MendocinoArts - Mendocino Art Center
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MendocinoArts - Mendocino Art Center
Spring 2012 COMPLIMENTARY MendocinoArts art AND Culture In Mendocino County PUBLISHED BY THE MENDOCINO ART CENTER Taste of Chocolate, Wine & Ale Saturday, May 26, 1:00pm – 4:00pm Mendocino Art Center Join us for the afternoon! Fine Wine • Micro-Brewed Ales • Decadent Chocolate • Artisanal Treats • Fabulous Silent Auction Advance Tickets: $25 u At the Gate: $30 A fundraiser for the Mendocino Music Festival and Mendocino Art Center 707 937-4041 www.mendocinomusic.com 707 937-5818, ext. 10 www.MendocinoArtCenter.org Blooming Every Day! www.gardenbythesea.org | 18220 North Highway 1, Fort Bragg, CA 95437 | 707-964-4352 GALLERY OF DECORATIVE AND FINE ARTS For the Art Collector and the Craft Lover 45052 Main Street, Mendocino, CA 707 937-3132 • www.thehighlightgallery.com The Mendocino Art Center Needs You! Support the Arts by becoming a Member, and give yourself the gift of art… Become a Mendocino Art Center member – and a “MAC Insider” – with newly added benefits for joining, and please consider joining at the highest possible level. Your membership directly supports the Mendocino Art Center, bringing vital cultural programs to the community, including unique gallery shows, youth programs, low-cost open studios, art fairs and musical concerts, world-class art workshops taught by some of the country’s finest instructors, exhibition opportunities for local and national artists, and Mendocino Arts magazine. Benefits at all levels: ❖❖10% discount on each workshop registration. 15% discount for Mendocino County MAC members. ❖❖Artist exhibit opportunities in the gallery and gallery shop. ❖❖Special artist invitations to participate in Members’ Juried Exhibits. ❖❖Members only discounts at participating businesses — lodging, art supplies, etc. ❖❖Mailing of MAC publications and event information. ❖❖Waiver of $25 per workshop non-refundable registration fee. ❖❖Discounts at Suburban Propane, CALSTAR and REACH. For details: www.MendocinoArtCenter.org/membership.html MEMBERSHIP CATEGORIES: Individual Member: $50 All of the above. Household Member (maximum two members): $90 All of the above. Student (12+ with student ID): $25 All of the above. Senior (70+): $25 All of the above. Supporter: $150 All of the above and recognition in a Mendocino Art Center publication. Sustaining: $250 All of the above and invitations to special gallery events. Patron: $500 All of the above and your name on a gallery plaque. 2 Champion: $750 All of the above and a commemorative tile with wording of your choice on the Zacha Tile Walkway. Business Partner: $100 Listing on the Mendocino Art Center Web site. Business Web Site Sponsor: $500 Listing on the Mendocino Art Center Web site home page. ZACHA LEGACY SOCIETY: $2,500 and $1,000 annual gifts All of the above and name included on the annual Zacha Legacy Society wall; plus invitations to events with VIP privileges and invitations to enticing quarterly member evenings. Sign me up to be a Mendocino Art Center Member today! ❏❏ Individual $50 ❏❏ Household $90 ❏❏ Student $25 ❏❏ Senior $25 ❏❏ Supporter $150 ❏❏ Sustaining $250 ❏❏ Patron $500 ❏❏ Champion $750 ❏❏ Business Partner $100 ❏❏ Business Web Site Sponsor $500 ❏❏ Zacha Legacy Society $1,000 ❏❏ Zacha Legacy Society $2,500 Name Address City State Zip Phone E-mail ___ Check (payable to Mendocino Art Center) ___ Bill my q Visa q MasterCard Billing Name Billing Address Account # Exp. Date Authorized Signature Mail to: Mendocino Art Center P.O. Box 765 Mendocino, CA 95460 Mendocino Arts Magazine Table of Contents Published by the Mendocino Art Center Vol. XLIII, No. 1, April 2012 Editorial: From Our Board President. . . . . . . . . . 5 6 Tom Macomber: History Transformed into Art . . . . . . 6 Lisa Orselli: Ancient Medium, Modern Sensibility. . . . . 8 Artists in Residence. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 True Colors: Natural Pigments and Paints. . . . . . . 12 8 April–June Workshops at MAC . . . . . . . . . . . 14 Meet Lindsay Shields, Executive Director at MAC . . . . 16 Let’s Meet Some of MAC’s Instructors: Seamus Berkeley, Bill van Gilder, Deborah Lozier, Robert Rhoades and Nick Taylor . . . . . . . . . 19 10 Encaustics: A Hot Topic . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23 20th Annual Garden Tour. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26 Mendocino & Lake County Gallery Guide. . . . . . . 