ABOUT KEN GILLILANDKen has been doing art from about the time he could hold a pencil. Even
in elementary school and junior high he showed great promise as an artist—recognized
in the school district city-wide art shows with several first place ribbons.
It was at this time he adopted the signature “Keith”. The reason being that
his art teachers were constantly calling him “Keith”—his father’s name who
happened to be a popular teacher in the area. Ken says, “…well I decided
to make it easy on them (the teachers)—besides my middle name is “Keith”
and “Ken” didn’t sound right— with a signature “Gilliland” or worse “Ken
Gilliland” – who’d be able to see the painting under that scrawl…” | |
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At 15 years old, Dore McLellan, a local artist, introduced him to oil paints.
Within a year, he was selling paintings at local art shows and accepting
commissions. He graduated from Crescenta Valley High School with a State
Scholarship, the La Crescenta Women’s Club Outstanding Achievement in Art
Award and a summer scholarship to Art Center. After a summer at Art Center,
Ken enrolled at California State University, Northridge as an art major
in the fall of 1978. He turned his artistic focus to drawing and painting
people, taking classes at CSUN in illustration, painting and figure drawing.
It was also there he met a popular Southland artist, D.J. Hall, who was
teaching at CSUN at the time. While Hall’s influence is clearly visible
in Gilliland’s paintings, he also credits CSUN art professors, Sol Bernstein
and Watson Cross, with having an impact on work. Graduating from CSUN with a BFA in 1983, he continued to paint in his spare time while he worked his “day job”, creating a series of paintings of friends that he called “contemporary portraits”. At this period he also experimented with Scenic Design and Painting for local theaters and schools, running a social club and newsletter and computer programming, music and art. In 1987, he showed his paintings with the “Sharing Friends of the Arts” in Hollywood and the following year at Gorky’s Café in downtown Los Angeles. He was also featured in an article in the Glendale News-Press. Disappointed with the public reception of his work, he turned to computer programming and began to sell “clip-art” to a national distributor, Asgard Software. |
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By 1990, he formed his own company, Notung Software, and began to release
multimedia packages based on historical periods. In February of 1993, a close friend got Ken to see that he was not only painting portraits of friends, but also very strong personal and social commentary messages. Ken, realizing that he could use his art to help people, cure social ills and make a “difference”, began to paint again. He also worked up his courage and walked into the Orlando Gallery, hoping to be represented there and has been represented by the Orlando ever since. | |
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In 1998, Ken returned to the computer art world started working with
3D digital art. In 2001, he met several people from a company called
Zygote and signed on as a brokered artist. Months after this, DAZ 3D spun-off
from Zygote and Ken went with DAZ. With the start of 2003, a partnership
with another DAZ brokered artist, B.L. Render, would forever change the
direction of Ken's digital art pursuits. They together created a generic
bird that could be easily altered in to hundreds of different species called
"Songbird ReMix". Here he found a way to create art, express environmental
concerns and make some money. Since then, he acquire the moniker "3D birdman"
and has spoken at Siggraph about digital bird creation. He is now a full-time fine and digital artist, webmaster of multiple websites and a guest teacher of art, photography, birding, native plants and other environmental issues and inductee in the TI-99 Hall of Fame. |
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