| After a trip to the island of Galveston, painter Fabio D’Aroma and writer 
	Audra Martin
 were haunted by the expression on the face of a man waiting on the street 
	corner,
 hoping to be picked up as a day laborer to work in the gardens of the 
	opulent vacation houses.
 They created a character named Dwayne Tatum, whose fate is mapped out over 
	two paintings:
 Dwayne and A Galveston Tale
 In “Dwayne”, D’Aroma painted an abstract background that expressed the emotional state of 
	the character.
 Building from that, Martin wrote a short story about his background directly 
	onto the canvas.
 Over this writing, D’Aroma could now paint an image of Dwayne.
 In “A Galveston Tale”, D’Aroma painted an image of where he thought the epiphany suggested in
 “Dwayne” would logically lead, leaving a section of the canvas where
 Martin would write the next chapter of Dwayne’s story.
 As the story suggested, he then covered part of the story with spray paint.
 The paintings are about the ongoing 
	dialogue between painting and literature and the various stages of creative 
	inspiration.
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