female artists

Nothing Green Can Stay, or Can It?

Figure 1. “Soul of a Tributary” by Veronica Szalus.

Figure 1. “Soul of a Tributary” by Veronica Szalus.

Physical transitions happen constantly in nature and while these vary in speed, it is the process of transformation that matters most. Northern Virginia artist Veronica Szalus explores themes of inevitable environmental transitions through complex sculptures. Her sculptures consist of synthetic and natural materials, which encourage viewers to study how their environments never surrender to permanence. Szalus’ work helps us internalize what each passing minute signifies for existence within every transitional shift.

 

Szalus’ installations are part of environmental art, a movement that began around the 1960s. Today, renowned contemporary artists in the genre include Nils Udo, Agnes Denes, and Andy Goldsworthy. This movement invites us to view organisms beyond their present physical status and pushes us to look into future possibilities of change as a continuation of the natural cycle. Since much of the artwork is produced to be site-specific, it creates a sense of awareness about current surroundings and/or issues regarding the impact of our interactions with our planet’s natural resources.

 

“Many of my installations use a combination of materials such as grass reed, bamboo, tree branches and vines. Beyond this I often consider a larger more pressing question --the constant transition found at the intersections of materials (manufactured or even natural) with environmental factors and what that means to the viewer and his/her world. There is a constant interplay between materials and the environmental factors of light, movement, sound and time that gives pause to contemplate the impermanence of the world around us and the existence that form us,” explains Szalus.

Figure 2. The artist at work in the studio.

Figure 2. The artist at work in the studio.

 In her work, organic and non-organic materials come together to possibly create something new. For instance, by shifting positions, deteriorating of materials, what may grow or die if environmental factors interfere, among other scenarios. An important factor to consider when observing Szalus’ installations is that time always remains the constant variable of the natural cycle for every living organism.

There’s a give and take that occurs when dealing with nature. It is these interactions that cause the potential for change, and the impact of such can only be witnessed through the progression of time. The pieces Szalus creates can also reflect how interior and exterior elements serve as agents of change in that environment. In other words, they instill an open perspective for how our relationship with our surroundings can impact our lives in the long run.

Figure 3. “Tilted Soul” by Veronica Szalus.

Figure 3. “Tilted Soul” by Veronica Szalus.

She explains, “I am continuously developing my work through volume and scale, new forms, and exploration of materials. I am inspired by many things including shifts in light, flexibility, tension and movement, color, and especially color that is the result of oxidation. I am currently developing concepts that incorporate water and the observation of oxidation, flexibility and durability in large assembled pieces, and using mundane objects to activate light.”

 

Szalus is currently working on an installation concept for the lobby of a performing arts center and an upcoming duo exhibition at Studio Gallery in Washington D.C., where she’ll be collaborating with Pam Frederick.

Explore more of Veronica Szalus’ work here.

 

 Today’s poem inspired by the natural transitions found in Veronica’s work:

 

Nothing Gold Can Stay

BY ROBERT FROST

 

Nature’s first green is gold,

Her hardest hue to hold.

Her early leaf’s a flower;

But only so an hour.

Then leaf subsides to leaf.

So Eden sank to grief,

So dawn goes down to day.

Nothing gold can stay.

Spacing Out is a Subliminal Gift

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Uncovering our subconscious thoughts probably sounds like a slightly intimidating yet fascinating idea. That’s why Uruguayan collagist Laura Botto reflects on this otherworldly concept through her work. This Montevideo-based artist explores real life by adding a dash of surrealism to everyday moments.

Laura’s collage journey began a couple of years ago as she constructed vision boards for specific ideals she sought in life. She then started creating collages by showcasing life in an atypical manner.

She studied photography/plastic and visual arts at the Instituto Escuela Nacional de Bellas Artes of Uruguay. “Even though I studied photography, I noticed the potential collage and photomontage have,” she says.

Collage allows artists to mix different materials and textures to create worlds often resulting in surrealistic images blended together from otherwise mundane objects. This technique as we know it today traces back to around 1910, thanks to Cubist painters Georges Braque and Pablo Picasso who glued patches of other materials to canvas of paintings or drawings.1

 Collage making can range drastically based on the artist’s choice of materials. These may include items like photos, paint, mosaics, wood, and more 2D and 3D constructions. Famous collage works include: “Just what is it that makes today's homes so different, so appealing?” by John McHale and Richard Hamilton (1956), “Blue Nude II” by Henri Matisse (1952), and Pablo Picasso’s “Still life with the caned chair” (1912).

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 For Laura, her creation process begins by jotting down ideas throughout the day, including ones from dreams. She works with images as if they were pieces of a puzzle, mounts what she envisions, then lets the collage sit for at least a day before considering finalizing it.

