Argentinian photographer Florencia Mazza Ramsay spent years jaunting from one private island to another capturing the latest fashion and automotive trends—but nine months ago, she traded in her Prada heels for something warmer to visit Barrow, Alaska. The trip, which took her thousands of miles away from the desert Southwest, found her in the Antarctic producing thousands of images to document the change in culture, climate and direction of a small yet impactful heritage.
NORTHERNMOST: FRAGMENTS OF AN ARTIC FIELD SEASON is the premiere exhibition for Ramsay since returning from Alaska last year. After traveling for three months with UTEP graduate students, professors and international scientists, she hopes to share her experiences with the world.
Ramsay’s past portfolios include work for Ralph Lauren, Porsche and Juxtapoz. After some time analyzing life and its voices, Ramsay delved into documentaries that express an expansive collection of life, its challenges and changes. Her black and white digital images captured life’s experiences with the residents of this deeply isolated area and provide an artists journey into the climate changes they endure.
“This is a powerful presentation of images Ramsay compiled from her time in Barrow. I couldn’t think of a better time to display her work, allowing El Pasoans a glimpse of life beyond our own borders, conceptualizing how others live on a border thousands of miles away which contribute to the isolation of those lines,” said gallery owner, Kimberly Rene’ Vanecek.
“I had to leave everything in El Paso to go to the middle of nowhere. It’s the complete opposite of what life is in El Paso—there is a lot of sacrifice to gain this knowledge. My main purpose was to document scientific effort and the way of life of the local culture and how they react with a very threated environment,” said Ramsay.
The premier of Ramsay’s exhibit serves as a platform for future documentaries in the region. NORTHERNMOST: FRAGMENTS OF AN ARTIC FIELD SEASON will kick off Thursday, April 14 at 6 p.m. and continue through May 5, 2016. A workshop led by the artist will be revealed during the opening exhibition.
The Art Avenue Gallery hours are Tuesday-Friday 11 a.m.-5 p.m.; Monday and Saturday by appointment only, at 1618 Texas Ave. Suite E. For additional information or questions, please email info@theartave.com or call 915.213.4318.
On Thursday, March 24, 2016, The Art Avenue Gallery hosted the workshop titled: Memento, a workshop imparted by artist Rhonda Doré. During the workshop, Doré talked about her creative process and how that leads to the creation of her unique paintings. By the end of the evening, the attendees had learned how to paint unique pieces that where both rich in color and texture.
Click on the image below to view the photo gallery of this event.
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The University of Texas at El Paso’s loss is Kent State University’s gain. Visiting Assistant Professor Demitra Ryan Thomloudis was working in the metals department for the 2014-2015 academic year when she was offered to head the Jewelry/Metals/Enameling program at Kent State University in Ohio. She is currently settling into her new position and found it hard leaving El Paso after making strong connections at UTEP, with both faculty and the community. The Art Avenue met with Thomloudis to discuss her influences, her message and her future.
Demitra Thomloudis at Kent State University, Ohio
You just moved from Texas to Ohio, what are your plans for 2016?
I am currently in the process of settling into my new studio and new academic life here. I will be continuing my research with the hopes to continue to build new material vocabularies for future projects.
How does material and techniques influence your work?
Materials are a major aspect of my practice and truly the driving force behind my work. Aspects of material I feel can speak loudly and signal significant information to the viewer.
What materials do you typically work with?
I typically work with industrial materials that are commonly associated with architecture or construction. I am interested in how these materials can be repurposed within the context of jewelry.
Is there a message you are hoping to create through your design?
My work directly relates to architecture and the built environment. I aim to create jewelry that captures a moment between material, time and place that purposefully interacts with human form. By relating to the aesthetics of architecture in this way I see jewelry having the potential to connect us closer to the world we are surrounded by.
As you are designing and creating your works, do you envision the individual that would be wearing your pieces?
No, I see my work as being universal to all.
What are you working on right now?
I am currently working on a personal body of work and a collaborative collection of works Influenced by a distinctive stretch of the Interstate 10 corridor that links the metropolitan cities of El Paso and Ciudad Juárez to the sweeping landscape of Las Cruces. The result of these works will be debuted in an exhibition entitled Cross Pass which presents new and collaborative works by myself and Motoko Furuhashi as we explore this unique country/state border region.
Together we aim to create works within the construct and intentions of jewelry/object to enable an intimate physical connection between the body and the vastness of our surroundings. We are devoted to this particular stretch of highway as the baseline for our personal and shared inquiries, and respond to a land awash with dramatic terrain, vernacular architecture and a multitude of boundaries.
