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  • obsession
    • The Chengellian Woman
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      • Jewelry/Accessories
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    • Tarot
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      • Metal Fabric/Clothing
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      • Process Gallery 2
  • Danger
    • 2021 Worn Thin
    • Bad Ass
    • The Dangerous Vagina
  • NEWS
    • What’s New
    • What's Old
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    • BIO
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  Markasky

Artist Interview #9 – Migueltzinta C. Solis

3/19/2014

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    A little bit about your background, where did you grow up, where do you live now, education, family, etc...
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Redacted Life




    What did you do for fun as a teenager?

                                   Apparently this:
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Troublecage
What was your first work that really pleased you as an artist?
    What art movements do you relate to?
Dadaism has always been near and dear to me. It's an artistic language that finds ways to express human-ness in times when words fail society. I feel that in our current state of environmental and infrastructural collapse it's important to access this kind of language. I see a lot of interest in a global discussion of race, class and environment, but there is an unseen hand that's pushing us away from having this discussion in the open. This means we need to perform these discussions in covert, encoded languages. A lot of people see absurdist art and say “I don't get it.” Of course you don't. It's there to challenge you. It's an encoded message.

    How has your work changed?
Well, I’m 27, which is young for an artist. I keep switching mediums, mixing them together. I started with writing, and added in layers photography, acting, sculpture, filmmaking, book alteration, painting, and most recently performance and conceptual social media projects. The versatility that comes with accessing all these mediums really frees me to come up with fresh ideas. What I’m struggling with right now are the stakes of my work. I’ve noticed I’ve gotten a little fearful with my art, and am not taking the kind of risks that would really push my art to the next level. I currently have a non-art job as an irrigation system designer and salesman that keeps me very comfortable materially, but leaves me little time to work on my art. I expect to see some new changes soon.
    Most significant project or accomplishment
Transitioning from female to male has certainly been the most significant accomplishment:
    What are your goals?
I want to have influence on the world. I want fashion movements, art movements and literary movements to take cues from me. I want college students fifty years from now to have to mention me in their essays about post-post-post-post-post modern art. I want to finish my novel. I want to attend residencies all over the world. I want to get a fine arts degree in Mexico. Also, goats. I really want to have some goats.


    What toys do you have?
I have two new toys worth mentioning. I just got a smartphone for the first time, so it’s much easier to correspond with everyone from film festival organizers to casual sex partners. Also, trolling, which is very important to my artist identity – think of it as a sort of social media intervention, a vandal-dadaism on your Facebook feed – is much easier with a smartphone. I love disrupting and exploiting normalized languages and forms. Memes, for example, are such an excellent use of referential humor and I love how they encourage people to appropriate images from pop culture and insert their own subcultural humor into it. I am currently working on a couple of essays in the form of buzzfeeds. TMDMM 5 : Shampoo Commercial is a satire of the progression-of-time transition videos common to trans culture on Youtube.

And the apps! Oh the apps! There are such apps in the world that open up whole new potentials for cybernetic art. Smartphones really do make us cyborgs, you know, because we can now transpose our creative selves wholly into cyberspace if we care to. Instagram is my favorite right now, but Snapchat is the one that really blows my mind because of the notion of impermanence. The image once received from the sender is only viewable for a few seconds and then it’s lost forever! It’s like the image as object has become so prolific that instead of trying to preserve it physically in an album forever, we are content and even excited by it only lasting a few seconds.

My other new toy is my body. I started the physical transition from female to male about three years ago when I started undergoing hormone treatment. It’s been about a year and a half since I had chest surgery and, now that I’ve healed I’ve been very interested in pushing the limits of my body as a performance in and of itself. I could give you the whole “at last, I feel right in my body” speech, but I try and resist the narratives we’ve started getting used to hearing about transpeople. For me it’s altogether like having a new body, a new vessel for expression. There was nothing inherently wrong with my previous body, I was just ready for a new toy.






    What do you eat?
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eatpaper
    What are your favorite movies/tv shows?
Right now I am completely infatuated with House of Cards. It is so excellently queer, and I love stories about power and manipulation. Also, Kevin Spacey is endlessly entertaining.

    Do you believe in magic? Why or why not?
I feel that the stories of my family coming to and settling in this country were made possible by a specific kind of magic. So, yes, family law obligates me to believe in magic.
(If you are having trouble seeing this video here, click to see it here.)
               Should there be censorship?
    God yes! But, of course, I am the only one allowed to choose what is appropriate and what is not.

    What advice would you give to others?
Whatever that thing is you know you need to do but you won't? Go do it.


