t’s hard to imagine boxing and painting combined to create
something artistic. But Dutch boxer Bart van Polanen Petel demonstrates
that it’s really quite possible to mix a brutal sport and a delicate art
form. He puts on his boxing gloves, dips them in paint, and throws
punch after punch at a blank canvas wrapped around a punching bag until
it is completely covered in chaotic color patterns.
“If life is ultimately a Darwinian struggle for survival,
then boxing at least has the virtue of being open about it,” says the
philosophical boxer. Inspired by its primal nature, painting is Bart’s
way of paying tribute to the sport of boxing. “Instead of crushing bones
and shattering teeth, I use my fists to create,” he explained.
Bart says that when he’s boxing, he feels a deep connection
with the men of the Stone Age and the Middle Ages. He feels a certain
animal within him, an aggression that he learned to curb in boxing. But
with painting, he’s able to let out all that aggression on to the
canvas.
“I use boxing techniques
exclusively, with real boxing gloves. No brush allowed. On canvas,
wrapped around a bag. Bagwork. An explosive expression of emotions.
Fear, aggression, anger. Pounding hooks and hammering uppercuts move on
paint on canvas. What remains is an echo of the beast within.”
Bart points out that while the human race has progressed
immensely since its brutal beginnings, that ‘evolution is not yet where
society is today’. “Although no longer required, an ancient pilot flame
still burns inside of us,” he says. “Laws and common sense tell us to
ignore the savage beast that growls within. In boxing, it can be free.”
“Boxing awakens, ignites, liberates the beast inside. Tamed
with technique and precision, boxing honors our animal instincts. Not
by the gentle touch of a brush, but by pounding paint on canvas, I pay
tribute.”
Bart, who boxed professionally in the past
and owns a boxing gym in the city of Tilburg, was himself a student of
the famous boxer Joe Frazier. Now that he’s turned to art, he’s doing
pretty well for himself – so far he’s sold four canvases in the past
year. But his real dream is to show his paintings in exhibitions all
over the world. To view more of his work, you can visit his website: paintboxer.com.
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