Bransford, (B.Ö.C.) Astronomy
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B.Ö.C. 2000-2001
Jesse Bransford, Detail of Gestalt No. 12 (The Left and Right Hands), 1998, 96x78", Pen and ink on paper. Private Collection.
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Gestalt Drawings 1997-2000
THIS SITE SERVES AS AN ARCHIVE OF WORK BEGUN 1995. ALL RIGHTS TO THE IMAGES AND CONTENT RESERVED. PLEASE CONTACT IF YOU PLAN TO LINK OR USE THESE IMAGES IN ANY WAY. THANK YOU.