I love chatting, answering questions and being flattered/insulted so please, please feel free to contact me! I can be contacted through any of the following:

Cauhboi.wordpress.com

facebook.com/cauhboi

youtube.com/cauhboi

vimeo.com/cauhboi

twitter.com/cauhboi

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Artist Interview #8 – Asha Ramesh

3/12/2014

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Wednesday is my day for featuring artists on my blog. I have a series of questions/prompts that I have offered, the artist is free to answer all, some, or make up their own questions or format.
If you would like to be featured here, send me an email and I will send you the list of questions/prompts. 
Today's interview is with Asha Ramesh:
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Where's Mommy
1.Where did you grow up? How was it there?
I was born in South India and grew up in a university campus in North India. There were many tall trees and wild growth that had not yet been cleared to make way for buildings. I would often go with a friend or two to explore this place and listen to the chorus of bugs and birds. One of my cherished memories is of waking up to peacocks cooing from the terrace of my childhood home. I'd run up the stairs to get a better look and see them disappear into misty mornings, their piercing sounds echoing from farther and farther away.
2. What were your earliest works of art like? How old were you when you made them? 
I don't remember my earliest artwork but I believe I was in Pre-K when I drew a rose on a paper the size of a postage stamp. I traded it for a coveted eraser. When I was 4 or 5 years old, I made a crayon drawing with the sun, moon, and stars shining together at the same time. In that skyscape, I also made a pink cloud because a friend had told me that clouds were actually cotton candy and I liked pink ones better.
3. What did you do for fun as a pre-teen and a teenager?
I often wondered how it would feel like to fly. In my younger years I would try to fly by tying helium balloons to my arms and jumping from see-saws or holding on to kites. In my pre-teen years, I discovered that if I ran fast enough and jumped over bushes, it gave me a transient feeling of flying. I loved participating in all kinds of athletic events and the school sports day was my favorite day of the year. Around this time I also surprised myself by winning a local art contest.
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Flying With the Flow
As a teenager, hanging out with friends and sleepovers were a lot of fun. I also developed a love for reading adventure fiction and writing poetry. Art took a backseat as I began to focus on academics. It would be many years into adulthood before I would return to my first love – art.
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Freedom Rings Hollow
4. What is your educational background? What was your first job?
My first job was as a Junior Resident Physician in a hospital. Later, I did my Masters in Business Administration and worked for a high-tech company in Silicon Valley. During an Artist's Open Studio in 2008, I was attracted to the beautiful work of a skilled metalsmith/jeweler. I asked her how I could learn to create with metal and she pointed me to Cabrillo College. 
At Cabrillo, I trained in metalsmithing and fabrication under the tutelage of Dawn Nakanishi, an accomplished metalsmith and a gifted teacher. I am also fortunate to have learned from some of the most talented jewelers from all over the US.

5. How has your work changed?
Over the years, my work has become more aligned with my thoughts, whimsies and even as an outlet for questions I grapple with. I have also become more receptive to what the metal wants to do even if it is not what I had in mind.
6. Some of your favorite artwork?
One of my pieces that people seem to connect with emotionally is a pair of asymmetric earrings from the 'Hinged Disconnect' series. It explores states of disconnect between the heart and the mind. Another piece that I like just as much, is an arm bracelet titled 'Flying with the Flow'. It depicts a woman holding on to a kite and flying through the cosmos. The inspiration for this came from my childhood fantasy.
More recently I wanted to create an intricate and alluring old-world box. When I was done fabricating this box, my daughter christened it 'The Magic Box' and my son put into it, a little clay heart he had made when he was 6 years old. I thought this was so apt, for isn't love magic?
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Hinged Disconnect – Asymetric Earrings
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The Magic Box
7. Other than your preferred medium what other kinds of art do you like? 
I am very fond of looking through different handmade kaleidoscopes. I also admire fine carvings. And I always have on-hand paints, markers and all kinds of paper to doodle on.
8. What are your favorite kinds of music?
'Breathless' by Kenny G is one of my all time favorites. I also enjoy Hindustani vocal music by Bhimsen Joshi – he sounds like the ocean waves! I love how Pandit Shivkumar Sharma plays the santoor, and especially his album 'Antardhwani I'. Santoor is an ancient string instrument that sounds to me like the amplified resonance of falling water droplets, big and small. I also listen to Ravi Shankar's sitar music and old Hindi songs from my childhood.

9. A. What are your favorite movies/tv shows?
I like Life of Pi, Dolphin Tale, Matrix, Star Wars, Shark Tank and  Project Runway to name a few.