30 Mendocino & Lake County Restaurant Guide. . . . . . 38 23 Gallery of Artists. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42 Calendar of Events . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46 Poetry by Armand Brint. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48 26 Spring 2012 Mendocino Arts promotes the arts by offering space to artists, writers, craftspeople and performers and by providing information on arts and entertainment in Mendocino County. Submissions of unsolicited non-fiction articles, photographs or artwork for consideration in Mendocino Arts must include a SASE or we cannot be responsible for their return. We welcome announcements of upcoming events to be included as space permits. 3 Mendocino County Museum Discover unique artifacts and exhibits that reflect our heritage: Frolic Shipwreck, Wine History, Stagecoaches and Wagons, Traveling Exhibits and much more. SPECIAL EXHIBITS: 75th Anniversary of the Golden Gate Bridge Photographs of Local Railroads from the Early 1900s ROOTS OF MOTIVE POWER, Inc. See restored and working steam machines: · Historic Logging Equipment · Steam Engines and Caboose Browse in our Museum Shop 400 East Commercial Street, Willits, CA Call 707-459-2736 for more information Email us at [email protected] Open Wednesday through Sunday, 10:00am–4:30pm www.MendocinoMuseum.org 4 Mendocino Arts Magazine SPRING 2012 MendocinoArts ART AND CULTURE IN MENDOCINO COUNTY PUBLISHER Mendocino Art Center ASSOCIATE PUBLISHER Mike McDonald EDITOR Peggy Templer ART DIRECTION / GRAPHIC PRODUCTION Elizabeth Petersen, RevUp Creative Media SALES COAST: Steven P. Worthen – 707 964-2480, 707 813-7669 INLAND: Jill Schmuckley – 707 391-8057 LAKE COUNTY: Linda Kelly – 707 367-9038 Gallery of ARTISTS ADS: David Russell – 707 513-6015 SPRING DISTRIBUTION – 15,000 SUMMER 2012 DEADLINE – April 13, 2011 MENDOCINO ART CENTER STAFF EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR: Lindsay Shields COMMUNICATIONS DIRECTOR: Mike McDonald EDUCATION DIRECTOR: Karen Bowers GALLERY DIRECTOR: Jessica Jade BOOKKEEPER: Virginia Neira REGISTRAR/CASHIER: Michele Cheyovich, Kath Disney Nilson MASTER ARTIST STUDIO INSTRUCTOR: Blago Stojanovski PROGRAM COORDINATORS: Ceramics/Artists in Residence — Derek Hambly Fiber Arts — Nancy Collins Fine Art — Arlene Reiss Jewelry — Nancy Gardner Sculpture — Gert Rasmussen FACILITIES: Gabe Arreguin MENDOCINO ART CENTER BOARD OF DIRECTORS PRESIDENT: Liliana Cunha VICE PRESIDENT: Patrick Keller TREASURER: John Cornacchia SECRETARY: Dale Moyer Chuck Bush Marge Stewart Janis Porter Bob Treaster Eileen Robblee Lucia Zacha Nick Schwartz MENDOCINO ART CENTER 45200 Little Lake Street • P.O. Box 765 Mendocino, CA 95460 707 937-5818 • 800 653-3328 FAX: 707 937-4625 [email protected] www.MendocinoArtCenter.org Mendocino Art Center Mission Statement: The mission of the Mendocino Art Center is to be a vital cultural resource, providing a broad range of the highest quality educational and exhibition opportunities in the arts to all people. Founded by Bill Zacha in 1959 as a nonprofit organization to support, foster, advance and promote artistic awareness and participation. COVER IMAGE: Lisa Thorpe, Tree of Life, 8”x10”, collaged map, stamps, art papers on wood, encased with a skin of encaustic medium topped with gold leaf. Spring 2012 From Our Board President… I t’s spring! A time of new growth on the planet and so it is with the Art Center. We are delighted that Lindsay Shields has agreed to join our staff permanently and is our new Executive Director. With her leadership, the Zacha Legacy Society has come into being and in the summer we will be honoring our first inductees. A grantseeking program started by Lindsay during her consultancy with us is moving forward. Most recently we received a $1,000 grant from the Rotary Club of Mendocino for a new computer for the gallery. We are very grateful for the continued support of our local businesses and Rotarians. The most exciting news in the education department is that this summer we will be offering five classes for academic credit through Woodbury University in Southern California. Each class is comprised of two workshops. Accreditation is provided by NASAD (National Association of Schools of Art and Design) and WASC (Western Association of Schools and Colleges). These ten workshops will still be available as stand-alone offerings to those