Friday, July 1, 2011

Art in Bloom and Our Annual Open House!


Hello All,

It's that time of year, again.  Our Annual Open House Celebration is much anticipated each year.  It is Spanish Village Artists' way of saying "Thanks" to our many patrons and visitors each year.  Spanish Village Art Center is located at 1770 Village Place, San Diego, California.  The event will take place on Saturday, July 23, 2011 from 10:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m.

For the first time, in collaboration with the San Diego Floral Association and the San Diego Botanical Garden Foundation, Spanish Village Art Center is hosting a spectacular new event, "Art in Bloom", a magnificent display of floral horticulture blended with paintings done "live" on our courtyard patio by our plein air artists.

The artists, located throughout the courtyard, will demonstrate their individual media and their art using an array of live floral arrangements provided by the Floral Guild as their subject matter.  Demonstrations will begin at 10:00 a.m.  At 2:00 p.m., the People's Choice voting for favorite artwork/floral arrangement will begin.  Something you won't want to miss!  Cash awards will be presented at 4:00 p.m.

We are honored to have several garden groups from the Botanical Foundation present to talk about their representative plants, and give information about their events throughout the calendar year.

Steven Maddy from Studio 41 in his "Garden of Paper Flowers"
getting ready for Art in Bloom
(Tiny bubbles have got nothing on these Paper florals!)

As always, we are happy to announce that entertainment will be provided by Tin Man's Heart.  Their smooth vocals and acoustics will waft throughout the patio adding to the ambiance, where visitors can meander enjoying refreshments and the everfamous Spanish Village Silent Auction.  Wonderful artwork will be donated by the Spanish Village artists for the auctions, as usual.  This year, we will sponsor "three" different auctions, ending at 3:00 p.m., 4:30 p.m. and 6:00 p.m.  It will be a great time to collect art from your favorite artists, and to visit them in their studios or on the patio.

An open invitation is extended to all guests to stroll through our historic studios, and enjoy a day of art, floral arrangements and fun!  Please drop by and enjoy this annual event of appreciation and welcome from all of us here at Spanish Village Art Center.  We throw this party just for you each year, and the best part is that it is free!  (Well, maybe not the best part)...The food, entertainment and, most of all, the ART make this a must attend happening of the year!

So, come on down.  Take in the beauty of floral horticulture, imbibe, ingest and take something BEAUTIFUL home from the artists of Spanish Village Art Center.  I guess that suffices to say, "EAT, DRINK AND MAKE (FLORAL-LY) MERRY!  See you there.


Lovely Paper Horticulture on dispaly for Art in Bloom
courtesy of Meisha and Steven Maddy
in studio 41


For more information, contact event director, Susan Ludwig in studio 34A, at:
(760) 436-0453, or at susludwig@gmail.com


Written and posted by Cassandra Shepard, Studio 32
Text and content copyrighted, 2011, all rights reserved

Tuesday, June 7, 2011

Wine, Cheese & Chocolate Festival...Umm-mm!



Hello All,

It's that time of year again.  The Women's Museum of California is throwing its 4th Annual Wine, Cheese and Chocolate Festival at Spanish Village Art Center!!!  (Quick.  What's your favorite? Oh heck, why choose when you can have them ALL?)  Well, ladies, I say, "Throw Down", 'cause we are ready!  This event is always a delightful experience, and Spanish Village Art Center is proud to host the museum's fete on our colorful patio each year.  Yay!  Let's hear it for Women, Wine, Cheese and CHOCOLATE!  Oops!  I guess I just let slip which is my favorite (the wine and cheese are tied for second).

Taking place on Friday, June 17, 2011, from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m. in beautiful Balboa Park, the well attended bacchanal is sold out early each year!   There will be wine, cheese and chocolate tastings for the guests, and our artists and studios will be open for participants to browse, and explore the many diverse arts of Spanish Village.  There will also be live music on the patio for "Dancing under the Stars".  Sounds just dreamy, doesn't it? 

After the wine, cheese and chocolate mixed with mellow music and dancing, we may all have to be carted out of here in wheelbarrows!  I promise you it will be a night of culinary decadence and delight ( in a very good way, that is).  The "visions of sugarplums" hasn't got a thing on this event.  (I'm envisioning dark, dark chocolate with a merlot or shiraz...sigh...polished off with a tangy pungent goat cheese...oh my!)  See you all there!  Come loaded for...CHOCOLATE!