10. Do you believe in magic?
Yes! Love, Life and Art are all Magic! 

11. What advice would you give to others?
I am happy to share what works for me as an artist. When I am designing, I try to allow my thoughts and feelings to flow onto paper without editing. It is important to me that the design excite me at an intuitive level. During this process, I consciously steer my mind away from thoughts of what techniques I would use to execute the design. When I am able to do this, it allows creativity to flow with originality and unbridled possibilities.

12. Where can one buy your artwork?
My wearable metal art pieces and art objects can be bought through my Etsy Store: AshaRameshDesigns.
https://www.etsy.com/shop/AshaRameshDesigns

You can also buy my work through Many Hands Gallery in Capitola, California. 
 http://www.manyhands-capitola.com

I also love collaborating with customers directly to make custom pieces. I can be reached at: asha4art@gmail.com

It gives me deep satisfaction to contribute a portion of the proceeds from every sale of my metal art pieces to the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children. I am not affiliated with the center, just a regular person who finds their work to rescue children in danger, outreach programs for child safety and rehabilitation invaluable.
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Artist Interview #7 – Kirsten Denbow

3/5/2014

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Wednesday is my day for featuring artists on my blog. I have a series of questions/prompts that I have offered, the artist is free to answer all, some, or make up their own questions or format.
If you would like to be featured here, send me an email and I will send you the list of questions/prompts. 
Today's interview is with Kirsten Denbow:
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1. A little bit about your background, where did you grow up, where do you live now, education, family, etc...
I grew up in Michigan, Detroit metro area.  Moved to Maryland when I was 16.  Then I went back to Michigan a few years later to attend the University of Michigan.  I graduated in '97 with my BFA in Metalwork and Jewelry Design.  I then went to Cal State Fullerton for my MA from 1999-2001. Now, I live in Denver with my daughter and my husband.  I teach high school jewelry and have a studio where I pursue my own work.  
2. What was your first work of art & how old were you?
I'm sure my first work of art was a finger painting about age 2 or 3. My parents had it framed and hung on our wall.  I do remember in middle school my mother would take me to the bead store and I would make jewelry.  I didn't take art in high school or realize I wanted a career in the arts until college.  My first intentional work that I was really proud of was in college in my 20's.

3. What did you do for fun as a teenager?
I was a bad kid.  I didn't do anything productive for fun.  Actually, most of what I did was kinda illegal, except play cards. 

4. What and when was your first job?
My first real job was when I was 13.  My mom was the manager of a catering business and when they needed extra help I would work as a server.  I was told to tell anyone who asked that I was 15.  Please, don't get the impression that this was a bad child labor violation thing; for a 13 year old it was great money and I got to go to some cool parties with local celebrities and eat really good food!  I even met the Vandellas (from Martha Reeves and the Vandellas) at the Motown Museum in Detroit.

5. What was your first work that really pleased you as an artist? 
I was taking a class at U of M called Mixed Media.  It was the first time I had really started combining materials and techniques.  I realized that I have too many interests to focus on just one thing.  I was making anodized aluminum pieces that I would die form and then sew to watercolor painting on fabric. They were my first Ah Ha!, epiphany moment for me, when I just knew I was doing what I was meant to do.   

6. Who was the first artist to influence you?
My Mixed Media teacher, Marianetta Porter, really was the first one to truly influence my work.  Her work has a great sense of humor to it.  As a teacher she really influenced me to think about my work differently. 
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7. What art movements do you relate to?
For fine art, Pop-Surrealism, Contemporary, Abstract Expressionism.  For design, I am very into mid-century mod and Americana design aesthetic. It is very nostalgic for me.

8. How has your work changed?
For years I worked primarily in silver, copper, and brass and I heavily oxidized just about everything.  I have always loved including weird found objects and odd things. For years I looked for non-gemstone ways to add color to my work.  Gems just don't fit with my conceptual pursuits.  I tried fabric, paintings, found objects, polymer clay...  In the past few years I have included enameling.  It started as just a few pieces.  Now, I work almost exclusively with enamel because the colors are just so great!  I have recently started to add more silver work back in with the enamel.  I am constantly getting ideas for new things and I rarely stick with one design or look for too long.  Blame my ADD.

9. What things do you not like to do?
Accounting.  Marketing.  You know, the essential business stuff outside of making. I'll do it but, I really just like to make things.  

10. Most significant project or accomplishment
I was pretty proud of going to my first wholesale show last year.  I went into debt to do it but it was a big step.  

