Category Archives: Fashion

Lara Dann, Eclectix Interview 31

Lara Dann

Born in Rochester, New York – Lara Dann has moved all over the US and various parts of California. A product of divorced parents and a struggling, single mother she experienced a good bit of uprooted change and transition. When Lara turned 12 years old, her mother remarried and she acquired a loving and supportive step-father that was influential in raising her to adulthood. About a move from California to Vermont she says- 
“Huge culture shock. It was 1985-86 and I was a part of the Madonna craze. I showed up to school with jelly shoes, arm full of black rubber bangles, shirt off the shoulder. The works. I was used to being the new girl, but this look was too much for the kids with flannel shirts and high tops. I was ridiculed by the girls and stared at by the boys, so making friends was always a challenge. I kept to myself and was very shy because I didn’t want conflict- but that just came off as bitchy.”
After finishing high school, Lara (now back in New York),  went into advertising design- a field she worked in for about 6 years before becoming disenchanted with the competitive nature of the work environment.
“I did a 180 and went to school full time to become a LMT (licensed massage therapist) and that experience has really enriched my life both creatively and personally.”
After 9/11 and the ensuing economic downturn in New York, a failed business venture and a short stint in Baltimore – Lara and her family got a job offer in Knoxville TN. They have been there for about 5 years, a small and safe place to raise a family. Lara is also introducing advertising back into her life as well as maintaining her therapist skills.
 
 
 
 
Eclectix first noticed Lara’s pretty and fashionable art a number of years ago and lately we’ve been impressed and excited by the direction it has taken. Her stronger imagery and style consists of  beautiful woven tapestries- gracefully layered with subtle hints – mixing fairy tale colors and darker mysteries. Decorative motifs and lacy patterns weave in and out, clouds of softly hued haze surround and swirl within the subjects. Victorian hair, trance-like,  emotive faces and mystic symbolism – all weave together to produce astounding dreamlike visions. There is a serene and hypnotic calm reflected in the eyes of her subjects, calling to us from the netherlands of the spiritual world.
 
 
 
 
My favorite art memory from my childhood is…  I was about 8 years old when I re-drew the menu from a Farrell’s Ice Cream parlor picture of a couple sharing a fountain soda with acute accuracy. A random couple saw it and offered me 20 dollars for it and told me I was going be someone special in art to watch one day, and they wanted my first artwork. That was the moment that I realized that drawing pictures wasn’t just for me. They don’t know it- but that gesture of payment made a huge impact on my outlook on art and it’s potential for me.
 
 My interest in art/painting started …  My interest in art started as a young child, except I didn’t see it as “art” until I was much older. For me, it was what I did to pacify and soothe myself. I didn’t have any interest in watching TV. I spent most of my time outdoors, exploring for hours, most of the time independently, but when I was indoors, I was always drawing. I can remember that it started around 3 years old, when my parents divorced.
 
 
 
I am often inspired and motivated by…. Vintage items, nostalgia. I pull most of my inspiration from nature, although I don’t paint or draw landscapes. Insects and human anatomy is very inspiring also, not just muscle and bone, but the neurology and physiology of our makeup and that of entomology. I draw a lot of inspiration from personal heartache, childhood experiences, and desire. None of these examples are ever “in your face” but I weave that energy and imagery into my work and I think subtle impressions of those things emerge.
 
 
 
 
If I could spend the day with any artist (dead or alive) it would be…
If it’s ANY artist- I would choose Ludwig Van Beethtoven. He was such a complex and intense individual. And we would…  I would love to just soak up some of the terror he experienced as an artist, and as a person, and observe how he translated that pain into something beautiful. That would take more than a day I suppose. Andy Warhol would be a choice as well. He was so influential, creative and prolific. I am not a musician, or a pop artist, but I am not interested in watching tutorials about how they created their work, I am interested in how they lived their life, and what defined them as artists through their own personal lens.
 
