Trent Reynolds

I am an artist and teacher living in Los Angeles since 2007.

I have taught art at Santa Monica College, SMC Emeritus College, The School of the Art Institute of Chicago, LACHSA, Milken, Graphaids, my studio, and more. I primarily teach drawing, painting, mixed media, and design fundamentals. 

Teaching and learning creativity is a collaborative process and I find great satisfaction working with and learning from students. 

At present my own artwork is primarily abstract - a shift that happened after my fourth daughter was born. Learning and experimenting is an important part of my creative process so my work tends to move around a lot. You can see examples of what I’m currently up to here.


The following two series of paintings I consider milestones in my personal development. They are perhaps more biographical illustration than art so I include them here on the about page.  

The Paintings I Don’t Want To Make

Toward the end of my second year as a grad student at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago I hit a low point. I had spent the previous year not happy with anything I had made and not feeling confident I knew what I wanted to do. 

I was talking with a friend in my studio one day and I told him my greatest frustration was that I didn't know what I wanted to paint but I knew exactly what I did not want to paint. Thankfully he was there to suggest the way forward might be to make the paintings I didn't want to make.

I made a list of all the paintings I didn't want to make. They were mostly cliché subjects like sunsets and waterfalls. Some of the things on the list were subjects I might enjoy painting but I felt weren't my stories to tell. Once I had a long list I came up with compositions that combined as many of the things on the list as I felt I could. 

When I was done I ended up liking the paintings quite a bit and the process brought much needed insight that helped me see the way forward. 

Time and Family

This series of paintings is from my BFA thesis exhibition. They are a combination of photography and painting using a process I developed with some grant money. 

I would apply a photosensitive liquid to a large canvas, let it dry in the darkroom, and then expose the surface using a 33mm negative and enlarger. The enlarger was tipped on its side so I could get the canvas far enough away to make the projection as large as the canvas.

After the surface had been exposed I applied photo development chemicals with sponges to develop the photograph. I then worked into the photograph with encaustic (wax) and paint. This series felt like my first departure from what I was being taught as an art student. I discovered the thrill of finding my own path.