The Evolution of Passages

The Evolution of Passages

Local artist Ron Gianola’s work spans decades and genres

By Keith Schneider
Current Contributor

The one unmistakable element in Ron Gianola’s arresting “Passages” paintings is his command in brush, knife, and single pigment colors to produce abstract images, endowed with energy and motion. 

The Passages collection—which Gianola started about a decade ago—has a readily available narrative expressed by freedom from constraint and realized through freeform rhythm. The paintings are a visual declaration, much like Gianola’s other artistic expression as a jazz drummer. The immediate effect is like watching clouds changing shape in a wind-blown sunset.

Some 65 of Gianola’s paintings—which measure his evolution from auto-industry draftsman to portraiture to landscapes, to ultimately reach artistic prominence with his unique Passages canvasses—were on display recently from September 15, 2023, through January 7, 2024, at the Dennos Museum Center at Northwestern Michigan College in Traverse City. The exhibition also featured Stephen Duren, a noted West Michigan landscape artist, and 10 artists connected to the Tusen Takk Foundation, a Leelanau County artist-residency program. 

Ron Gianola artist painter Passages 213 honor michigan the betsie current newspaper Keith Schneider
Ron Gianola’s mastery of the abstract—unfolding in a cloud of color, emotion, and movement—is expressed in Passages #213, painted last year. Gianola’s paintings are the result of more than 50 years of “pursuing the possibilities of a personal transformative vision that engages emotion, expression, and the poetry of visual music,” according to the Dennos Museum, where Gianola recently had a solo exhibition. Image courtesy of Ron Gianola.

If art defines the artist, then the bright blending of movement, fine skill, precision, and resolve in Passages is an apt reflection of Gianola. It is all interesting, determined, and under control. 

He is 73 years old and has spent a lifetime exploring his artistic instinct, even as he understood the need to support himself financially as a well-recognized machine tool designer and draftsman in Michigan’s auto sector. The older of two sons, he was raised on Detroit’s working-class east side. Even before he graduated from Cass Technical High School, a magnet school, Gianola attracted attention for his drawing and design skills and began working in the Motor City’s auto sector, where he stayed, mostly as a freelancer, until the Great Recession in 2008. 

“I was a car nut,” he says. “That’s what I wanted to do. Work in styling. I had an uncle that was a model maker. I just grew up in that culture.”

delorean car artist auto industry Ron Gianola artist painter Passages 213 honor michigan the betsie current newspaper Keith Schneider
The DeLorean phase of Ron Gianola’s career—a future design executed while he was in high school in the late 1960s. Hailing from Detroit originally, the city’s rich culture of automobiles and music seeped into his bones, while the beauty of Benzie County’s landscapes inspired Gianola’s painting career to “explore the creative, personal, and humanist side of life, mind, and spirit… embodying the essential mystery and spiritual beauty of nature and the human psyche,” according to the Dennos Museum, where Gianola recently had a solo exhibition. Image courtesy of Ron Gianola.

With the other side of his creative instinct, he sought excellence in music and fine art. Detroit’s jazz musicians sought him out as a drummer. And with wages earned as a designer, he studied art and began painting at the Detroit Society of Arts and Crafts, a private art and design college now known as the College For Creative Studies. 

“I was starting to draw figures at Arts and Crafts,” he says. “Even if you’re in industrial design, you should have a fine art background. You should have art history. Basic design. Basic color. Photography. History of material. The whole bit, right? So I was somewhat in fine art at that point, including figure drawing, which I had never done in my life. And I thought, Whoa, how did this happen? This is too weird, even for me! But I was good at figure drawing. And I just fell in love with art.”

He also fell in love with his wife, Pam Yee (73), and the pair eventually made the move to Benzie County in the 1990s. 

They had known each other as teenagers in Detroit, where Yee also attended Cass Tech and graduated in the same class as Gianola, before going their separate ways. She raised two sons and worked as a Wayne County Circuit Court clerk. The two reconnected at their 10th high school reunion in 1978, and they married in 1986. 

Pam Yee Ron Gianola artist painter Passages 213 honor michigan the betsie current newspaper Keith Schneider portraits
Portraits of Pam Yee (1987) and Ron Gianola (1982). Image courtesy of Ron Gianola.

During that period and afterward, Gianola and Yee also made regular visits to Benzie County, spending summer weeks on Platte Lake. 

In 1990, they paid $40,000 for a house along the Platte River, upstream of Honor, that Gianola renovated during weekend trips from Harper Woods, an inner ring suburb of Detroit. He later added a second floor. He also renovated what he calls “a complete, uninhabited, abandoned wreck” of an outbuilding next door for his studio. 

In 1995, the river house became their permanent residence and workplace.

