Adam Dennis' brush strokes come in quick, fluid succession. Then, he leans back to study his composition.
The piece, which delves into the French Revolution, extends from floor to ceiling. Hundreds of hours of painstakingly detailed work have gone into its creation. The size and scope of it are evidence of Dennis' formal training and aesthetic grasp.
But the artist's medium, on this day, is drywall paste. His masterpiece, rather than hanging under glass in a gallery, is housed in a bar — Uptown's Coup d'Etat — where, hours earlier, cocktail-fueled patrons were leaning against it, brushing past it and knocking holes into its surface with stray chair backs.
And if the owners decide they want to do something different, the artwork gets simply washed away.
It's made from chalk, after all.
"A little heartbreaking," Dennis said with a smile. "But it comes with the job."
"Job" is a term used a little loosely with Dennis, a multidisciplinary artist who is self-employed through Adam Dennis Arts and Uffda, his two creative houses. These days, a large percent of Dennis' clients are restaurants, where he creates menus and murals with chalk.
At Coup d'Etat, Dennis maintains a pair of mammoth columns bearing 360 degrees of chalk art. He's also in the process of spray-painting a mural in the private dining area. But the Mound native, 36, has just about run the artistic gamut.