For more information and to reserve your place, contact the Women's Museum of California at (619) 233-7963 or log on to their website at: http://womensmuseumca.org.

Spanish Village Art Center is located at 1770 Village Place, San Diego, California between the Natural History Museum and the San Diego Zoo.



Written and posted by Cassandra Shepard, Studio 32
text and content copyrighted, 2011, all rights reserved

Friday, June 3, 2011

Catnip Connection 5 - "Meow"!


"In Your Face" by artist, ALLY BENBROOK
IMAGES ARE COPYRIGHT PROTECTED


Hello All!

All of you,  "Cat Lovers" out there, that is.  It's coming again, the much anticipated annual "Catnip Connection 5".  Coming soon to Gallery 21 is the always winsome and entertaining exhibit of (you got it) "Cats, cats and more...Cats"! Did anyone say, "CATS"? Hurray!  The Fifth Annual juried exhibition is scheduled to run from June 15 - 27, 2011 at Gallery 21 in Spanish Village Art Center.   We are located at 1770 Village Place in Balboa Park.

The all media exhibition is set to honor animals of the FELINE persuasion, which includes domestic and wild species alike.  As always, the participants will donate a portion of the proceeds from the show to the Feral Cat Coalition.  The coalition is an organization offering spay and neuter clinics for stray cats in San Diego County.

This year's exhibition is sure to be a marvelous display of the Ferocious, Fastidious, Fantastic and Free-wheeling life of the Feline!  So, mark your calendars.  The reception for artists will be held on Sunday, June 19, 2011 from 4:30 - 7:00 p.m.  Awards will be presented at 5:30 p.m., so you don't want to miss it.

For more information, contact Vicki DeLong at (619) 850-6637, or email at: vbde@cox.net.

See you there.  "C'est les chattes...and that's, that!"  Prrrrrrrr...


Written and posted by Cassandra Shepard, Studio 32
text and content copyrighted, 2011, all rights reserved

Wednesday, May 11, 2011

Doorways to Art in Spanish Village


"Sunflowers and Chicadees" by watercolorist, LUCY WANG
IMAGES ARE COPYRIGHT PROTECTED

Hello All,

It has been awhile since my last post. I took a little hiatus to manage life's little "happenings", and mulled over the subject for my next blog. Periodically, I will feature articles on the events in Spanish Village Art Center in my news flash
column, "Around the Village". As you will remember, we are located at 1770 Village Place, San Diego California in beautiful Balboa Park. The 37 studios are open daily, featuring some 100 plus artists and fine crafts persons.

Last blog, I featured the Woodcarvers Guild in Studio 38.  I would like to dedicate this blog to the Spanish Village artists, themselves. In fact, this will be a feature that I will run, periodically, introducing one of our finest artists and crafts persons each time.

Among our many advertisements, here in the Village, there has been a postcard favorite entitled, "Doorways to Art".  Indeed, our colorful doors have been a particular draw and of continued interest to visitors in Balboa Park for years.  Now, let me enhance that fondness and interest by, individually, introducing you to our artists "beyond the doorways"...through the "Doorways to Art" in Spanish Village Art Center.

My first feature will be on watercolorist and calligrapher, Lucy Wang in Studio 4. Lucy's 3-Dimensional Watercolors on Silk are a legend unto themselves, and her original technique is unmatched by any other that I have seen.  Her subject matter is whimsical, lyrical, folkloric.  Each painting telling a story.  Her silk stretching technique is her own creation, giving the spectator a layered vision of finely painted folklore and nature's bounty.

"Flute Player", by LUCY WANG
IMAGES ARE COPYRIGHTED


The beauty of her painting reflects her love of nature and demonstrates her exquisite mastery of the brush.  Lucy has uniquely blended her Chinese painting background with the influence of Western painting techniques to develop an innovative style of watercolor painting on silk in a 3-D layout.  This technique that she created was so unique and groundbreaking that it was featured nationwide on the "Lynette Jennings Design" show on Discovery Channel, and "Our Place" on Home Garden TV.  (Uhh, excuse me folks, but, "How about those Props"?)  I'd call Lucy Wang..."Fierce"!