who do not desire credit. An additional cost will be added to the class fee for those attending for credit. More information regarding these classes is available in our summer catalog and on both the Art Center Web site (www.mendocinoartcenter.org) and the Woodbury University Web site (www.woodbury.edu). If you plan to be in Mendocino for Memorial Day weekend come to the “Taste of Chocolate, Wine and Ale” event. The Art Center is partnering with the Mendocino Music Festival to bring to town purveyors of the best wines, chocolate, ales and artisanal foods for your tasting pleasure. You can’t miss us – we’ll be in the Festival tent on the front lawn of the Art Center. Visit our Web site for updates on this and other new events. I hope you will join us for what promises to be a very exciting year of new class offerings and events. ~ Liliana Cunha Board President 5 Tom Macomber: History transformed into By Jessica Jade Norris Art Above: Tom Macomber with his Western Bench sculpture. Anna Macomber photo. Top: Discarded scrap metal that Tom turns into his one-of-a-kind sculptures. Above: Grasshopper Wine Holder. Larry Wagner photo. I t’s a cold, crisp morning driving out to and include just about everything you could imagine – old Kelseyville. Wide open spaces with oak trees sit next to wood burning stove parts, wagon wheels, water pumps, bits of industry and family farms. A loaded hay truck rock crushers, buggy axles, mining carts, an assortment pulls out in front of me and escorts me down the road of gears, brackets, horseshoes, recycled woods, a pulley to the Macomber ranch, while tiny wisps of hay collide driven drill press, and more. Down the hill within walking distance is Tom’s with my windshield. The property is a peaceful, country workshop, and his area of setting, decorated with strategically inspiration. The entire outside placed farm equipment, historical space is lined with tables and flat findings, and of course, Tom surfaces that have piles of sorted Macomber’s fantastically whimsical metals for welding. It’s an incredible art sculptures. The road curves feeling to see it all as a group and around a large red barn and riding realize how important these parts area, where Tom’s wife, Anna, once were. Tom takes scraps and keeps her horses. Further up the pieces of what has been left behind hill is the absolutely gorgeous and welds them back together in home that took them eight years imaginative ways that are fun and to complete. comical. He explains, “The process Tom is standing outside of of creating my metal sculptures the garage in front of his Model begins when I am mentally and A car, and greets me with warmth physically rested. I am usually and enthusiasm. Without delay, inspired by something I want to we walk around the yard for the create. I sketch it out or find a tour and Tom explains to me where picture and then go to my scrap all of the various yard treasures iron (pile) inventory. Sometimes, came from. Most of his antique Handcrafted Faucet Flower Bouquet. I get inspired just by searching collectibles are from Lake County Anna Macomber photo. 6 Mendocino Arts Magazine Middletown. Collecting, refinishing, through the misfit metal and come and appreciating antiques was a up with some really great original favorite pastime. They purchased creations. Putting it all together, I start the Macomber Ranch property in at the bottom and work my way up. I 1980 and completed their dream cut and pre fit all pieces then grind all house just in time to welcome their the rust and dirt to bare metal where I son, Forrest. need to weld. Sharp and rough edges Tom had lots of work in must be ground smooth. I use a MIG carpentry over the years and was wire welder that has gas and argon mix running a successful business. and an oxy-acetylene torch to heat and Everything changed in 1996, when bend the metal. Occasionally I use Tom survived a near fatal heart attack an air plasma cutter. Once the basic and radical surgery to repair the sculpture is created then I look for damage. After 30 years of carpentry, interesting items to dress it up and add he was forced to retire. With lots of to its character. When I am satisfied support from his family, he began I give the bare metal a salt bath to Tom at work in his shop. Anna Macomber photo. his cardiac rehabilitation and slowly promote rust so the welds match the started to get his life back. Not his whole sculpture. When dry, I put a