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From
time to time
an artist appears
who so combines imagination
and skill that the
world of art cannot long deny him
his due without diminishing
itself. G. Mark Mulleian is such
an artist.
Born in San
Francisco
in 1947, Mulleian since
the age of
thirteen has dedicated
himself to one purpose,
the greatest
possible development of
his natural artistic
talents.
Though his gifts
are considerable, he knows
that nothing short of supreme
effort will enable him to realize
his goal. A sixteen
hour workday is
not unusual for
him. And if towards
the end of such
a day,
his energy wanes,
he refortifies himself by
recalling
something Michelangelo
once said, "If people knew
how hard
I have had to work
to gain my mastery,
it woulden't seem
so wonderful."
That so young
a man has attained
so great
a proficiency
in his chosen field
is rare enough: what is truly extraordinary
is that Mulleian
has done it without any formal
art training. He has studied
and practiced his craft
alone.
A few art books,
periodic visits to local
museums, constant
attention
to the visual aspects of all
forms of life and
matter, and an informing
imagination have more
than supplied the
want of teachers.
Mulleian's
personal experience
has given him a vivid sense
of the now. Vietnam;
the Tet Offensive;
his artillery position under bombardment;
huddled in silence and
fear with twelve buddies
in an old dilapidated
bunker; he stands up and utters a prayer
to his God,
and moments later a 75 millimeter
mortar round explodes
though the bunker roof,
a inch and a half thick
dry rot peace of wood;
Amazingly no one
is killed, or even
injured. That
kind of immediate
experience
often makes a
believer out of
a non-believer.
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