 She explains, “I love collages that have a few elements and some words or phrases. But I also love the surrealist ones where an image intervenes and creates a completely different reality. For a long time, I felt like I had to choose either one of the two styles, but I gave up on this idea. I do what I feel, whenever I feel it. Whichever the artistic medium we develop may be, we always leave our own footprint in the artwork.”

Laura has found a way to tap into her subliminal thoughts of daily moments to create surrealist images. Through inviting imagery, Laura’s vision and voice entice you to step outside your own reality to reconsider perspective when it comes to life moments.

“Collage allows the opening up of conscious, which is very direct…its also a way of looking at what you are consuming all the time” – John Stezaker, British contemporary conceptual collage artist.2

In Laura’s world, imagery ranges from a cute retro girl watering a field of dry land from the sky, a woman staring at you behind a green leafy curtain with the words “Know how to see” underneath, to two lovebirds sitting peacefully on a wire in outer space. They also include collages of people looking at the viewer alongside suggestive phrases to evoke rational yet subconscious thought.

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Collectively, these collages show us that even those seemingly basic moments can hold weight in making our lives what they are as a whole. It is through these subconscious metaphors that we can gain perspective of how valuable our interactions can be in the grand scheme of universal things.

 “My collage “La mudanza (The move)” has an air of nostalgia and sadness of leaving the familiar for something new, and I made it during a moment that I was going through that [experience]. It’s almost unconscious,” says Laura.

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These collages challenge our thoughts by making life a little dreamlike when we have to process it, including difficult moments. They welcome a conversation with our own mind that perhaps we never considered before.

Check out the gallery below and to view Laura’s prints click here.

* Interview translated from Spanish. All photos courtesy of the artist.

Today’s poetry pairing inspired by Laura’s celestial visions:

This Lunar Beauty

BY W.H. AUDEN

 

This lunar beauty
Has no history
Is complete and early,
If beauty later
Bear any feature
It had a lover
And is another.

This like a dream
Keeps other time
And daytime is
The loss of this,
For time is inches
And the heart's changes
Where ghost has haunted
Lost and wanted.

But this was never
A ghost's endeavor
Nor finished this,
Was ghost at ease,
And till it pass
Love shall not near
The sweetness here
Nor sorrow take
His endless look.

The Beauty of Needful Things

Figure 1. Cindy Amaya working her craft in the studio.

Figure 1. Cindy Amaya working her craft in the studio.

For Cindy Amaya, being an artist is embracing the relationship between humans and our environmental surroundings. As a recent graduate from Southern Adventist University in Collegedale, TN, Cindy is exploring her creativity by presenting the viewer a glimpse of handpicked organic surroundings with an optimistic viewpoint through her work.

“I’m constantly inspired by the world around me. [It] comes from having a childlike mindset when I'm out in nature. I begin to explore different textures and patterns that can be added to my work. I’m inspired by fun color schemes I see in nature and also by kids,” says Cindy.

In her paintings, Cindy’s use of blank space almost removes nature from its surroundings and puts us face to face with it through very detailed realism and aesthetic techniques of how organic elements compose the overall part of nature she wants us to appreciate, be it whole or abstract. The use of broad strokes intermixed with complimentary shades and lines bring forth an abstract portrayal of nature to some of her work, yet they resemble the wildness and fragility of living things through delicate lines.

Figure 2. Cindy Amaya “Green Your Work #2” (2018).

Figure 2. Cindy Amaya “Green Your Work #2” (2018).

Nature serves as an artistic element. Using these surroundings as a canvas for her current inspiration provides beauty and perception to living things most of us at times take for granted.

She explains, “Nature is good for us. A fact that is often times under-appreciated. Just looking at it and the color green, has this sort of calming effect. When we allow ourselves to me intimate and spend more time looking around, we begin to notice patterns that we didn’t know were there before.”

Appreciation of living things is not an understatement in Cindy’s technique, as nature gives life to the whole ecosystem, including aiding in our existence and that of animals. Through Cindy’s perception we can take a closer look in the safe space these living things provide just by their colors, shapes, and as living, breathing organisms alone. Interlacing this understanding with our surroundings only makes our experience and perception richer of why they matter.

All photos courtesy of Cindy Amaya. To view more of her work, visit her site.

A poetry pairing to Cindy’s artwork:

Turtle Came to See Me
BY MARGARITA ENGLE

The first story I ever write
is a bright crayon picture
of a dancing tree, the branches
tossed by island wind.

I draw myself standing beside the tree,
with a colorful parrot soaring above me,
and a magical turtle clasped in my hand,
and two yellow wings fluttering
on the proud shoulders of my ruffled
Cuban rumba dancer's
fancy dress.

In my California kindergarten class,
the teacher scolds me: REAL TREES
DON'T LOOK LIKE THAT.

It's the moment
when I first
begin to learn
that teachers
can be wrong.

They have never seen
the dancing plants
of Cuba.