Studying with master artists in Taiwan, Lucy graduated from the National Taiwan College of Arts.  She has taught for more than 20 years at her studio in Spanish Village Art Center, as well as at the University of California San Diego Crafts Center.  Teaching workshops throughout the United States, she has also written four books on Chinese brush painting, and co-authored a fifth on drawing and watercolor techniques.  She, also, has several informative animation and teaching videos currently posted on youtube.com.

Lucy sponsors a student show each year at Gallery 21, here in Spanish Village, featuring the calligraphy and Chinese brush paintings of her students.  In her "spare" time, Lucy exhibits annually at the Laguna Beach "Art-A-Fair" during the summer.  Her artwork has, understandably, been selected by National Audubon Society, National Geographic Society, Smithsonian and UNICEF for holiday gift cards.  (Can I say, one more time..."Props", people)!!!  And, guess what, folks?  We are just "bursting at the seams" with pride to boast that Lucy is an integral and valued member of Spanish Village Art Center!!!

Well, that's Lucy Wang, in a nutshell (Ouch! Poor nutshell...it's so crowded in there).  Lucy is an amazingly accomplished artist, and a delightful person.  Her demure persona and welcome smile will greet you as you enter her blue and lavender door.  Positioned just outside the studio, colorful umbrellas give shade to visitors and her myriad selection of giclee prints and cards.  A visit to Studio 4 (to meet Lucy) is a journey into the mystical folkloric realm of the Orient.  And, remember...Lucy's quiet and easy aura is waiting there to bid you welcome to her world.

Hold that thought.  Imagine a cornflower blue and lavender door through which the visitor can see beautiful maidens dressed in flowing silks, cranes dancing in wintry wonderlands, beautifully rendered Chinese brush paintings of any and all subject matter, and you will just begin to visualize the mastery... mystery of Lucy Wang's art.

Not unlike, "Snow Falling on Cedars".



"Dancing Cranes" by watercolorist, LUCY WANG
IMAGES ARE COPYRIGHT PROTECTED


You may find additional information on Lucy Wang and her 3-Dimensional Watercolors on Silk at her website:  http://www.lucywang.com/

Enjoy Lucy's animation videos at:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tI4vPNsBzcU
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AVqeycDKjDo&feature=mfuinorder&list=UL
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FnHe5TLFAUU&feature=mfuinorder&list=UL
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gI0kNyFaonw&feature=mfuinorder&list=UL



Written and posted by Cassandra Shepard, Studio 32
text and content copyrighted, 2011, all rights reserved

Friday, April 22, 2011

Around the Village: "Woodcarvers Demo"


IMAGES ARE COPYRIGHT PROTECTED

Hello All,

Here's a "heads up" from Studio 38, the Woodcarvers Guild in Spanish Village Art Center, located at 1770 Village Place, San Diego, California.  On Saturday, April 23, 2011, the guild members will give demonstrations of lathe, scrollsaw and the art of woodburning on the patio.  The demonstrations will be done close to Studio 38, and all visitors to Balboa Park are invited to come and watch.  Our woodcarvers are some of the best in the county, and enjoy their craft as much as showing it off to the public.

So, all of you wood lovers out there, come on down and join the fun!  The carvers will keep a "lathe turning" just for you.  Who knows...maybe you will enjoy it so much that you will want to join the Woodcarvers Guild, and start turning yourselves.  Amazing things happen all the time.






Remember, "...to every season, turn, turn, turn".  See all you enthusiasts there!



IMAGES ARE COPYRIGHT PROTECTED


Written and posted by Cassandra Shepard, Studio 32
text and content copyrighted, 2011, all rights reserved

Thursday, April 21, 2011

Jihmye Collins ... The Man Behind the Smile


Jihmye Collins (1939 - 2011)
Photograph, copyright 2011 of Mithaq Kazimi


Hello Everyone,

I dedicate this blog to commemorate Jihmye Collins, Artist, Activist, Poet and Friend. A tribute to the "man behind the smile"... To an "Athlete Dying Young". Please join Spanish Village Art Center in honoring and commemorating Jihmye on April 5, 2011 at Gallery 21 from 2:00 - 7:00 p.m. The gallery is located in the heart of Spanish Village Art Center at 1770 Village Place, San Diego, California 92101.