protective finish coat to seal and give the piece a finished old life, but a new one, with a greater appreciation for the look. Then the fun part, picking a name and giving the smaller things. He had accomplished everything that he had wanted to do in his trade. Now he had to “throw his creature life!” Tom was born in Fresno in 1941, and was raised with watch away.” No more stress or fast paced living. With this new lifestyle came a new philosophy and his two brothers in Clearlake and Berkeley. He graduated from Berkeley High in 1960 and spent six months in the the fulfillment of his dream to create sculptural art. “I Army Reserve, after which he moved back to Clearlake. just love creating, it’s a great feeling. I believe that we all At that time, they were just starting the Konocti Harbor have our niche, and we can find that niche if we just open Inn, and his soon-to-be boss asked him, “Can you read a up our mind. Since rehabilitation, I don’t look at time as tape measure?” He was a quick study and got a union job money anymore. I don’t keep track of my time when I am working on my art. I laugh and have fun with it. We are doing commercial and industrial carpentry. Tom and Anna were married in 1975. They were only here for a short while.” Tom is 70 years old and still enjoys making his art. His a great team and built a successful business together buying and selling fixer-upper houses. They also bought work is in private and corporate collections all over the and sold antiques, and had their own antique shop in world, and can be seen at the Mendocino Art Center. Left to right: Horn Director. Larry Wagner photo. Kenmore Kat – inspired by an old Kenmore sewing machine. Anna Macomber photo. Three Stooges Shovelback Bird. Larry Wagner photo. Spring 2012 7 Ancient Medium, Larry Wagner photos. Modern Sensibility By Michael Potts L isa Orselli fires up her torch my kids were in junior high. I took a class at CCAC from and points the hot blue flame at her lat- another wonderful teacher, Liz Sher. She told us not to est work. “Fuse it or lose it,” she murmurs. A erase and never let us crumple, but urged us to try to do shimmer of liquidity passes across the waxy more with whatever wasn’t working, to resolve it out of surface, and the power of the medium becomes clear. Lisa chaos. digs down through the beeswax, chips of wax flying, to re“In 1990, when my daughter was 17, she and I went to veal colors from below, then re-torches to smooth and blend. study in Florence for half a year, she at the American High “In ‘regular life’ I plan,” Lisa confesses, “but with encaus- School, and I at the Lorenzo de’ Medici Institute. When tics, I can challenge myself to make jumps and see what I found the painting class full, I decided to study printhappens. Meditation, part of my yoga practice, has taught making in a studio once used (we were told) by Donatello me to see the space between myself and my thoughts, and with another wonderful teacher,” Peruvian born Lucy that helps me keep the critical voice at bay as I work.” Jochamowitz. “She taught us to embrace our mistakes,” Art entered Lisa’s life in ninth Lisa reminisces. “I discovered that grade. “My best friend and I had print-making, scratching through a wonderful teacher who encourshellac onto a metal sheet, enhances aged experimentation with blind otherwise sketchy drawing skills.” contour drawing [sketching withBack in the U.S. with a new mediout looking at the paper], colum to explore, Lisa completed her lage… I was drawn into the pracBFA at CCAC and joined a group tice of making art, right up until of artists sharing gallery space. She my work became ‘not right’ durcontinued to visit Mendocino for ing life drawing class in college.” classes at the Art Center, where Art faded behind life, and Lisa she enjoyed staying in and walkcame away from University of the ing the village while immersing Pacific with a degree in English. herself in art. When her husband In her twenties, she began her retired in 1997, they relocated. “I life-long practice of yoga. Before and After, 12"x12", encaustic on panel with felt uprooted,” Lisa remembers. “I found my art again when encising. Above left: Red Cosmos, 12"x12", panel, “I had to leave my press behind, encaustic and paper. 