 
 
 
The tip or art technique (a specific tidbit of craft, advice or mechanical expertise) that has helped me the most is …. The most important advice I have- is to do whatever it is you want to develop- for at least 20 min everyday. No matter what. I really think the thing that helped me the most is experimenting. Just making a mess- and NOT creating for a finished result or product. When you take away all expectation, you have the freedom to get to know yourself through your imagery. Use uncommon objects in uncommon ways and paint, draw, or photograph it. You don’t make anything that makes any sense, and you don’t make anything you will show anyone, but you engage your creative brain, and become intimate with your process and your materials and eventually you create your own language through it.
 
 
 
 
If I could own one piece of art, out of the world’s collections, it would be …
I do appreciate and am able to distinguish fine, quality craftsmanship. However, I fear I don’t know enough about the world’s collections to answer this objectively- I mean- what if I say something like Klimt whom I adore- and then I’ve missed out on that ONE famous black velvet painting. Every piece has it’s place. I appreciate such a wide range of artwork that I cannot place a degree of importance on something on display in a museum, vs. something my own child created. If I were forced to choose one over the other, I would choose to be surrounded by my children’s creations.
 
 
My favorite piece of my own art is… (below), because…
Well, I am a bit partial of the drawing I did when I was 6 years old because it is so honest, innocent and unabashed. It’s a drawing I did after my mother explained where babies came from. I wanted to know exactly. Every detail and because she never lied to me, and was a bit too honest, she told me quite literally, how and where they came from. And then I drew it. Every detail. I showed it to her, and she giggled, as an appreciative mother would I suppose to such a drawing, and I immediately felt embarrassed, so I tried to scratch my name off of it. It still makes me laugh to this day. Of my current works, I would say “Dangerous Garden” (detail at top of post, entire image at bottom of post). Because it was about a dream I had that was very intense.
 

Lara's childhood drawing

 My ultimate project or fantasy is …  There are a few artists that I would like to collaborate with. There have been discussions, but it’s hard to get on the same page, especially with distance between you and projects that are so spontaneous on both ends, working out a time line, etc. Hopefully that will be something that can happen in the near future. A fantasy would be to become published, or a pro surfer. One can dream.
The last song I choose to listen to was…  I’m on a Rolling Stones kick lately. I’ll listen to that until my ears bleed, over and over until I can’t listen to it again for years. That’s like with everything I do. I do it to the extreme- and then move on.
 
 
 
 
The last book I couldn’t put down was …. “The Anatomy of Evil”  by Michael H. Stone, MD. For a bit of research on a project.
 
My favorite word is … I can’t think of a favorite word, as much as I can think of words I can’t stand to hear: “slacks” and “meal”. Shivers, right?
 
 
 
 
I can’t live without …  My children and my husband/partner, Todd. But bottled spring water is really up there on the list!
 
It’s not hip, but I really love ….  board games.
 
My favorite motto (or quote)  is….   “Fuck em if they can’t take a joke”
 
 
 
 
Your works have a foggy, mysterious dreamy style… do you work from a detailed rough?  Or do you improvise and let the image evolve as you paint? 
Thank you. Both. Until recently – I didn’t do a lot of pre-sketching or detailed roughs. I just went head on into it, and adjusted as I went. That suited a very good purpose when I was developing my style, but as I am fine tuning and defining it, I am becoming more disciplined about laying out my ideas beforehand. I became frustrated with getting too far along with a piece and it being too late to add something that I really wanted there, and since I work in visible layers, this is very important to hammer out in the beginning. However, I do allow myself to improvise, especially if I feel I’ve ruined a piece during stages. Often I let mistakes take center stage and adjust to them and I am always fascinated with the process of taking a back seat to the painting process, observing what emerges from it and not controlling it too much.
 
 
 
 
If you could live anywhere in the world, where would that be?  Have you ever been somewhere that causes you to get a physical reaction? It’s similar to the feeling you get from being attracted to someone. You feel like the cells in your body are lining up, your heart beats a bit faster, your mind and senses open just a little more and you are rejuvenated. That is what I felt when I landed in London. I felt like I was home, but it was the first time I had been there. I would like to live in England. But, another place that I fell in love with is Kauai, an island of Hawaii. There is something raw and magical about that place. I would enjoy either of those, and for different reasons.
 
