A mural of UMass alumni MFA artist Sean Greene

Color Code

Sean Greene '04MFA Paints Himself Out of Corners

From indigenous Mexican art to skateboarding and graffiti to Marimekko prints, the evolving visual vernacular in the paintings of Sean Greene ’04MFA is personal, on purpose. Growing up in the San Francisco Bay Area and later in Connecticut and Vermont, Greene was surrounded by artists—an early immersion that he pulls from when making his own work.

Even so, he reached a point where “I didn’t know how to take it further,” he says. Coming to UMass for his MFA “proved to be a great experience,” Greene adds, and at the core of that was the color class taught by Ron Michaud, based on the teachings of Josef Albers. “I was able to really understand color in a way I had never considered before,” Greene explains. “Colors affect one another when they are near or surrounding or next to each other, just like people do.”

An incredible sensitivity to color is at the center of Greene’s work, as he keeps discovering new expressions. A series of works from around 2006 feature looping, overlapping lines influenced by the scrawled graffiti alongside New York City’s Metro-North trains and the swooping paths of skateboarders. Where the lines cross, the colors seem to mix like luminous overlaid transparencies—an illusion that Greene extended and expanded in several bright, gorgeous murals, including those he created for Facebook’s Cambridge offices in 2014.

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Artwork of UMass alumni Sean Greene '04MFA titled "Pleasure Index"

“I’m tempted to say color is the through line in my work,” he explains, “but in a way, color correlates the most with emotion for me, so it could be that emotion is really the through line.” However, “The more I develop a body of work, the more defined it gets, and that’s when I start getting restless because I can predict the outcome. I like being in an unknown territory.” In those times, Greene recalls advice from UMass professor Hanlyn Davies to “invite a foreigner into your work. By which he meant, do something different, break one of your own rules.” Greene points out that “it’s a great way to keep learning and growing as a person and an artist.” His attitude has proven fruitful: He shows work frequently in New England and occasionally in New York; Washington, D.C.; and Oakland, California. In 2014 Greene was awarded a Massachusetts Cultural Council Fellowship.

Read the full story in the Magazine of the University of Massachusetts Amherst.