We are hosting a potluck dinner, poetry reading and viewing of Jihmye's artwork in remembrance and love. We hope you will bring your fondest memory of Jihmye, and join us in the celebration of the "Life of Jihmye Collins", a man who walked tall among us.

I dedicate this poem by A. E. Housman to Jihmye Collins, because he was an athlete, in his own right, for justice and peace through his art and his Ba'Haai faith. To me, he was a friend and fellow artist, as he was to many of us here at Spanish Village Art Center. But to those of us who really knew him, and knew him well, he was an athlete and champion for the togetherness of mankind, and a vigilant crusader against injustice for all. He reached into the community, and tried to pass on his love and respect for the human race through his work with youths and the underprivileged. Artist, Activist, Poet and Friend, all encompassed within that undeniable presence and radiant smile.

"To an Athlete Dying Young", by A. E. Housman (1859-1936)

"The time you won your town the race,
We chaired you through the market-place.
Man and boy stood cheering by,
And home we brought you shoulder high...
Smart lad, to slip betimes away
From fields where Glory does not stay.
And early though the laurel grows,
It withers quicker than the rose...
Now you will not swell the rout,
Of lads who wore their honours out.
Runners whom renown outran
And the name died before the man...
And round that early-laurelled head
Will flock to gaze the strengthless dead,
And find unwithered on its curls
The garland briefer than a girl's".

"We will all love and miss you Jihmye, but, our lives are better for your being."

P.S.
Jihmye,
 I know you loved "all things Africa", and delighted in reconnecting with your heritage and the Motherland.  So, this poem is just for you, from me:

From "Out of Africa" by Isaak Dinesen, (1885 - 1962)

"If I know a song of Africa, of the giraffe and the African new moon lying on her back, of the plows in the fields and the sweaty faces of the coffee pickers, does Africa know a song of me? Will the air over the plain quiver with a color that I have had on, or the children invent a game in which my name is, or the full moon throw a shadow over the gravel of the drive that was like me, or will the eagles of the Ngong Hills look out for me?"

Jihmye,
I believe the answer is, "Yes, and the color will be purple."
Thank you, Cassandra


Photograph courtesy of Alane Gray, copyright 2011


Who is Jihmye Collins?
Watch video compliments of Community Faces Project: Jihmye Collins (c) MACSD
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qac0YuArJBA


"In Loving Memory...",  from all of us at Spanish Village Art Center


Written and posted by Cassandra Shepard, Studio 32
text and content copyrighted, 2011, all rights reserved

Friday, March 18, 2011

Who Me? Yes, Yumi...Darling Yumi!

Yumi as "The Painter"
in "Every Painting Tells a Story",
a comedic musical drama based on Romeo and Juliet
at Ciao Bella Caffe Bar e Ristorante

 Hello All,

I can hardly believe it. How time flies. Once again, Yumi Climenson brings her vision and unique persona to Gallery 21 for her annual show. The exhibit runs from 3/9/11 - 3/21/11, and is open to the public daily from 11:00 a.m. to 400 p.m. Gallery 21 is located at the center of Spanish Village Art Center in historical Balboa Park. This year Yumi entitled her exhibition, "Beyond the Light", and dedicates it to, "My Parents and Kazuko, for their Love and Wisdom".

As I walked through the exhibit with Yumi, she shared with me the essence of two paintings which she says, essentially, embody the theme of the show. The first and primary painting, entitled "Beyond the Light", shows a clear brightly lit day where seagulls walk on a beach, and gaze quizzically at two Japanese characters, seemingly, inscribed in the sand. In the background, a pristine jewel-toned wave, lit from beyond, breaks gently on the shore. The characters are alluring and, on second glance, have the appearance of remnants of sea drift objects, sticks awash on the beach. When I asked Yumi what the characters meant, she said, "They say, Peace, Harmony and Love" for her mother's name, which means child of peace, harmony and love. This painting, Yumi says, "represents the natural light that is in us all".