The current works we are showing in the magazine reflect the landscapes of El Paso—can you tell our readers a little more about this?
Yes, this work is part of five other works all entitled “Viento: BLOCK.” These pieces are made from concrete, steel and pigmented with bright colors. The forms, materials and colors are all reminiscent of the surrounding architecture and landscape of the El Paso area.
How did you start in this field?
It was by accident. I originally went to school to study medical illustration. I took a class as an elective course in jewelry and was totally hooked. I had to change my major that same year.
Do you feel your interest in medicine has overlapped into your current works at all?
When I look back, I think my interest in the body has always been the driving force for my creative inquires. Medical illustration fulfilled that at one point, but what it was missing was materiality. I am absolutely in love with traditions of Metalsmithing and its possibilities. With this training I see and explore materials through the eye of a jeweler, which allows me to present materials differently than lets say a sculptor. I see this as a distinct advantage.
What challenges do you encounter to find a receptive audience to your unique style of work?
The challenge for me is that my work is not typically what you think of when you think of jewelry. I am constantly fighting an uphill battle, but at the same time I asked for it. I want to challenge what jewelry is. I make work that makes you think about the possibilities of what jewelry can be or what is presented as such. I see jewelry as being an expressive art form just like any other medium such as painting or sculpture. My work is not static, it is complete when worn on the body and therefore operates within the realm of Jewelry.
Do you have any mentors or inspirational individuals who played a key role in guiding you along your career?
I am lucky to be among and supported by a spectacular mixture of both established and emerging talent since the time I was in school till this present day. This field is so very intimate that every individual I have met over the years has contributed or inspired me and my dedication to the crafts in some capacity. I am fortunate to have studied under Kathy Buszkiewicz, Matt Hollern and Sondra Sherman who have supported me countlessly over the years, and to have encouragement from mentors such as Renee Zettle-Sterling and Rachelle Thiewes.
On Thursday March 10, 2016, The Art Avenue Gallery was proud to host the works of artist Rhonda Doré. Attendees had the opportunity to experience the exhibition entitled Above and Below, at The Art Avenue Gallery, located on 1618 Texas Avenue Suite E. The exhibit featured artworks from two of Dore´s recent series: The Archaeology of Memory and Where Things Bloom.
Click on the image below to see the photos of this magnificent evening.
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For just 24 hours a most unlikely venue—an underused transit canopyclose to the El Paso/Juarez border—was transformed into a glitzy, avant garde party space this past fall for the Beaux Arts Party, an annual costume ball sponsored by Texas Tech University College of Architecture.
The substantial project, dubbed Flash Installation, was headed by TTU professors and co-founders of the Missouri-based architecture and design collaborative AGENCY, Ersela Kripa and Stephen Mueller and executed by TTU students. The project repurposed hundreds of standard roadway barrier barrels to create a suspended, reflective cloud beneath the steel canopy. “The installation effectively humanizes the expansive infrastructure, signaling new uses for a one-night event and future explorations of life under the canopy,” according to Kripa. “The barrel cloud creates a visual and acoustic ceiling for a dance floor and food trucks, mitigating the human scale of inhabitation with the infrastructural scale of the canopy space and repurposed objects.”
The installation was radically short-lived, with all construction and de-installation taking place in a 24-hour timeframe. The barrels were dismounted and returned to the barrier supplier the morning after the event. They are now back in commission as roadway barriers city-wide.
AGENCY recognized that the barrels, which are readily available for temporary rental at minimal cost, would provide the ideal ‘found material’ for transforming the superscaled space. The barrels themselves are extremely light and easily manipulated into a variety of positions. “They are also highly volumetric, providing minimal structural impact on the existing canopy while maximizing the visual presence. Multiplied in 16 rows and 16 columns, the barrels define their own topography, echoing the lines of the distant mountains. The new suspended ceiling defines zones of intensity and intimacy below the superstructure,” said Mueller.
The barrels also come ready-made with a large surface area of bichromatic reflective tape, which AGENCY used to activate the installation visually. The barrel cloud took on new life, creating atmospheric lighting effects as it interacted with dappled sunlight, passing headlights, event lighting and flash photography.
To complement the aerial installation, a secondary element was installed on the parking lot surface itself. Composed of 300 flexible roadway reflectors, the ground pattern is calibrated to form an anamorphic image. When viewed from a particular angle, the seemingly randomly placed reflectors are recomposed as pixels of a recognizable image.