11. What are your goals?
My goals are to be an independent, self sustaining artist.  I currently teach high school and as much as I love sharing knowledge, teenagers don't always appreciate what you are teaching them.  My goal is to make a living teaching adult classes and workshops and producing work.  Bigger goals include professional recognition like doing some of the big shows and getting work into galleries that I have been admiring for decades.  

12. What toys do you have?
In the studio, my favorite is my kiln.  Personally, I have a 150cc scooter, a vintage trailer, and a juicer!  

13. What do you eat?
Right now, mainly vegan.  I don't usually like to define it because I don't stick to it strictly.  True vegans would probably cringe at that statement!  I have a love affair with popcorn!

14. What are your favorite movies/tv shows?
I love the creative challenge/building/how to shows.  Face Off, Project Runway, Tree House Masters, How its Made... and comedies Raising Hope, The Big Bang Theory...  As far as movies, I'm a sucker for a good romantic comedy, the funnier and sillier the better.

15. Do you believe in magic?
Nope.  Actually, I really dislike magic shows and magicians.  

16. Should there be censorship?
For the most part, no.  I think there should be a few exceptions.  I do think we should continue to have censorship to protect innocent people. For example, child pornography, publishing images of people without their consent, etc...  For the most part, if it isn't hurting others, I think people should be able to decide for themselves what they want to watch or read.  

17. What advice would you give to others?
I don't really see myself in a position of being an advice giver.  I usually seek out advice from others!  I'd keep it simple.  Be a good person.  Be kind to others. Be true to yourself.  

www.kirstendenbowdesigns.com
www.kirstendenbowdesigns.etsy.com
kirstendenbow@gmail.com

WORKSHOPS
http://artmakersdenver.com/workshops/
September 14-16, 2014

GALLERIES
Craft Alliance 
6640 Delmar Boulevard
St.Louis, MO 63130

Dim Sum - A Concierge Shopping Service
Philadelphia, PA
www.shopdimsum.com

Gallery Fifty 
The Village at  Grand Traverse Commons
800 Cottageview Drive, Suite 50
Traverse City, MI 49684

Pacific Gallery 
228 Forest Ave.
Laguna Beach, CA 92651
www.PacificGallery.net

Seebeck Gallery 
9020 76th Street
Pleasant Prairie, WI 53158 

Show of Hands Gallery
210 Clayton Street
Denver, CO 80206

Trinkets 
Woodland Village
1943 Rt.9 North
Clermont, NJ 08210

Willow - An Artisan's Market
2400 W. Main Street
Littleton, CO 80120

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Artist Interview #6 – Meg Brown

2/26/2014

3 Comments

 
Wednesday is my day for featuring artists on my blog. I have a series of questions/prompts that I have offered, the artist is free to answer all, some, or make up their own questions or format.
If you would like to be featured here, send me an email and I will send you the list of questions/prompts. 
Today's interview is with Meg Brown:
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1. A little bit about your background, where did you grow up, where do you
live now, education, family, etc..

I grew up in San Francisco, Lake County (near Kelsey Creek) and Australia I am from a family of seven children. My mother was an artist that  did watercolor, carving of wood and lettering, as well as being a home maker and amazing cook. My grandfather was a doctor and an artist. His medium was watercolor and some portrait oils. I now live in Davis, California helping care for my mother-in-law, Ruth, 97, who has severe dementia. My husband and my son do an amazing job being part of the care team. I am learning and trying to practice unconditional love.
2. What was your first work of art & how old were you?
I have very clear memories of sitting at my Kelsey Creek and molding things out of clay. I was around 5. I also have memories of drawings being put on the fridge in Australia. When I was 7, I drew a picture to a story by Dr. Seuss, and to think that I saw that on Mulberry Street. The teacher
entered it in a contest and I remember being on TV with my picture. I never have really felt I could draw. I use drawing to discover my feelings.
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3. What did you do for fun as a teenager?
I was a teenager in the 60's... my school was 4 blocks from the Haight. The National Guard came my junior year because we were having riots at the school. I walked with about 1300 students to the Civic Center to request black history in the text books and in the library.  Many students were going off to Vietnam. Ninety fellow students became pregnant my freshman year. There was no education about birth control. I ran for class President and by the end of my time there there was birth control information in all the PE classes, even though the Girls Dean was totally against it in the beginning.
Another minor victory was when I first
started at Poly, girls were sent home if their skirts were not below the knee. There was a kneeling test.... By my senior year we could wear shorts
(probably because our skirts were so short.) I was on a fencing team, Northern California Champs, volley ball team, basketball team, the first city girls track team, and I was a model. 
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I had 6 pairs of false eye lashes if you can imagine that. Most of the money from modeling went for clothes. I have 14 inches of leg above the knee before I couldn't call it a mini skirt. I also had jobs working in the lab and babysitting – that money was mostly saved to go to school. I was vice president of the school and created school events. We had Sly Stone come to perform.... I would run down to the beach during lunch for fun. I can remember taking balloons to the Haight for fun and handing them out during one lunch time.
Boys and dates were fun.
My goal was to go to Davis, so I took mostly AP Classes so my art was used making posters, decorating for dances. My mother let me use her wheel and kiln to do clay in her downstairs art room. I guess that started when I was about 13 and I would go to her art room to disappear and play with the clay.

