In Family Day – It’s Just a Walk in the Park, Gregory Evans presents a scene that remains exactly what it appears to be: a family walking together, steady in pace, familiar in form, with the requisite, loving, family dog in place. Or is there more?
Nothing asks to be explained. Sometimes it doesn’t need to be.
The figures hold their positions with ease – silhouettes grounded, solid, consistent – while the world around them operates on a different logic. Colors shift. Patterns gather and release. The sky pulses and morphs, defying definition, its usual role quietly suspended.
Plum trees plum – its what they do. Skies do what skies do. People with a dog walk in a park. That’s it, mostly.
Within BwahT mythology, this work rests in a current where nothing is revealed or transformed, but something is present. The world remains continuous. A processional myth – always coming, always going. We walk in strange lands, if they be seen.
It’s the same as it ever was.
Family Day – It’s Just a Walk in the Park was originally done as a colored sketch on printer paper.