Dave House
Visual Artist
Vibrant|Mixed Media Painting|Acrylic Painting|Mixed Media|Woodwork|Crafts
Concrete by day, Controlled Chaos by night—vibrant colors dance in fluid harmony. Epoxy,Resin, & Acrylic blooms🎨✨Art Therapy for the heart ❤️& Soul
Columbus, Ohio, United States
Joined September 2025
ARTIST STATEMENT — DAVE “D-HOUSE ART” HOUSE
I create art at the crossroads of discipline, rebellion, and transformation. My work is born from two worlds that seem opposite but live in the same body: the hard, structured, brutally physical world of concrete construction, and the fluid, unpredictable universe of acrylic color and epoxy resin. Everything I pour, paint, or polish comes from years spent shaping materials that don’t forgive mistakes, and from a lifetime of learning to turn chaos into something meaningful.
Long before I became a concrete finisher, I was a rebellious kid sketching heavy-metal album covers, graffiti lettering, and creatures that only existed in my mind. Those early, chaotic drawings were my first escape — a place where rules didn’t matter and creativity wasn’t judged. After serving in the U.S. Army as an airborne infantryman, earning my Expert Infantry Badge, and learning precision, endurance, and mental control, I carried those lessons into concrete work. And eventually, I carried them into painting.
Concrete taught me how materials breathe. It taught me that timing is everything — the exact moment the surface tightens, the perfect pressure to smooth an edge, the way flow can be guided but never fully commanded. When I discovered acrylic pouring and resin work, it felt like the first time I could bring those same understandings into a space of softness, color, and emotional expression. The chemistry of pigments and the flow of paint mimic the settling of concrete, but they open into something more spiritual, more unpredictable. They move in ways that remind me of life itself: beautiful, messy, unplanned, and fully alive.
Themes
The central themes in my work revolve around transformation, duality, movement, and release.
• Transformation — turning working-class materials and the weight of a labor-intensive life into color, shine, and something that feels uplifting.
• Duality — the collision between roughness and refinement, job-site grit and studio elegance, discipline and chaos.
• Movement — inspired by the patterns a trowel leaves on fresh concrete, the swirling bloom of a cell activator, the way resin expands and contracts as it cures.
• Release — honoring the emotional freedom that making art gives me after long days of grinding through physical labor. My paintings are both a release for me and an invitation for viewers to release whatever they’re carrying.
Materials & Process
I work with acrylics, pigments, resin epoxy, alcohol inks, ceramic tiles, wooden panels, and mixed media surfaces. Much of my technique blends the precision of construction with the freedom of fluid art. I layer paint intentionally but allow it to react naturally. I tilt, torch, spin, or manipulate the surface like I would guide a slab — not forcing it, but responding to it. My finishing process is influenced by concrete polishing: sanding, sealing, and building a glassy surface that invites people to touch it even before they know they shouldn’t.
Every pour contains a conversation between control and surrender. I set the stage with color structure, but the alchemy — the true beauty — happens when the materials speak for themselves.
Influences
My influences include:
• Street art and graffiti, rooted in my chaotic youth and love for expressive mark-making.
• Heavy-metal artwork, especially Iron Maiden’s “Eddie,” which taught me about detail, intensity, and imaginative storytelling.
• Concrete finishing, from trowel patterns to wet-slab reflections to the way aggregates shift under pressure.
• The Shelly Art Bloom technique, pigments like “This Little Piggy” and “Primary Elements,” and the entire fluid-art community that pushes chemistry into creativity.
• Life itself — the job site, the people who support me, the struggles I’ve overcome, and the belief that art can grow out of any environment.
Audience Experience & Intent
My intention is to create work that feels alive. I want viewers to feel motion even in stillness — like the piece could shift, open, or bloom at any moment. I want them to see the tension between grit and beauty, between control and chaos, between who we’ve had to be and who we’re allowed to become.
I hope people feel empowered when they stand in front of my work. I hope they see evidence of a working man who built his own artistic path and understand that creativity doesn’t require a perfect past or a pristine studio. It only requires honesty, energy, and the courage to let something inside you come out.
In the End
Every piece I make is a reflection of my journey — from rebellious kid to soldier to concrete finisher to artist. My art is proof that transformation is possible at any stage of life. It is a bridge between the chaos of the job site and the color of the studio, between physical labor and emotional release, between who I was and who I continue to become.
My work is not just about color or technique; it is about release, resilience. *Release the Genius*