4. What and when was your first job?
Baby sitting at 8 years old.
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5. What was your first work that really pleased you as an artist?
Our sixth grade teacher was retiring and I was asked to paint her portrait. I loved doing that because I really admired and respected her. I was paid 10 cents a letter for lettering. I loved putting together graphic books for educators that were giving talks. I love making bowls for bowl parties. I made 250 cups (Raku) for the first Whole Earth Day at UCD and had an amazing toast with our class.  It was wonderful transforming rooms for dances and events. We had happenings and they were amazing.
6. Who was the first artist to influence you?
My mother and my grandfather.

7. What art movements do you relate to?
The Impressionists

8. How has your work changed?
I am doing a lot of fiber arts right now. Natural dying, oxalis is starting to bloom and that makes lovely yellows, orange, greens. I am learning to weave. I have been spinning and I am learning Navajo spinning. I am also doing some creative spinning. I knit and create energy clothing, mostly shawltars. UCD Craft Center lets me work and teach there. I have been doing handbuilding using nature and form as a focus.
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Drop Spindle
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9. What things do you not like to do.
I don't like to clean up vomit.

10. Most significant project or accomplishment? 
I don't think I have one. I enjoyed helping put together the art shows; Birth of a Spirit, Doors and Windows Opening, Chairs with a Voice and doing the Art and Garden Show. I have enjoyed doing Open Studios.
I loved helping start the homeschool program in Santa Cruz. I was able to
start a clay studio at Loma Prieta and at Small Schools. I don't think of my family as a project but they are really important to me.
11. What are your goals?
I have had goals most of my life. Get A's, get into school, do open studio, create a show, make pots, start a school, start a non-profit, write a grant, support and love my husband and children (which I continue to do) and now I am very day-to-day with caring for Ruth. Art has become my place of sanity. When Evelyn asked me to do this interview, I thought what am I doing???? What I do is day-to-day.... I have been in Davis doing elder
care for almost 6 years. So for now, I don't have a goal. I am looking forward to dying some wool, silk and cotton, spinning it and making a weaving. I have some pots made on an amazing gourd that are ready for glazing. I hope to have a pot luck dinner with friends when they are finished. I have a new clay that has mica sparkles. I am experimenting
with using it to burnish pots to make it go farther. I have a children's book wanting to come into the world. I am thinking of doing an edit on Pots from the Creek.
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Throwing at Oak Hollow
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12. What toys do you have?
Sarah just gave me some wind up toys from Spain. They remind me of my
mother. I am working on a doll house for Ruth. It is stacking boxes, covered in felt with felted furniture.
I think of my loom, wheels, carding machines, kiln as my toys...
13. What do you eat?
Veggies and protein are my focus right now. I have gained weight and that
is a problem for me. I am open to suggestions. The Happiness diet is my
favorite.

13. What are your favorite movies/tv shows?
Jon Stewart and the Daily Show, Stephen Colbert Report.

14. Do you believe in magic? Why or why not?
Yes, I do believe in magic, because I love illusion.

15. Should there be censorship?
I think there should be self-censorship. I am often glad when I keep my
mouth shut. I want to learn non-violent communication.

