Friday, June 26, 2020

Passages



Two years in the making or should I say 37? That's how long I've been writing letters. Journaling since the age of 12. Passages is a project that developed from an idea my best friend and I had back in the early 1990's of doing an art project together with our correspondence.

At age 53, after the Santa Rosa fires, I felt a need to create works of art that incorporated boxes of  ephemera I'd been collecting for so many years. As I re-read letters some 20 or 30 years after receiving them, I was flooded with memories and images, yet they seemed to belong to someone else. I felt removed, as if I were exploring the life of another person.

As a young woman, I felt so different than everyone else around me. As I grow older, I see how all of our lives are so universal. We experience so many of the same thoughts and feelings. I had envisioned, "Passages" to be shown in the month of May and June when my students graduate from high school. I wanted them to reflect on the stage they are at and the passages they are embarking on. Though I have used personal items to create the works of art in the show, this exhibit is not about my past but about a universal past.

First feelings of desire, longing, love, the physical pain of a broken heart. All of the insecurities about fitting in, about career and finding oneself. The search for happiness and belonging. Observations about people and places. Books read, movies watched, experiences.

I hope that some people will be able to visit the actual exhibit and experience the artwork in person during this pandemic. A soundscape of music and voices will accompany the exhibit if there is an opening. Every abstract work of art is layered with years of stories which cannot be captured in a video.

As you take this virtual tour, I hope you get a sense of your own passage through life.

Here is a book of the exhibit.

Sunday, June 21, 2020

Don't Throw Out Anything! It Can All Be Recycled.


Samurai Revisited
Samurai Revisited, 24x24, 2020


Over the past few years I've been taking paintings that are collecting dust in my garage and giving them new life. They add a rich layer to my new work. Instead of destroying pieces I don't like, I sand them down or use them as a base layer for a new work of art. I love knowing that there is a history or back story to each piece that only I know about. This particular painting was once a samurai. I kept the color palette and added pages from a 19th century Japanese book on Kabuki theater along with fabric and new painted elements.