Monday, August 23, 2010

2010 Ventura Artists Summit




A cardboard woman with a skirt of white netting, a hollow left leg, and overflowing shopping bags presided over twenty-seven artists working at an array of tables. easels, chairs, and stools. Judy Levinson's wacky take on figures set a magical tone for two weeks of serious studio work in the company of artists intent on producing meaningful work. Bell Arts Factory in Ventura, California was the venue for our gathering.

Ranging from thirty to eighty years in age, we artists were Swiss, English, Canadian, Asian American, East and West Coasters, South Westerners, and a sprinkle from Middle America. We came bearing the wounds of divorce, cancer treatment, high blood pressure, arthritis, diabetes, asthma, motherhood, grief, broken hearts, exhaustion and exclusion. Each artist had extracted herself from an easy or difficult situation in order to produce her best work and take it to a new level; no eye, ear, neck, back, leg, or emotional ailment could extinguish her will to create.

Katherine Chang Liu, leader and mentor for the two weeks, presented thought-provoking slide shows, gave individual critiques, cheered flagging spirits, and extracted commitments from those who have kept their creations away from the public eye. But it was the energy of the individual artists that created an electrifying atmosphere conductive to high performance.

For me personally, the summit was an opportunity to launch into my new Children of Eve series of paintings after months of research and data collection. I needed a concentrated period of work to release the visual language of Pilgrimage and find something fresh and specific to the story of our human migrations out of Africa 70,000 to 50,000 years ago. Hopefully, producing four pieces has built enough momentum to keep me going on the remaining eighteen.

Together we artists committed to publishing a book that will showcase the range of work we are doing. Twenty-seven artists are doing one-of-a-kind: cardboard creatures, imagined topographies, lithographs via computer, textural histories, collaged self-portraits, off-the-wall assemblages, genealogical constructions, distorted spacial arrangements, bold and lyrical abstractions, outrageous and gestural figures, and paintings of sculptural forms, color-field shapes, feminist antics, pointilistic skulls, moody environments, color frequency settings, surreal and composite images, calligraphic landscapes, garden vegetation, symbolic narratives, and social commentary. There are no duplicates.

Until the book is ready, enjoy these photos of Katherine commenting on another of Sand Poland's stunning assemblages, my easel in the studio, and the beachside view from my balcony in the Crown Plaza Hotel.