16. What advice would you give to others?
Listen to your inner being.

megbrown@baymoon.com
3 Comments

Artist Interview #5 – Christine Mighion

2/19/2014

3 Comments

 
Wednesday is my day for featuring artists on my blog. I have a series of questions/prompts that I have offered, the artist is free to answer all, some, or make up their own questions or format.
If you would like to be featured here, send me an email and I will send you the list of questions/prompts. 
Today's interview is with Christine Mighion:
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Ocean Jasper & Recycled 14k Gold Earrings


1. A little bit about your background, where did you grow up, where do you live now, education, family, etc…
I grew up in Northern Indiana, where I now live, and received a degree in dental hygiene from Indiana University. I really wanted to go to art school, but I was raised by a very strong mother who felt that I needed to pursue a more practical and stable career. However after college, I quickly realized that I didn’t have the passion for dentistry that my patients and employer deserved. 
Like magic, I was presented with the opportunity to move to Hawaii, and what I thought would be sort of a break to get my head together that turned into six of the best and most difficult years of my life. I began working with adults with developmental disabilities shortly after moving there and just fell in love with the individuals and families I was serving. With a new but failing marriage, I returned to Indiana with a beautiful baby girl in tow and I’ve been here ever since. The funny thing is that I later remarried a dentist and we now have a family of two children and a french bulldog. 

2. What was your first work of art & how old were you?
I have no idea how old I was, but I’m sure I was born with a crayon in one hand! Ironically, one of my first memories as a very young child was sitting on the floor watching one of the holiday parades in Hawaii on TV. I remember coloring multiple pictures of my interpretation of Hawaii and telling my mother that I thought we should move there. 
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Sapphire, Recycled 14k Gold and Oxidized Sterling Silver Necklace
3. What did you do for fun as a teenager?
It was pretty quiet where I lived, so like many teenage girls I spent a lot of time with my friends. If I wasn’t with them, I was on the phone with them or doing something creative in my room. Of course, I was self absorbed and in and out of “true love” throughout my high school years. Summers were fun though. We spent a lot of time going up to Lake Michigan during the day and roaming around Notre Dame at night when it was quiet. 

4. What and when was your first job?
My first paid job was as an assistant to the owner of a driver’s education company when I was 17. I was in the class and he thought I was responsible, so I began helping grade papers and that turned into a short lived job for the summer. 

5. What was your first work that really pleased you as an artist?
I drew a self portrait in college for one of my art classes that I was really proud of. I didn’t quite follow the “rules” given to us at the time and it had a finished but unfinished feel about it. The instructor asked to keep it and make a slide out of it for his class and I never went to pick up the piece once it was done. 
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This is my Secret Garden Ring that I felt was the first piece I was really happy with.

In jewelry, I created a ring about a year after taking my first metalsmithing course that I just loved. It had a lovely purple lepidolite stone and I had rolled a botanical print into the silver band. I added several gold accents and oxidized the entire piece. It was my first true labor of love. 
*6/7 How did you go from dental hygiene to jewelry design?
I went back into dental hygiene when my daughter was very young and I wanted to spend more time with her. My mother’s plan for me wasn’t so bad after all, because at the time I was working 50 hours as a director for a non-profit, assisting persons with developmental disabilities and so stressed. I was able to cut my hours to 24 when I went back into dentistry and make more money than I was previously while spending time with my daughter. I also ended up meeting my now wonderful husband who worked in the office across the hall. I ended up breaking my tailbone during the delivery of our son and couldn’t sit for long periods of time on anything other than a donut for years. My husband was eager for me to come back in the office in some capacity, but he said he would wait until our son went school. I took a metalsmithing class at our local museum and was immediately hooked! Within six months of that first class, I was selling my jewelry at a local shop and my new goal was to make more money creating jewelry and doing something I truly loved than I ever could in dentistry. By the time my son went to kindergarten, I had done just that and my husband knew I would be miserable if I had to come back into the office. Now I’m just his consultant, I guess you could say. 

8. How has your work changed?
When I began, I felt like I was struggling to fit this image of what I thought an artist should be. I wanted to make more complex pieces and I was very influenced by nature, botanical forms, and strong contrasts. I began to realize that although I liked the work I was producing, I didn’t find it something I could wear on a day to day basis. The more I played with gold, the more simplified my pieces became. I made jewelry I loved and would personally want to wear. I wanted the stone to be the focus and the gold to be a quiet compliment.

9. What things do you not like to do? 
Repetitive work! Shortly after landing a few good wholesale accounts, I found out I didn’t enjoy making too many pieces more than a couple of times unless they were super easy. I didn’t feel the same love for each piece as I did creating something new, so I ended up closing my wholesale accounts in order to continue to enjoy my work.
10. Most significant project or accomplishment?
I think my most significant accomplishment lies in the philanthropy arm of my business. Although, I donate a portion of the profits from every piece of jewelry sold as a regular practice, it was amazing to partner with Lucky Magazine and raise nearly $10k for the Red Hook Initiative in Brooklyn, NY over just a couple of months with the sale of my Gentle Waves Ring Set. Writing that check to them truly felt like nothing else I have ever done and I knew it would help so many kids. 
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Gentle Waves Ring (this was the one in Lucky Mag for the Red Hook Initiative
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11. What are your goals?
My goals now are much more simple than they used to be. Really, I just want to make work that I love and that feels very authentic to who I am in the moment. I want to continue to fabricate each piece of jewelry myself and connect with my customers directly. I want to continue to have freedom to travel, work when I want, and be mom once my children are home from school. 

