Showing posts with label art exhibit. Show all posts
Showing posts with label art exhibit. Show all posts

A closer look into Dwelling Places; Interview with artist Robin Maria Pedrero



It always helps to look a little closer.
Get in there...

 A couple of weeks ago, I attended the opening reception of Dwelling Places, the Robin Maria Pedrero solo exhibition at the Lake Eustis Museum of Art.
I am familiar with Pedrero's work, and I was excited to see her first solo showing in a museum setting. I was prepared to write a review of the show, and I did take copious notes with my nose just inches from the canvases. As I worked my way through the crowd and the galleries, I noticed something very interesting. 


 Robin's style was changing before my eyes. It was so fascinating to see her newest pieces, some completed not long before the show, in juxtaposition to some of her earlier works.
Cows in the Olive Grove


 Pedrero has been known for her ethereal paintings that are layered with transparent acrylic glazes over stylized silhouetted patterns and landscapes. Occasional charcoal lines sometimes added areas of mixed media detail, but the layered textures I had noticed were very thin and detail was minimal. The tooth of the canvas often showed through in areas of the composition while others received a thick application of paint, giving the pieces a variety in their surface textures.
Zinnia's Garden
The dream-like quality of her earlier palette seemed to be replaced with bold, heavily saturated color. Its application is almost buttery and smooth on the background layers now. In each new painting, there seems to be one or two small focal points that she enhances with detail. The textures of each new piece are thick and interesting throughout the composition, with areas of the foreground having palpable depth. It was very hard not to touch!

 These newer pieces are certainly evolving into a different direction, and the artist is incorporating found materials and sensory objects as part of the installation. (Keep reading for an explanation from the artist.)



Corvus Coffee Peace Meeting

 So it was at this point I couldn't keep taking notes, because I just needed to interview the artist to find out what was going on.

 (I was excited, guys. Imagine you're a foodie, and one of your favorite recipes at a restaurant changes, but you don't dislike it, you eat it up and just want to know "Why?!" and "What is in this, now?!")
So I asked her. (Well, after waiting a bit. It was crowded, and she's a popular lady. She had to get back to me via email. Sidebar to anyone wanting to network with artists at an art show, let the artists talk to the gallerists, curators, and collectors. It's a big sale night, so unless you are purchasing artwork, try to follow up later. Robin was super nice and got back to me when she had some down time.)

Here ya go...



 D. Renée Wilson: Woah, Nelly! This is really cool. It looks like your style is changing. What is going on with your paint application?!

Robin Maria Pedrero: This became part of my process as I like to experiment, and I began to push the paint around in a similar manner that I use in developing my soft pastel works. My publisher gets quite excited when I utilize texture in my work so I began adding fiber paste,  molding paste and gels more often. You will notice that I still utilize a variety of textures and glazes in my acrylic pieces.
Thursday's Crow Has Far to Go



DRW: Why the attention to detailed but small focal points? 

RMPI like the variety of having dreamy, loose areas of a painting and areas that are more focused and up close. I never noticed that there were very “ small focal points”, just perhaps that I highlight some areas and give added details more so than to other areas. Some sort of favoritism!  
I like to add little details hidden in to add curiosity.  

DRW: Tell me about the sculptural pieces. Is this your first time working in 3D?

Nest, Golden Path- piece of the Berlin Wall, Vessel

RMP: Several years ago I created a large 5 foot tree using a support and pieces of my cut up clothing. These  3D works in Dwelling Places are my first vessels. I must say I am pretty excited about them.

DRW: Why did you choose the materials you did?


RMP: The materials were intuitive, and serendipitously we began to receive a newspaper that we had not ordered and my supplies arrived daily. I began with papier-mâché, and discovered that my process in building these 3D pieces carried some similarities with my painting process. 


Although I had a vision for the first 2 pieces, the nest and the vessel, I allowed myself to adjust and build on my creativity. I focus a lot on connectivity. I knew I needed to create a sailboat. When I looked at the body of work I’d developed it seemed fitting that I would use coffee beans or grounds on the bowl vessel. I wanted these to be treasures.  I have been keeping this little bag of  money shredded by the federal reserve that of my children brought me from a field trip for years and this was the perfect use for some of it. Money in the vessel and in the nest!  I had already begun the work of a nest with a single egg when the announcement that our  first grandchild would be arriving in November. My life just kept becoming a part of these pieces. I also tried to finish a soapstone carving and a wood carving, yet they remained unfinished, due to an attack of the shingles during August. Thankfully my paintings were completed.


DRW: Oh, no! I'm glad you were able to get well and to prepare work in time for the show. Do you see yourself creating more sculpture in the future?

RMP: Yes.

DRW: How has the painting style shift changed your process in the studio? 

RMP: I think I will keep a combination of using textures and some glazes.

DRW: Is this a style you plan to stick with? What do you see coming next for you?

RMP: I joked at the exhibit.. black and white.
I feel something stirring inside. I don’t know how to explain it. It’s an odd excitement. A new chapter is unfolding and as soon as it reveals itself I’ll share.


DRW: That is exciting! And joking aside, I'd love to see the texture that would come from a forced B&W style. ;) Thank you so much for sharing with us today, Robin! 