8 Mendocino Arts Magazine Keeping Track, 9"x12", encaustic on panel with scraping and layering. along with my gallery group, all my friends, and the buzz of my birthplace. Berkeley is a hard place to leave.” Classes with Bob Rhoades at College of the Redwoods, and Bill Martin’s weekly figure drawing studio at the Art Center, allowed Lisa to “stay oiled,” but it was yoga that provided perspective. In 2000, a fellow yogi suggested teacher training classes with noted instructor Rodney Yee. “At the class, every time I lay on my back, I started crying,” Lisa recalls. “Yoga works with our bodies, but its practice opens up much more. During meditation, I could watch my mind jumping hither and yon. Thus I came to understand that a discerning mind is great in art and life, but a critical mind is a hindrance. Each of my teachers offered the same wisdom: persevere through the rough spots, breathe, stay focused and calm, and keep at it until the chaos resolves.” In 2004, a friend urged Lisa to try an encaustics class with Sandi Miot, a Novato-based visual artist whose work seeks “to make order out of chaos.” Lisa remembers thinking, “This is fun! The techniques mimic printmaking. Encaustics is a seductive medium: you build and fuse, scratch through it, stick things in it... Of course,” she adds, “once you start, challenges emerge. There’s technology – heaters, tools, waxes, pigments. I still feel like I am just beginning.” Lisa teaches yoga classes and takes courses while pursuing her encaustic work. “I understand now the importance of ‘practices’ in my life. When I stick with it, doors open, and I discover more ways to make something I haven’t seen before.” Lisa also teaches occasional encaustic classes at Racine’s in Fort Bragg. Spring 2012 Paris Map, 9"x12", textured encaustic on panel. Lisa is a member of the Artists’ Co-op of Mendocino, upstairs at the west end of Main Street, where doing the gallery payroll makes her think about the business of art. “What little business sense I have tells me that most artists work out of devotion to our medium and some kind of hope that someone will see our work, appreciate it, and possibly even buy. “In yoga terms, I see that my work comes in cycles. I just finished a flurry of work to fill my wall at the gallery. This weekend I’m assisting Rodney Yee, who is teaching at the Yoga Journal Conference in San Francisco… and I’m working through another intensive yoga program with a teacher in New Mexico. Being pulled in so many directions means that my time for art bounces around. The constant is that I am always grateful when I get to my studio. I am so happy when the wax melts and I can continue the adventure.” Lisa Orselli in her studio. Larry Wagner photos. 9 MAC Artists in Residencep By K. Andarin Arvola Derek Hambly, director of the Ceramics and Artists in Residence programs, tells us “the AIR program is over 40 years old. Our artists are usually at a crossroads of professional development. They are geared toward goals such as preparing for studies for a post-bachelor or MFA program, or to developing a body of work for exhibition purposes. We cater to this, more so than treating this opportunity as a retreat. We’re extremely interested in artists who are producing work and contributing to their field/medium at a high caliber of professionalism. “As we move forward in the development and refinement of our campus, our program will become a staple in the arts for those who are in pursuit of artistic growth.” Each year the Mendocino Art Center’s residency program culminates with an exhibition of the participating artists’ works created in the MAC studios. This year’s exhibit, featuring artists from across the country as well as from Taiwan and Holland, will be held April 5–28, with the opening reception on April 14, 5:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. p Charlie Williams Williams lives in Gainesville, Florida. “I’m interested in the ever-surprising challenges of sculpting the human figure. Predominantly representational, my residency project involves creating solid aluminum and bronze figurative sculptures. These are produced from concept design to forging and chasing the final product. All the bronzes were made by lost wax casting and the aluminums were sand/Styrofoam casting. I work mainly in stone but also enjoy drawing and ceramics.” Charlie Williams 10 Alicia Reyes McNamara Originally from Chicago, McNamara says the four years she spent living in Central America and Europe are her inspiration. “These memories, whether embellished, diluted or sincere, remain as truths in a history, the fine line between memory and