Long term, I’m hoping to move back to Hawaii or some place tropical and exotic where I can have a small studio and participate in hands on volunteer work geared towards protecting our marine environment. 
12. What toys do you have?
Malibu wake boarding boat, stand up paddle board, and a kayak. Unfortunately, I tore both of my shoulders and can’t play with my toys. I can still scuba dive though and we have a new GoPro to play with on our next trip back to Maui.

13. What do you eat?
What don’t I eat should be the question! Homemade cappuccino and some sort of sweet treat daily. I eat mostly vegetarian as a preference, and a lot of Greek food since I’m married to a Greek. My diet is all over the place. Sometimes super clean and healthy, and then at other times it’s all comfort food. 
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Sapphire & Recycled 14k Gold Ring
13. A. What are your favorite movies/tv shows?
TV - Big Bang Theory, America Unearthed, Ancient Aliens, Long Island Medium, and HGTV’s Hawaii Life.
Movies -  I rarely see a movie anymore because most of them are too stressful for me to handle. I did see and love The Secret Life of Walter Mitty. I also like really bad old horror movies like The Blob. I love Monty Pythons movies as well, but I love movies and books that make you take an inventory of how you’re living your life such as I AM and Eat, Pray, Love.

14. Do you believe in magic?
Yes, and I practice it as well. I believe everyone can and does create their reality and I’ve manifested so many things I’ve dreamed of over the years. I’ve always been very sensitive to what others call “unseen energies” and as a child I was fascinated with life after death and mediumship. This curiosity and my sensitivity grew as an adult, and it continues to be a passion for me today. Currently, I’m in a year long apprenticeship for Contemporary Shamanism. How’s that for a surprise?

15. Should there be censorship?
No, but I do believe that children should grow up in a supportive and nurturing environment where they feel safe and loved. I think that the focus on violence in our programing and media is unhealthy at best.

16. What advice would you give to others?
Find your voice in all that you do. Be who you are and don’t be afraid to do things your way. Take risks. Explore life outside your boundaries and take time to be curious each day. 

www.christinemighion.com
www.facebook.com/ChristineMighionJewelry
www.twitter.com/CMighionJewelry
www.pinterest.com/CMighionJewelry

My work can be seen in various national and international fashion and lifestyle magazines such as SELF, Lucky, Vogue, Parents, People StyleWatch, The Knot, and Shape.
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Artist Interview #4 Aleksandra Micic

2/12/2014

2 Comments

 
Wednesday is my day for featuring artists on my blog. I have a series of questions/prompts that I have offered, the artist is free to answer all, some, or make up their own questions or format.
If you would like to be featured here, send me an email and I will send you the list of questions/prompts. 
Today's interview is with Aleksandra Micic:
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For me art is a way of life. If I can’t sculpt, I’ll paint, if not that, then I’ll draw or write, if I don’t have neither a pen or a paper or anything my hands could use then I will sing, if my voice fails me, I will dance, if my legs won’t move, I will imagine it all. 



There is art in every breath of the life I live: the way I wake up, get up, walk through the room around me; the way I smile at others… or frown; the way I cut my meal or scratch my nose, the way I rejoice or suffer…. 


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Off To a Far Far Away...
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Colors of Africa



When pain overwhelms the joy of my heart, there is always that spark of love for life and art of God that surrounds me that tell me “Inhale and keep going, you are alive.”


 



I was born in Belgrade, Serbia (ex Yugoslavia). Grew up mostly in Libya, partly in Canada (Toronto) and the rest in Serbia. 
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Bed of Roses
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Baby Kiss


Been around, seen enough and learned that greed rules this world not love, lost a smile for a while, but decided not to be a part of it and let the world shape me, but be myself and thus shape the world around me. 




Rules are just a guide, not a must if not reasonable. Other people's boundaries are not mine and vice versa. Love to forgive and give a second (third... tenth... x) chance to anyone who asks for it. 
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African Forest
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Carving



I believe that anyone can change if one wants to. Hate lying and love the truth no matter how hard and cruel it may be in a moment. Love to love.  