 
Upcoming shows:
June – group show at XL Gallery in Florida
In the fall –  the moon goddess show curated by Aunia Kahn,
 

Darla Teagarden, Eclectix Interview 30

Darla Teagarden

Darla is a mixed media artist – combining the arts of photography, fashion and theater sets to produce some very artful and inspiring shots. Formerly a stylist, model and dancer, her current works are photographic – often hand drawing the backgrounds and using recycled or vintage props. Darla’s works are wonderfully dramatic, peek-a-boo-like window displays into postcard historical fantasies. They are decorative, feminine and tactile – woven vaudeville beauties. She currently lives in Austin, Texas in a blue house with her son, 3 dogs, a dwarf rabbit and a black pot bellied pig.

The Butcher’s Daughter – Darla Teagarden

My favorite art memory from my childhood is…. I loved vacationing in Northern California… fishing and camping in Lake Shasta. I pretended I owned and controlled parts of the ”wild” and tried to ignore the humdrum- Kitsch of non denominational suburban life as an only child back home.

Evening Field – Darla Teagarden

My interest in art/painting started ….  I’ve been a visual artist actively since 2003 , when I was a mixed media painter. Before then, I studied dance, worked in the vintage retail industry and did some modeling.

Vaudevillian Water Deity- Darla Teagarden

I am often inspired and motivated by…. working self taught artists. The majority of successful artists I know had a leg up through supportive artist parents, college etc… But I love someone’s story when it comes , in a way, from left field as a way to be heard and sometimes to survive.

Conjure in the Rose Garden – Darla Teagarden

If I could spend the day with any artist (dead or alive) it would be… Frida Kahlo. I imagine we would be two peas in a pod. We’d hang out at her Blue house, have a well-made table with lots of food and booze and we would discuss the state of the world.

Darla Teagarden

The tip or art technique (a specific tidbit of craft, advice or mechanical expertise) that has helped me the most is …. Don’t be a giant fragile weakling. You are going to suck, so get over it and just DO. Do it, because you have something to say. Don’t fail small, fail big.

Octo Dutchess, Sea Salt – Darla Teagarden

If I could own one piece of art, out of the world’s collections, it would be … Otto Dix’s Anita Berber. (below)  Anita and the time period in which Otto worked has personal significance to me.

Otto Dix’s- Anita Berber

My favorite piece of my own art is…. My next thing, because if you dwell on something that went right, mixed with all the interruption of life ( which we know there are many) you can get lazy or bored.

The Hostess – Darla Teagarden

My ultimate project or fantasy is … Being paid to travel to shoot and write about amazing people.

Audubon’s Secret Love – Darla Teagarden

The last song I choose to listen to was… Anna Calvi, Jezebel/Moulinette Single.

Lady Tether Heart – Darla Teagarden

The last book I couldn’t put down was…. Laura Hillenbrand’s Unbroken. I know many talented people, some great, but it doesn’t mean shit to me if they are giant tools. I resepct and admire stories about great souls who survive without trading it all in. Last fiction book that moved me that way, was Middlesex  by Jeffrey Eugenides.

Showgirl Kitty – Darla Teagarden

My favorite word is … lately.. “Seabiscuit”

Darla Teagarden

I can’t live without …  Creating. Even if it’s just a collection of beautiful things to look at. Something in the air must always be moving and asking me questions.

The Mourning Cage - Darla Teagarden

It’s not hip, but I really love ….  I’m pretty sure ”not hip” is hip… but I’ll have to choose going to Disneyland. Nothing hip about wearing comfortable shoes, mouse ears, and renting a jazzy to get ahead in lines… if one was so inclined.

Bambina de Assisi – Darla Teagarden

If you could live anywhere in the world, where would it be and why? I would live in Spain… So many beautiful people and places.  I’ve always had a love for Barcelona and Madrid..

Bee Charmer - Darla Teagarden

My favorite motto (or quote) is…  “Life shrinks or expands in proportion to one’s courage.” by  Anais Nin. Simple and true.

