Bardo of the FAMOUS PAINTER – Daniel Kaufman Short Film

“BARDO OF THE FAMOUS PAINTER” is a documentary exploring the journey of a gifted and dedicated artist struggling for several decades to survive in the zeitgeist of the contemporary art market.

The subject of the film is Daniel J. Kaufman, an encaustic (wax) artist based in Los Angeles. Daniel, the first artist in any medium to be awarded a Fulbright Fellowship and who later worked as a National Geographic photographer, eventually discovered encaustic art using his daughter’s crayons, melting them with spatulas on an electric stove, creating a breakthrough series of paintings compared by former Palm Springs Art Museum curator Michael Zakian to American surrealists Knud Merrild and Boris Margo.

Even with the support and encouragement of numerous art world luminaries including renowned art critic Peter Frank and globally respected gallerists like Molly Barnes (both interviewed in the film), for whatever fickle reasons of fate and circumstance Daniel has up until now endured the difficult life of the archetypal starving artist as he reaches his seventies. The Bardo is the Tibetan term for the intermediate state or gap we experience between death and our next rebirth which Daniel struggles with daily.

“BARDO OF THE FAMOUS PAINTER” explores, with compassion and humor, the challenges of every artist trying to earn a living while creating and sharing art driven by inner necessity. The film traces how Daniel’s passion has taken a toll on his life, especially with his family. It captures the struggle and evolutionary arc—the bardo—critical to realizing his life’s work. Despite his often exasperating efforts promoting and exhibiting his paintings, Daniel feels this is the price he must pay to be recognized as a fine artist.

Directed by Karl Xjimenez