Those are all the things I try to teach my kids. They, with my husband are my greatest joy and comfort in life from God.
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Shine Into My Heart
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Roses of Africa


They inspire me to stay who I am. We feed on each other's love and have plenty to share with others.





micicarts.blogspot.com
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Back in Time
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Mini Embroidery Detail
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Rose's Sonata
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Mini Embroidery Centerpiece
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Autumn Feathers
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Living on Lavender
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Precious as Life
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Veins of Life
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Artist Interview #3 – Sandra Wiley

2/5/2014

1 Comment

 
Wednesday is my day for featuring artists on my blog. I have a series of questions/prompts that I have offered, the artist is free to answer all, some, or make up their own questions. 
If you would like to be featured here, send me an email and I will send you the list of questions/prompts. 
Today's interview is with Sandra Wiley:
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1. A little bit about your background, where did you grow up, where do you live now, education, family, etc...
I always say I grew up in Berkeley, but I spent my childhood in South Gate.  South Gate is a city in LA County, in the South East corner...yeah, that corner.  It's interesting that in South Gate you can rent a motel room by the hour. Growing up, I had no idea that this wasn't normal. I later found out that it's because of all the sex workers that worked there.  
Well, when I was 17, I escaped from South Gate and attended UC Berkeley. I promptly got myself kicked out but stayed. After 22 years, and 8 colleges, I finally graduated with my BS in Community Health Education from San Jose State University. I live in the mountains behind Santa Cruz, I'm married, have two young children, and work as a health educator for the Santa Cruz Women's Health Center. In my free time, I work with wool, fibers, and recycled materials trying to make functional art.
2. What was your first work of art & how old were you?
I've always drawn or painted. I can't remember not doing so. I learned how to knit when I was 9 and crochet when I was 7. My mom always was doing something, making things, like hats made out of beer cans and Christmas wreaths made out of sandwich baggies. I grew up watching her and learning.

3. What did you do for fun as a teenager?  
I was a pretty wholesome kid, until I went to college. So, we did things like toilet paper other kids houses and go to the movies. Sometimes we would cruise around Hollywood or go down to the beach. We did a lot of family stuff also.  
4. What and when was your first job? 
My first job was flipping burgers at a "Der Weinerschnitzel" when I was 16.  It was right across the street from the High School.

5. What was your first work that really pleased you as an artist? 
I guess that would be the first poncho I made when I was 7 years old. It was blue and white and I loved that thing.
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Body parts
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6. Who was the first artist to influence you? 
My mom. Though she would never call herself an artist. My dad painted and we used to watch Bob Ross all the time; but my mom really influenced my work.

7. What art movements do you relate to? 
I love folk art from all over the world.  Just people, using resources that are available to them, making beautiful (often useful) pieces of art. I love that.
8. How has your work changed?
Ha! It has gotten better. I'm more confident and patient. I trust the process more and have discovered that my original intentions for whatever piece I am working on may not be what is born.
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Mother and child
9. What things do you not like to do?
Sometimes I'll get repeat orders and then the pieces feel tedious. But, the beauty is that no two pieces are ever the same, so there is often the feeling of surprise, even when I think I'm doing the same thing.
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Say 'Hi' to Big Red!
10. Most significant project or accomplishment?
 I was pretty pleased with my sculpture of "Big Red". She was significant because she taught me to let go of my preconceptions and go with the flow.

11. What are your goals?
So many! Though I love my money job (it really is the best job ever!), I would really love to do art full time. I want to raise my own fiber animals (llamas, goats, rabbits, sheep) and grow my own veggies. I'd like to make my own cloth and maybe even have a little shop on my land to sell my wares. I'd also love to continue teaching in some capacity, maybe art classes or even childbirth preparation classes. I'm still young. One day, I may have it all figured out.


12. What toys do you have? 
Last year I got a beautiful spinning wheel named Esther.  

13. What do you eat? 
What have you got??
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 13. A. What are your favorite movies/tv shows?
I don't have cable.  But, I stream stuff all the time. It's been fun introducing my kids to my favorite movies from when I was a kid. Interesting how things have changed.  

14. Do you believe in magic?
Yes, of course.

15. Should there be censorship?
No, but expression should not be forced upon those that don't want to hear it.

16. What advice would you give to others?
About what?  Love?  I say hold out for the right one. Work? No job is too small and try to get paid what you are worth.  Art?  Do what you love, someone else will love it too.  Kids?  Ya got me there!

Website: www.sandrawiley.weebly.com
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Santa Cruz, California

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