Maharani Kishori – Darla Teagarden

Link to Darla’s Website & Portfolio

Mary Jane Ansell, Eclectix Interview 16

Mary Jane Ansell

“ Ultimately, make sure it’s yourself who you are trying to impress the most, with each new piece! ” 

Dan, BP Portrait Award - Mary Jane Ansell

I first saw Mary Jane’s work while playing tourist in London, at the BP Awards show at the National Portrait Gallery (above and below). I was completely floored by her incredible, detailed rendering. Every single hair was captured in all it’s own minute detail! Mary Jane’s art just left a beautiful ache in my heart, haunting me as I left the exhibition. Her latest series, “The Beauty of the Hours” is a graceful, moody and captivating group of work. She currently works from her studio in Brighton’s North Laine, after going for her morning walk on the beach. 

Georgie, BP Portrait Award - Mary Jane Ansell

Can you tell us where you were born and a little history about your childhood?  I was born in South Shropshire, England, in a beautiful spot in the middle of the country side – our neighbors were cows, foxes, sheep… we kept lots of wildlife – raised ducks, climbed trees that sort of thing, very rural idyl – I’ve always thought it was a great way to grow up in terms of developing a kids imagination, my brother and I were always disappearing off for some “adventure” or another and coming back covered in mud and leaves… we never got to fester the concept of boredom!

Toy Soldiers – Mary Jane Ansell

What was first piece of art that you remember creating?  Ahh – this is funny, my mum’s just given me a couple of examples of just this in fact – I used to make tiny little pop up scenes – I can vividly remember making a desert island, about 2 1/2 inches across complete with coconut tree and a shark patrolling its waters – the shark was on a little handle so you could make him swim about… I read a lot then but I cant remember what I was reading that inspired that!

Girl Reflected, “The Beauty of the Hours” – Mary Jane Ansell

What inspired/prompted the vision/image for the most recent piece you completed?  I’ve just had a solo show, “The Beauty of the Hours”.  In this new body of work, centering on a series of pictures of Georgie and Sofia, two models who I’ve been working with a lot over the last couple of years.

The Beauty of the Hours – Mary Jane Ansell

I wanted to play with the kind of imagery that the classic portraits and fashion shoots for Vogue which Cecil Beaton produced in the 50′s called to my mind. Mixed with nineteenth-century French academic salon painting- Ingres, Bouguereau… those kinds of influences. At the same time I was working on a portrait of Henry Allingham, WWI veteran (and at one time oldest man in the world) for Armistice Day. Polar opposites – that I must say I relished.

Mary Jane Ansell

If there was an artist, dead or alive, that you could spend 24 hours with; who would it be and what would you do?  Right now I’d go for Ingres or Bouguereau to take me through their techniques… it depends what I’m tackling as to who’s brain I’d like to pick most!

Mary Jane Ansell

Do you work from live models sitting most the time? from photos?  I work in a number of ways depending on the piece – often I’ll begin with thumbnail sketches – really quick notes to get the idea down. I may be working with a particular sitter or I’ll look for a model and location that suits the mood of that idea. I work in a slow process, building up many layers. Back in the studio I work from many, many reference photos – but it’s important to keep your hand in, working from life too. There is no substitute for understanding the subtleties of skin color than to work from life.

Girl In A Naval Cap, “The Beauty of the Hours” - Mary Jane Ansell

What materials, specific brand of paint/glue/pencil do you prefer to use? I prefer M. Graham or Old Holland Oils, Rosemary and Co. brushes and Spectrum mediums. I’m an inveterate tester of techniques, always seeking the holy grail of the perfect tools. The perfect medium, trying to adjust the feel of the paint under the brush just so, the speed it dries, the shine (or lack of it) and all the other considerations that go in to bringing about the image that you started out with in your minds eye!

By Her Own Hand - Mary Jane Ansell

Is there a technique, procedure or tip that you have discovered, you could pass onto other artists? Keep looking for your unique visual language – it’s the one that rings most true, keep pushing yourself and learning. Don’t lose sight of what you love about it, prepare for very long hours, lots of plate spinning, be professional. Write down your techniques! Don’t reinvent the wheel – most of this stuff has been honed by someone somewhere… and ultimately make sure it’s yourself who you are trying to impress the most with each new piece!

Mary Jane Ansell

What is your favorite word? Elbow.   Last song you chose to listen to? Elbow.

Mary Jane Ansell

If you could pick one piece of art to own, out of the world’s museums, personal collections and galleries, what would it be? Too many… probably Ingres’ Grand Odalisque (below) so I could pour over it’s technique.