While dial-up internet service kept his drafting clients happy—and his income stable—the change in lifestyle and geography had immediate effects on Gianola’s painting. He began to specialize in Benzie landscapes. 

“It’s here. It’s beautiful. It’s for all the reasons we’re all here,” Gianola says. 

He and Yee also spent time in Hawaii, where he met Lau Chun—a renowned impressionist landscape painter—and studied Chun’s use of color. 

In 1995, Gianola produced “Summer Serenade,” an impressionist triptych of the garden outside his cozy, sunlit studio. It exhibited Gianola’s maturing craftsmanship and detail, and his understanding of Chun’s color techniques. It was his first masterwork and was chosen by former-Governor Jennifer Granholm (D) to hang in the Governor’s Mansion in Lansing. 

Governor Jennifer Granholm Ron Gianola Summer Serenade landscape cabin on Platte River artist painter Passages 213 honor michigan the betsie current newspaper Keith Schneider
“Summer Serenade,” painted in 1995, shows an example of Ron Gianola’s early work, when he first moved from Detroit to Benzie County. Image courtesy of Ron Gianola.

The path from past pursuits to artistic excellence is seldom short, direct, or free of complications, though. 

In 2007 and 2008, the Great Recession hammered the auto industry—and drafting work dried up. 

So, nearing 60, Gianola retired from his auto-industry work and devoted more time to painting. He began to experiment with interiors and geometric shapes and more color-infused abstract images. Gradually, something new and distinctive began to emerge from Gianola’s easel. He called them “Passages,” a reflection of his evolving artistic passion and the intensity of the freedom he was experiencing with his life in the woods.

Passage canvasses were infused with the elusive motion and sound of a fast-flowing river. The art was not primordial or reckless or abandoned. Rather, it was tightly constructed, even as it exclaimed excitement and celebration. 

Passages was the work of a thinking man who freely creates, with the result that—when he finished—the canvas examined the artist’s presence and his exhilaration. 

In 2014, Gianola painted Passage #82, another triptych and a masterwork that embodied the beauty and charisma of the collection. 

Passages #82 Ron Gianola artist painter Passages 213 honor michigan the betsie current newspaper Keith Schneider
Hung in the Dennos Museum at Northwestern Michigan College in Traverse City from September 2023 to January 2024, patrons studied the deep reds and skyline colors of Passage #82 and marveled at its power. Image courtesy of Ron Gianola.

“I tried to paint like Lau for 12 years,” Gianola says. “In the end, I never wound up painting like Lau. But—much better—I wound up painting like me, because I worked so hard. Trying to do what I thought Lau was doing, I learned all this technique that I wasn’t paying any attention to. And one day I woke up, and I thought, Well, you know what? That doesn’t look like Lau. That looks like a great painting that I didn’t intend to do. You know, you struggle and try so hard to get there that you learn some other stuff on the way. After 50 years, you’ve actually learned a few things.”

Passages elevated Gianola’s work to prominence and stature that only a handful of Benzie County artists have achieved. Among them are Gwen Frostic, the nature block-print maker; Roland Roycraft, the landscape watercolorist; and Dewey Blocksma, an avant garde sculpture artist. (Editor’s Note: See The Betsie Current’s 2019 profile on Blocksma in our online archives.)

The leaders of the Dennos Museum certainly understood what was happening in Gianola’s studio and invited him to display Passages at the end of last year. 

“Ron continues to find new ways to explore themes and ideas that excite him. That’s what really got us interested,” says Craig Hadley, the Dennos Museum director and chief curator. “And we’ve never mounted a solo exhibit of his work. That was appealing, as well.”

The solo exhibit at the Dennos—one of Michigan’s finest art museums—was a peak experience in Gianola’s life and his art career. It delivered the public recognition and approbation that Gianola has merited for years. 

What’s next? 

Gianola is not clear on that question. 

“I’m content,” he says. “I did what I wanted to do, or what I felt I should do, which for the longest time seemed kind of impossible. I didn’t have enough time. I was working in this crazy engineering business. It just seemed like chaos. I had to show the world that there was a poetic side to me.”

Ron Gianola’s work can be found at RonGianola.com online; likewise, he can be found at “Ron Gianola” on Facebook. Visits to his studio in Honor can be made by appointment; send an email to Ron@RonGianola.com with any questions regarding price, shipping, or technique.

Featured Photo Caption: Ron Gianola’s mastery of the abstract—unfolding in a cloud of color, emotion, and movement—is expressed in his paintings. Gianola’s paintings are the result of more than 50 years of “pursuing the possibilities of a personal transformative vision that engages emotion, expression, and the poetry of visual music,” according to the Dennos Museum, where Gianola recently had a solo exhibition. Image courtesy of Ron Gianola.

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