imagination within personal mythologies; my goal is to memorialize events remembered . . . Ceramics is a fusion of all my loves; I can bring everything in my background (sculpture, textiles and painting) into Alicia Reyes McNamara play. I can use textiles through paper clay slip dipping, painting through glazing and surface design and sculpture through my figurative forms and installations.” Nikki Couppee “My current work talks about the different functions jewelry performs in society. It can define social status, question value and be a redeemable investment. Given to mark a special occasion, jewelry can perform on a psychological level with the transference of deep feelings onto the object. I create opulent jewelry reminiscent of royal jewelry but made of quotidian materials instead of gems and precious metals . . . I insert an element of decay; by allowing the mild steel to rust naturally against the stainless, thereby adding a layer of impermanence which challenges market value and forces one to reflect on its potential changes over time.” Saskia Konig “I was born in the Netherlands and became fascinated by Belgian Blue stone. This material reveals hidden treasures from millions of years ago: fossils of shells, little sea animals and plants. My leading theme was water: streaming, Mendocino Arts Magazine o flowing water of river and sea; water as a symbol of life. Last year, due to our removal to the forest, trees became my chief theme: their meaning and connection with people. For me they are creatures with experiences and memories; that is what my tree sculptures represent.” Wei Jane Chir Wei Jane Chir presents in a left-to-right long scroll, a slow, river-like narrative titled “One’s Special Tea.” The scroll includes ten ancient Chinese pictures and introduces the different teas, linked by theme. Photography is used to integrate the artist’s own woodcut. “Drinking, collecting, and growing my own tea was a personal hobby. I took my wood block print work and used a modern medium to bring tea into the digital age. It’s not only my own special tea book, but the special tea book of many people.” Jazmyn Azure “I combine ceramics and photographic imagery on sculptural forms to express my reflections of social, economic and political trends. Through the manipulation of earth, fire, color and imagery, my intent is to provide a more journalistic and neutral perspective that may open the viewer to discovering their own point of view. After extensively researching and evaluating topics, I utilize social interaction to compile a multitude of perspectives around a single idea.” Deborah Fell Deborah Fell’s medium is quilting. “As I studied the surrounding beauty of the Mendocino coast, it felt as if I were witnessing conversations everywhere . . . between the cliffs crashing against the waves, the sun setting in the distance, the dance of tiny beauty being Spring 2012 constantly washed ashore.” Her series is entitled “Mendocino Coast Conversations.” Once that concept solidified, “the painting, images and design components overflowed.” She included text to bring in a strong design component as well as emphasizing the interactive coastal conversations and allowing the “conversations” to become tangible. Tim Ayers Ayer’s work is a union of slip cast, an historically industrial technique, and the tradition of wood fire. The marks of wood firing are unlike any glaze or brush stroke; wood embers and fly ash melt and drip, salt fluxes the silica present in the clay. Flame causes the clay body to flash in a beautifully irreguTim Ayers lar fashion. “I create ceramics that reflect the control and the sophistication of modern industry, yet through atmospheric firing, my art still resonates with the chance and irregularity of nature.” Hannah Plotke “These recent works are about the idea of bedazzling something to death, the way a little girl holds a puppy too tightly. A reverse elitism in cahoots with mainstream culture; the viewers are complicit in their own kitschiness. I include figures and portraiture, pattern, objects and adornment, contemporary artifacts, clothing, jewelry and artwork to create a quilt-like environment, a snapshot of a psychological, personal and visceral state of mind. The pattern serves as a way to talk about design, advertisement and tapestry in a metaphorical sense; and to relay a feminist perspective.” Deborah Fell 11
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