Ingres' Grand Odalisque

Of all your works, what is your own personal favorite? What was the thought or vision behind the work and why is it your favorite?  I’m not sure I have a favorite – some mean more than others to me – the pieces I’ve had selected for the BP Portrait Award for example, I’ve kept those.

Hear No, See No, Speak No, Part II - Mary Jane Ansell

What was the last event/movie/art/anything that really moved you emotionally? Be it sad, angry or happy?  The unveiling of my portrait of the WWI veteran was very moving – finally getting to show it to the friends and family and seeing their response meant a lot. (below)

Henry Allingham, WWI veteran - Mary Jane Ansell

I can’t live without … Coffee in the morning

The Cafe - Mary Jane Ansell

It’s not hip, but I really love … Reading old cookery books in bed.

Mary Jane Ansell

My favorite motto is…. Follow your bliss. (Joseph Campbell)

Mary Jane Ansell

Mary Jane’s Website 

LINK to the current Eclectix website – art news & exhibit listings

(This entry was  originally posted on 1/24/11 and transferred here –  as we are discontinuing our other blog site)

Dean McDowell, Eclectix Interview 12

Dean McDowell

“ When you experience or see things no child should, it really does manifest itself in the psyche. I certainly wouldn’t say it helped form who I have become but it does put a lot of crap into perspective …” 

Rainy Day Blues - McDowell

Dean is an exceptional newbrow artist who has shown works with Eclectix in the past. His acrylic portraits have a wonderfully deep base of fleshy, thick textures and layered strokes, some hint of mummy wrappings. The images evoke emotion, red eyed from crying, some bruised and bloodied by life or it’s vampires, some lipstick smeared and hinting of violent encounters. They may have been victims, hardened by abuse; becoming cold and indifferent as a form of self-defense and survival. In spite of it all, beautiful and sensual colors bleed through, and a strong and silent resolve matures.

Dean McDowell

 Can you tell us where you were born and a little history about your childhood?  I was born in Gransha, a small town land near the Mourne mountains, Northern Ireland. The best word I can use to describe my childhood is mischief, I was pretty wild from an early age and growing up in a rural setting made adventures a standard occurrence. Being so isolated lead me to art early in my life, I loved nothing more than to sit and sketch something like a piece of rusted barbed wire hanging from a post.

Programmed - McDowell

Is there an event or experience that helped form who you are today? Simply living in Northern Ireland, growing up through the ‘troubles’ has given me a skewed perspective on life. When you experience or see things no child should, it really does manifest itself in the psyche. I certainly wouldn’t say it helped form who I have become but it does put a lot of crap into perspective, it gives me a grounding I will never lose. When people first discover my artwork they find the imagery can be dark but in all truthfulness, the work I have on show through either galleries or online, although personal, is by no means a dark window into my soul, it is merely my perspective on the emotions of others.

Mike Mignola’s "Hellboy"

What was first piece of art that you remember creating? The media?  You know I wish I could remember but thinking back I was always doodling, mostly in pencil or charcoal. Actually my first really fond memory is getting an early taste for American comics, trying to copy the style or creating my own. A particular favourite? So many but when I really got serious about comics in the 80′s I always followed the work of Mike Mignola (above), from the pre Hellboy era right to present. I still check out the latest Mignola offerings, his style is so unique and beautifully bold. I simply remember being blown away by the artistic style of that era; this of course was before the UK fought back with the now legendary 2000AD series. So yeah, my early creations were heavily influenced by the comic genre.

BitterSweet - McDowell

What generally inspires you to create a piece?  Life, it’s that simply. It inspires, depresses, anger’s me on a daily basis. Whether I’m simply watching people go about their daily routines or listening/watching the worlds ‘lifecasts’ though the media, you cannot help but to be inspired. Actually, I find most new paintings will constantly evolve as the inspiration pulls me in many differing directions. In fact, I am certain no one painting I have finished has ended how I imagined it would at the beginning.