Proceeds from event sales and donations benefited TTU School of Architecture’s chapter of the American Institute of Architectural Students. The project seeks to open dialogue with the city and the school to imagine new uses for the underutilized canopy space.
El Paso, TX—Abstract painter Rhonda Doré’s new exhibit parallels the change in the weather in the Borderplex. In her collection Where Things Bloom the artist layered canvas with acrylic paint, placing soft hued petal shapes throughout the pieces. She challenges the viewer to create a story in each work of art, encouraging them to see the beauty of the natural world instead of the struggles within our own lives.
In her second series Archaeology of Memory Doré found inspiration in pieces of paper: a receipt, a diploma, a stub from a musical performance. She transforms a small tangible memory and creates a story through her application of mixed media collages on canvas. “These paintings are like ore. They reveal glimpses of metal and color like precious stones. I’m exploring a parallel between the inclusions in rock, and small meaningful occurrences in our lives,” said Doré.
A self-taught painter, Doré has been drawing and painting for the last 15 years, yet learning from podcasts and other web based programs to build her painting career. She is currently the vice president and group creative director at Sanders/Wingo, an El Paso advertising agency.
“This collection really shows a breakthrough for this artist with the use of metallics. It’s a bolder collection of colors,” said The Art Avenue Gallery owner, Kimberly Rene’ Vanecek. “Where Things Bloom takes a softer approach with her application of small petal-like pieces that appear to float throughout the canvas,” said Vanecek.
For those that follow Doré’s work, you will find her initial approach to painting hasn’t changed—she still wants each piece, no matter the size, to have a story. It may be the actual story from pieces embedded in the artwork, or it could simply be your own interpretation.
Above and Below: Where Things Bloom & Archaeology of Memory will be on display Thursday, March 10, 2016 through April 10, 2016. The Art Avenue Gallery will be hosting a workshop with Doré on Thursday March 26 at 6 p.m.
The Art Avenue Gallery hours are Tuesday-Friday 11 a.m.-5 p.m.; Monday and Saturday by appointment only, at 1618 Texas Ave. Suite E. For additional information or questions, please email info@theartave.com or call 915.213.4318.
On Thursday, February 11, 2016, The Art Avenue Gallery hosted Regimen, a workshop imparted by pop artist Reggie Watterson. During the workshop, Watterson talked to the attendees about his distinctive paintings that feature fruit and vegetables and how these offer endless possibilities to a canvas. He also discuss his creative process and his use multilevel color combinations.
Click on the image below to view the photo gallery of this event.
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As a child, Suzi Davidoff used to go driving with her father.
They took road trips all throughout the American West, traveling in New Mexico, Arizona, Texas and California.
And as her father motored down highways, Davidoff admired shifting landscapes—the arid deserts, the wide-open grasslands, the forested mountains.
These experiences, the El Paso artist said, were the earliest intimations of what later inspired her work.
Flatbed Press, Austin, TX monotype process, 2014
“The landscape and the sky and the horizon, and the whole feeling of having this limitless space, were all really important to me,” Davidoff said.
“We’d be driving in the West, like from El Paso to San Diego or from El Paso to Northern Arizona, and that immediacy of the sky and the mountains always felt like it was important. Not necessarily that I was interested at that point in drawing it, or expressing it, just that it was a real central part of my being.”
Davidoff’s career as a professional artist spans three decades. Today, she primarily creates drawings, etchings, monotypes and lithographs—the latter three being printmaking techniques. Her work deals with multi-layered perspectives in the natural world: Charcoal-drawn plants within backgrounds of carefully designed cellular structures or orbital patterns; prints depicting various mosses, grasses or flowers in pressed layers of blue, black and red.
In her studio on E. Yandell Drive, Davidoff studies various botanical curiosities: fir cones from Finland; ball moss from Central Texas; devil’s claws from the Chihuahuan Desert.
Flatbed Press, Austin, TX Garden Suite – complete, 2014
The specimens offer a hint into her process, a method of interchange between her studio and the natural world—a technique that blurs the line between studying nature and making art.
Davidoff enjoys walking and hiking. As a girl, she hiked often with her father during their road trips. Nowadays, she likes walking in the arroyo near the El Paso Tennis Club; or rambling through the Davis Mountains of West Texas; or strolling through various desolate stretches of the Chihuahuan Desert; or traipsing about with a machete in exotic places like Costa Rica.
“I go on tons of walks and tons of hikes,” Davidoff said.