"Beyond the Light" by artist, YUMI
IMAGES ARE COPYRIGHT PROTECTED

The second painting central to the theme of light, is that of "Seine - Paris", showing Yumi's favorite bridge over the river Seine. This piece depicts the bridge bathed in blue and yellow light from an ornate lantern attached to a time worn lamp post, where three children prance like cherubim. Yumi recognizes that, "The light represented in this painting is artificial, but also important for lighting our way. For this we must be thankful". Yumi, also, chooses this painting because she loves children, and predicts that children are our hope for the future. She, therefore, embraces them for they alone will determine our survival. An inscription underneath the painting reads, "The city lights casting over the Alexander 3 bridge in Paris. This is the 2nd painting of the "Beyond the Light" theme. The statues of children represent our future. Peace on Earth!

And, so you have it, Yumi's vision. The light of nature and the artificial light created by man to simulate. In Yumi's vision, we are seekers. "We seek the Light, we move Toward the Light, and once Beyond the Light, we become the Light. We are the Light". The choice now is what we do with the Light once we achieve it. It is every individual's personal choice...our individual journeys to become the Light. "It is what we do with it that matters". I believe this is what Yumi envisions, what she imbues into each canvas that she touches. The Light that radiates from the vision within her, and pours out onto her brush.

Witness to this are her many paintings that coat the eye and shower the mind with blinding colors of light, as seen in "Dusk in Paris", a shimmering flood of pure golden light at sunset, along a riverbank walkway. A colorful couple walks along the left bank of the river, where the entire city scene is bathed in gold so brilliant, that it bounces off every molecule of architecture, water and space. Seen up close or viewed far across the room, the golden light in this painting mesmerizes and enraptures.

Likewise, "Adieu and Hello", a painted tale of enchantment and mummery as seen at the Grand Circus, is filled with fantasy, fiction and grand performances cascaded with warm citron light shining down upon the players in the center ring. Of this piece, Yumi says, "Life is like a Grand Circus filled with laughter, suspense, running and stumbling. But Light is always there for us to find".



"Adieu and Hello", by artist, YUMI
IMAGES ARE COPYRIGHT PROTECTED

Her animal portraits convey the same joy of Light with their spontaneity and humour. Particularly enduring to me was one small painting named "Peek-a-Boo"! It is a miniature painting of a fluffy puppy who has shoved his head through a small partition, but didn't quite fit the opening. He is obviously elated with this game, and does not appear to notice or care that his ears are pinned back on the other side of the opening. Absolutely charming, purely comedic and so full of the Light of baby things.

This pouring out and capturing of Light transcended into an unusual venture for Yumi, who recently participated in a comedic musical drama presented by Ciao Bella Ristorante in La Mesa. The play entitled, "Every Painting Tells a Story", was based on the tale of Romeo and Juliet and centered around a monk named Friar Lawrence. In the play, Yumi is the Painter, who paints a portrait of Romeo from the beginning of the story to the final scene, where it is presented. She expected to paint for five performances, thus producing five portraits of Romeo. What she did not expect was the "acting part". The Light of her brush swiftly became the Light and birth of her thespian abilities, and she got quite the workout during the performances. Everyone loved it, and Yumi soon found herself, and her Light, stretched to two additional performances. Seven in all. Seven performances, seven Romeos. It was a priceless experience, in which the portrait of herself became another projection of Light that she had not expected. Happily exhausted, Yumi eagerly returned to the Light that she knows. Her brushes and oils. And, the Light poured forth once more.

Please join Yumi in this celebration of Light, Peace, Harmony and Love. A visit to her exhibition is always an enlightening experience, and a confirmation of Yumi's wish for a better world. A world where we walk in the Light. Most importantly, she believes in the vision.  I have to admit, when I am in her presence and long after, I can see no better vision than Peace, Harmony and Love on Earth. Yumi invites us all to travel "Beyond the Light" and guarantee a peaceful future through our children.



"Seine - Paris", by artist, YUMI
IMAGES ARE COPYRIGHT PROTECTED


Yumi Climenson lives in La Mesa, California where she paints as an artist dedicated to her vision. She may be contacted through her website at: www.yumi-art.com. For lectures, demos and workshops contact Yumi at (619) 697-0465, or by email at:
yumi-art@juno.com.



Written and posted by Cassandra Shepard, Studio 32
text and content copyrighted, 2011, all rights reserved