The Lady of Shalott (1888) - John William Waterhouse

If there was an artist, dead or alive, that you could spend 24 hours with; who would it be and what would you do?  God, that’s such a hard question to answer, there are so many wonderful artists past and present I would love to share thoughts with. One artist I studied in college was John William Waterhouse, I have always loved both his subject matter and artistic technique. (above) The first time I came across his works I was simply in awe, that hasn’t changed. Of those living in this modern age of art, I would say Mark Ryden (below), perhaps a very common choice but nonetheless his artwork has that otherworldly feel but screams out with a cultural voice. I’m sure he would be a very interesting man to spend some time around.

Mark Ryden

What materials, specific brand of paint/glue/pencil do you prefer to use? A favorite? And why?  Nothing specific, anything that’s at hand is good although I must admit, the technique I have developed means I go through an extraordinary amount of paint brushes. If anyone has come across an extremely hard-wearing brush please let me know.

Savage Smile - McDowell

Is there a technique, procedure or tip that you have discovered, you could pass onto other artists?  With my acrylic works I tend to use multiple layers to build texture and focus on low relief colours, once I am nearing completion of a work I will often water down the acrylics and use them as watercolours, this helps finishing tones and blends. Trail and error is the best method of finding a technique that is often unique to ones work.

(Click to see larger textures )- McDowell

Your works have killer thick and contrary under-textures, would you share how you build these and with what?  When I first start a canvas I will do a preliminary sketch of what’s in my mind for a finished work, I shall then block in very basic bold colors that can be worked over and give that textured layered look. Generally all paintings are started with really heavy acrylic but as it progresses the paint gets watered and lighter until you get a near watercolor finish.

Monster - McDowell

What is your favorite word? Last song you chose to listen to?  Favorite word – Cruthine(An asteroid in orbit around the Sun) The last song I listened to, or am currently listening to as I write is “Black Bullet” by Die So Fluid.

Boreas (1902) - Waterhouse

If you could pick one piece of art to own, out of the world’s museums, personal collections and galleries, what would it be? Not being picky although I do have my favorites, any works of art by Waterhouse. (above)  The works of Waterhouse have been a constant in my life, studying or simply admiring them I can’t help but to forever be awed by the mans work.

Dean McDowell

Of all your works, what is your own personal favorite? Actually I don’t have a favorite, every work I produce I feel I could have improved upon it. In all honestly I am my own worst critic, at times I’m not sure how I produce anything. Frustration is a good word to sum up my time spent in the studio, I constantly battle my inner doubts.

Disconnected - McDowell

What is the last piece you completed? What triggered the imagery in it?  The last work completed was a painting for the “Twilight Journeys” show at the Alternative Cafe, the work is called ‘Disconnected’. (above)  Its a 30x30cm painting on box canvas and the imagery is very much an emotive piece relating to grim emotions and how even being totally disconnected from everything around you, we as individuals cannot escape life’s ever presence.

Not Everyone Gets A Happy Ending - Dean McDowell

You recently became a father, right? How has that impacted your art? Any tips for new parents trying to keep up with their art?  That is correct and what a wonderful if frightening time that was and of course is. It impacted my art to the extent that I have basically had to take an 18 month break from all things art, unrealistically I thought I’d be away from things for 3 maybe four months, how naive I was. The only tip I can give is to not have any shows lined up for at least a 12 month period, IF you don’t have the works already finished and of course, enjoy every minute…..

Dean McDowell

What was the last event/movie/art/anything that really moved you emotionally? I still haven’t gotten over the birth of my daughter, god I was so unprepared. More recently and on a stranger note, I have been studying the emotional instability of children’s authors. So many talented people wasting so much of their lives through insecurity and self doubt but when they did manage to gather enough emotional togetherness to achieve their goals the results were astounding.

Hidden Thoughts - McDowell

Any last words or commentary; good or bad you would like to share or get off your chest? A favorite quote?  Just a simply thank you for those who have taken an interest in my words and works, hearing comments or feedback good or bad is always meaningful and very much appreciated.

Be Absolute - McDowell

For more Dean - On FaceBook:  click here.

Website: http://www.deanmcdowellartist.com/index.html

Contact: deanmcdowellartist@gmail.com

LINK to the current Eclectix website – art news & exhibit listings

(This entry was  originally posted on 10/19/10 and transferred here –  as we are discontinuing our other blog site)