Railroad Tressle, 1990

dick ibach
American (born 1940, died 2021)

Location: East Omak Elementary, Omak

About the Artwork

Railroad Tressle by dick ibach features an abstracted landscape made of energetic, colorful patterns in warm shades of reds and pinks. A lone figure stands on a curvy, elevated railroad trestle and points towards the dark entrance to a tunnel.

This painting is part of the artist's body of images inspired by his memories. He notes, "I find it really healthy to be able to laugh at myself – to poke fun at events that continue to live through some magic, in my memory. These memories with all their varying emotional content, which demand to be celebrated, are good stuff for the activity of art. I hope some of these celebrated events will strike a chord from your past life."

This artwork was acquired for the State Art Collection in partnership with Omak School District.

About the Artist

Spokane, Eastern Washington-based artist dick ibach (1940-2021) created paintings that combine figurative imagery with expressive forms, symbolism, and intense patterning. His art is humorous and often based on his memories: "It is my intention to speak of the contradictions of the human condition: to address both the nobility and stupidity of it all." He believes that the viewer must develop a “visual literacy” and not expect explanations, because “Artists are visual, and their imagery is visual… Words are for poets.”

ibach was born and grew up in Yakima, Central Washington. He earned a Bachelor of Arts degree from Seattle University and a Master of Fine Arts degree from the Pratt Institute in Brooklyn, New York, in 1972. He taught art at Spokane Falls Community College for over fifteen years. He was also a Jesuit brother for ten years during the 1960s and he worked many odd jobs such as a hospital orderly, sod buster, cattle brander, grave digger, and cabinet maker. These experiences shaped his point of view as an artist.

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