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| His painting provides plenty of satisfaction | ||
| By Mark Shanahan, Globe Staff August 24, 2005 |
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| Dressed in a scarlet shirt, black jacket, and jeans, Ron Wood looks very much like a Rolling Stone. His rooster 'do is suspiciously dark for a man of 58, but the guy's still got vibe. (And the cool quotient only compounds when you consider that, before joining the Stones in 1976, Wood was an original member of the Jeff Beck Group and the Faces.)
What you may not know is that rock 'n' roll isn't his only gig. When Wood isn't holed up in a studio or embarked on yet another world tour, he puts down his guitar and picks up a paintbrush. This week, with the World's Greatest Rock 'n' Roll Band in residence at Fenway Park, a collection of Wood's portraits are on display at Newbury Fine Arts, a gallery on Newbury Street. It was there, on a leopard-pattern chaise lounge, that we sat down with Wood while he talked about his art. |
Q. Welcome to Boston. Q. Good. Tell me about this show of yours? Q. Yes. A. Well, my youngest son, Ty, is my art representative, and we've got my [art] agent Danny here, and a whole crew, really. |
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Q. see Peter [Wolf] is here. Q. How long have you been painting? Q. And how high were you when you started playing guitar? Q. Which do you prefer? Q. There are portraits of Mick and Keith and Charlie, and also Jimmy Reed, Marvin Gaye, and Rod Stewart. If you come down on the price, I might buy the Jimmy Reed. Q. Do you have any favorite paintings of yours?
Q. Charlie [Watts] went to Scullers on his night off.
Q. Yes. Do you go to museums?
Q. How do you get these famous folks to sit for you? Like Jack Nicholson.
Q. What do your band mates think of your art? Does Mick complain about how you paint him?
Q. How much time do you spend painting compared to playing the guitar?
Q. Common?
Q. Do you collect art?
Q. Tell me about him.
Q. What sort of stuff is it?
Q. How'd you get interested in him?
Q. Sounds a little like collecting records.
Q. What sort of stuff?
Q. Is it important to you to be taken seriously as an artist? A lot of folks buy your stuff because it's by Ron Wood.
Q. So that is important to you?
Q. A stumbling block being in the Stones?
Q. Say, could I bum a smoke?
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