During these walks, she makes close observations. She keys in on the form a vine might take twisting up a tree trunk, the patterns of water in a riverbed, the ways in which stars glide across the heavens.
“In nature, what I love is that idea that when you’re walking through space, your perspective changes,” Davidoff said. “You can go from looking at a leaf that’s right in front of you, to looking up and seeing for miles. There’s that combination of perspectives that can happen just by moving your head.”
Installation w/ drawing materials, Studio Lab: Research Practices in the Visual Arts, Rubin Center for Contemporary Art, El Paso, TX 2014, photographs by Marty Snortum
Davidoff often collects plants and samples of earth. In her studio, she studies the plants while drawing them, so the actual forms on canvas are much like portraits. With the samples of earth and clay, Davidoff gives her drawings depth and color, smudging the material directly onto the canvas.
In this way, each work carries the “memory of the walk,” Davidoff said.
“By being out there and hiking and observing, by touching and collecting this stuff…and then putting it all back together in the studio, it connects the act of walking with the act of making art,” she said. “So it all comes together, and that’s the basis of the work.”
Davidoff’s artistic interactions with nature go beyond hiking as well. Her work often features subaquatic life forms—subject matter drawn from scuba diving trips she takes with her husband around the world.
Davidoff said the ocean and the desert, though different on face value, are actually similar in a few important ways.
“When you’re looking at the surface of the ocean, there’s so much you don’t see,” she said. “It’s beautiful, but there’s a whole other world below the surface. And it’s the same thing with the desert. When you just glance out at the desert, it may look barren, or it may look like there’s not much going on, but when you look at it closely, it becomes another world.”
Installation w/ drawing materials, Studio Lab: Research Practices in the Visual Arts, Rubin Center for Contemporary Art, El Paso, TX 2014, photographs by Marty Snortum
Over time, Davidoff said her studies of the environment, and the ways in which it’s contemplated in her work, have evolved. During graduate school at New Mexico State University, for example, her work often included immense spaces tapering off at horizon lines.
“But growing up in the desert, I had always been interested in the idea of looking at things more closely,” Davidoff said.
She began experimenting with “stripping away the giant landscape and focusing in on something closer,” while at the same time “trying to keep the energy of the landscape, but distilled into a smaller form.”
Much of nature’s beauty exists in intricate detail. So Davidoff embraced the challenge of “trying to find that vastness within the small space.”
“From an ecological standpoint, I’m interested in looking at our place in the natural world,” she said. “Where do we fit into this whole thing? How do we make this relationship work to where we’re not destroying everything, but are living sustainable lives?”
Davidoff’s current projects include an April art show in New Orleans and artwork slated for a building on the River Walk in San Antonio.
She is also compiling a book of images of her work, tentatively scheduled for April, and appropriately titled Walk.
Installation w/ drawing materials, Studio Lab: Research Practices in the Visual Arts, Rubin Center for Contemporary Art, El Paso, TX 2014, photographs by Marty Snortum
Tom Lea Institute President Adair Margo said that action—walking, exploring and transferring the experience to artwork—has sustained a body of work that is as beautiful as it is prolific.
Margo showed Davidoff’s work in her studio for about 25 years. Before the studio closed in 2010, Margo said she sold numerous Davidoff pieces to patrons in El Paso and throughout the United States.
“I hope she knows how much pleasure she continues to bring to the people who own her work,” Margo said, “because they’re very stunning pieces.”
El Paso Artist Suzi Davidoff gathers many of the materials for her artworks from the earth itself.
During walks and hikes in places around the world, Davidoff gathers plant materials, clay and soil—items which eventually become pigments in her drawings.
One such pigment is cochineal—a vivacious vermillion dye that’s derived from a beetle found in the Chihuahuan Desert.
“Cochineal is this pigment with this incredible history,” Davidoff said.
Flatbed Press, Austin, TX monotype process, 2014
During Spanish Colonial times, cochineal was one of Spain’s chief exports from Mexico. The bright, deep-red dye was used to color red coats, Venetian tapestries and the like, Davidoff said.
The dye is derived from the cochineal beetle, which often lives on common cacti of the Chihuahuan Desert, like prickly pear.
When she first started using it, Davidoff collected cochineal directly from the beetles on prickly pear cacti. Now she gets it from “a little place in Mexico that processes the ink.”
The dye comes from carminic acid, produced by the beetles to deter predation. Extracted from the beetles’ bodies, the carminic acid is processed to create cochineal.
As it’s used in Davidoff’s artwork, cochineal appears as bright red streaks against earth-toned backgrounds.