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A Swift and Flowing Renewal — Tim McMeans. Acrylic, ink and smoke-stained paper on wood.
San Antonio, Texas A Swift and Flowing Renewal · Acrylic, ink and smoke-stained paper on wood The Artist
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Tim McMeans

Mixed Media Artist
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The Artist

Tim McMeans

Tim McMeans does not come from a lineage of artists. He comes from bookbinders, scratch bakers, carpenters, and machinists — people whose relationship to making was practical, physical, and exacting. That craft inheritance is present in the way he works: smoke-stained paper applied to handmade wooden frames, then drawn and painted in acrylic and ink, then sealed.

The surfaces bear the evidence of process. He began drawing at age six after watching his older brother, earned a BFA from the University of Texas at San Antonio studying drawing, printmaking, painting, and art history, and has been a visual art teacher at East Central High School in San Antonio for 19 years alongside his studio practice. In Untitled street scene, the composition divides along a diagonal axis where cerulean and pale blue pigment—applied with deliberate linear hatching—cuts through a landscape of charred navy, deep teal, and ochre-tan forms that suggest both geological strata and urban architecture.

Paint builds sculptural thickness on the canvas surface, with dark blues pushed into dimensional peaks while lighter earth tones recede into flatter passages, creating an unstable topography where water or light seems to carve through solid matter. The spatial logic remains deliberately ambiguous—neither landscape nor abstraction, the work hovers between representation and material gesture, refusing easy legibility. What's most interesting here is the artist's refusal of completion: the rough edges and visible canvas ground suggest less a finished statement than a diagram of perception itself, as if the act of painting is still deciding what the subject might be.

His paintings use animals as symbolic subjects — each one chosen because it has enriched his life or carries personal meaning. The animals in his work are not illustrative; they are arguments about something beyond themselves. They appear in compositions layered with abstraction, text, and found objects, the whole surface held together by the warmth and grain of the wood beneath.

Credentials & Record

A documented practice.

Selected Exhibitions

Awards

Works at JG

Currently at the gallery

View Tim's collection.

Tim's work is shown across both Bainbridge and Park City. Browse the full collection — medium, dimensions, and price visible on every piece.

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