 If you are in our area, stop by the LEMA  to see Robin's solo exhibit. I don't have to tell you, but seeing art online is nothing like seeing an original painting in person. The carefully constructed surface textures, layering, and sculptural elements have to be seen up close.
The show will be up through October, 31.  If you're not around, you can still follow Robin here online as her next chapter unfolds.  

In Artwork & Play,






Orlando LIVE caught me on camera


 I'm typically camera shy at art events, but Orlando LIVE cornered caught up with me at the I Believe opening reception and we had a little impromptu chat about my paintings in the show.
 There are several brief interviews with some amazing ( and much more eloquent and substantially less awkward) artists that I admire immensely, such as Linda Brandt, Dawn Rosendahl, and Janae Corrado.
(my segment begins @ 6:45)
Orlando LIVE @ City Arts Factory (Jan. '14)

I Believe

  Though we all have different ideas about truth and what is important, belief can be said to be the outline in which we create our lives. Study after study suggests our brains are wired for belief, and it holds great power in governing our perception of self and the world around us.

 I am honored and  excited to have been chosen to exhibit work in this show curated by Art for All Spaces.
(Click HERE to read the curator's statement and R.S.V.P.  on social media.)

 This show features work from several artists and addresses questions of fundamental importance, those that shape not only our work, but our psychological orientation toward life.
In a special collaboration with local poets, written pieces corresponding to the         

   "I Believe" statements will accompany the works on display.
During the opening event, viewers will be able to vote on their favorite pieces, with awards being given to the winners.
These deeply personal statements offer an opportunity to see inside the hearts and minds of the artists and provoke the viewer to evaluate what beliefs they hold dear.

 If you are in the Orlando area, I hope you will join us this Thursday evening for a unique visual experience and introspective journey.


pictured above, "I Believe in The Underdog"
one of my watercolor paintings featured in "I Believe" inspired by Tatsiana "Tanya" Khvitsko.
Click HERE to read Tanya's inspiring interview on my blog. 


 "I Believe" opening reception:
Thursday, January 16, 2014
29 S. Orange Ave. Orlando, FL
6-9pm
Click HERE for directions.



 Whatever you believe, I hope it brings strength, joy, and fulfillment to your life.
~D. Renée


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Orlando Art Salon Members Show (and grow) Together

 It's cool. We aren't collaborating on crazy hair cuts. It's this kind of salon;

 "Salon: from the French word salon (a living room or parlor), means a conversational gathering. Usually this is a select group of intellectuals, artists and politicians who meet in the private residence of a socially influential (and often wealthy) person." - arthistory.about.com

Interior of 27 Rue de Fluerus, Salon of Gertrude Stein
  I'm pretty stoked to be a member of a group called a salon, especially since esteemed artists such as Matisse, Toulouse-Lautrec, Renoir, Picasso, etc. attended Gertrude Stein's salon,
 but this particular salon isn't an esoteric group held in an ivory tower at 27 rue de Fleurus
Like most great teams, it all started with a coach.

 Alyson B. Stanfield, aka the Art Biz Coach, has made a very successful career for herself. With thousands upon thousands of social media followers, she has an impressive reach and even more impressive audience engagement and quite understandably so. As a former museum curator, educator, and art history scholar, she helps artists do what we (well, at least me)  dread; the biz side of our art careers. So, when Stanfield offered free course materials to local artists that met in groups, I was all about it. Just my luck an amazing Orlando artist, Robin Maria Pedrero, offered to host the group in her FAVO studio.
 As an artist that actively participates in local art events and shows, I already knew quite a few of the artists that joined the Orlando group. This actually made it easier than I had imagined. Rather than a stuffy "all business" approach, it was a real pleasure to meet, brain storm, encourage and sometimes just commiserate with such a diverse and talented group of artists.

 Honestly, I'm not organized enough to give you a quantifiable measure of how the biz side of my art did benefit from the course. I can tell you that there were quite a few days when I wanted to throw in my paint rags, but I left our salon with lighter shoulders and a renewed spirit.
I don't know about you, but I'll take warm and fuzzy over the former any day.

  One of my favorite affirmations of all time comes from a fellow salon member, Dawn Rosendahl,
"I am a creator, not a competitor."
(Fyi, she's not showing with the group b/c she's busy as an artist-in-action at the Maitland Art Center and getting ready for a solo show there. Awesome!)
 This salon fostered a sense of kinship rather than a competitive, market-driven atmosphere.
That's why I'm so proud to show alongside some of these salon members at Dandelion
Communitea Cafe. (A place so awesome and truly community driven, it deserves its own post.)

Meet us at the opening reception this Wednesday, September 4 from 7-10pm at Dandelion

618 N Thornton Ave, Orlando FL 32803. 


Salon members featured in the show are listed below. Simply click on the name to learn more about the artist and see artwork.
Gail Peck
Robin Maria Pedrero
Aimée Trudell Wheaton
Susan Sloan
Gregory Stock
Leah Hossler Wiedemer
Dlynn Roll
D. Renée Wilson
Bethany Taylor Myers
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