Friday, January 30, 2009

The Artist's Studio: Bert Menco

As part of my research on artists' studios, I visit artists working in the studio setting and ask them about their materials, methods, practices, and approach to life. The emphasis of these forays is to examine the studio setting and how the artist functions and creates art in that space.



I drove to Evanston to visit Bert Menco, originally from the Netherlands, at his residence / studio, where he creates his drawings, paintings, and art for printmaking. Located in a quiet neighborhood, with signs indicating which side of the street to park on depending on the day, his Bauhaus-inspired condo building was designed by architect David Hovey and built in the mid-1980s. When I arrived, Bert had been working on a drawing he has tentatively named The Singing Siblings (a protective mother and her two daughters), which he created used pencil and colored pencil on pastel paper. He prepares many of his drawings in his cozy living room, which has sliding doors, and with the drapes drawn, you have, at this time of year, a partial view of his snow-covered yard with a wooden fence in the back.




Bert Menco. Inside Out - Outside In. 2005.
Etching and aquatint, 21" x 27".


Upstairs in his 140-sf studio, including a drawing desk, storage area, drawing / painting easel, small table, lamps, and chair, Bert works on paintings and plates for printmaking. He uses the easel for his oil paintings, and the drawing desk for his plate making, which involves using a magnifier, metal tools, and metal plates. His intaglio printmaking includes etching, aquatint, drypoint, and mezzotint techniques. For some of his prints, he has been known to work with 12 to 15 separate plates to create one large image.








Bert Menco. Musical Chairs. 1997.
Mezzotint, 18" x 14".


Bert's studio practices: "I use my whole house, more or less, as a studio. I draw in a dedicated studio space as well as in my living room and kitchen. I use my kitchen to 'bite' my etchings, although on a nice summer day, I might also do this on my small patio. I have a drawing table that I mainly use for drawing on an etching plate or for an occasional woodcut. More often than not I draw in my living room, but also when I'm traveling -- trains, sometimes planes -- as is obvious from my sketchbooks. I always work on my paintings in my studio. I tend to work simultaneously on one or more prints (etchings, drypoints, mezzotints, or woodcuts), drawings, and paintings, but finishing each of these can take quite some time, sometimes over a year. When working, I tend to mostly listen to WFMT or classical music, in addition to WBEZ."


Bert Menco. Dominatrix. 1994.
Oil on canvas, 29" x 22".



Bert Menco. Aso and Anansi. 2007.
Pen and ink on paper, 24" x 18".


"Although some of my drawings, intaglio prints, and paintings may appear simple, they are actually quite elaborate because it's not unusual for me to spend half a year's work on an image. I draw directly or use small sketches, even doodles, as image-generating nuclei, often combining two or three that appear to complement each other. I rarely use concrete references but rather work from inner visions. I tend to be narrative in my own art, perhaps poetically narrative. I don't see my images as telling a story but rather as reflections of inner feelings, similar to some poetry, and would like observers to read them as such. I like to believe that my work carries a certain mystery. My images are very much 'inside out.' I have usually some idea of what I want to obtain, but much of the image is generated while I draw or paint. The end product always surprises me, and I am often amazed that there even is an end product. Analyzing my own art is difficult, but I think that the dreamlike images tend to deal with confined spaces, which contain certain characters that reach out to one another but do not quite succeed in meeting, a reflection of this precarious balancing act that many of us have to deal with in our lives."


Bert Menco. D. 2007.
Drypoint and chine collé,
12" x 2".


Bert is represented by Morpho Gallery, Avram Eisen Gallery, and Michael Greany Fine Art, all in Chicago. His upcoming and recent exhibitions include: Upcoming solo exhibition, Avram Eisen Gallery, Chicago, 2009; Beyond Boundaries, Chicago Printmakers Collaborative, Chicago, and the American Print Alliances's Soap Box Prints (both traveling shows); Southern Graphics Conference: Morpho Gallery and Columbia College (portfolio show: Picturing the Beast, Chicago, spring 2009; Atelierroute Groot Woerden '09, Studio Ilja Pronk, Kamerik, The Netherlands, summer 2009; Nuances of Printmaking, Koehnline Museum of Art, Des Plaines, IL, 2008; 7th Lessedra World Art Print Annual-Mini Print, Lessedra Gallery, Sofia, Bulgaria, 2008; Voorjaarstentoonstelling Het Kunstgebeuren, Ede, The Netherlands, 2008; Paradeigmas of Silent Spring, solo exhibition, Oculus Gallery, Chicago, 2007.

For more about Bert and his art, go to http://www.bertmenco.com.

Credits: Art images labeled with the artist's name were provided by the artist, and all other photos were provided by Amy A. Rudberg, unless otherwise noted.

Wednesday, January 21, 2009

The Artist's Studio: Cathy Sorich

As part of my research on artists' studios, I visit artists working in the studio setting and ask them about their materials, methods, practices, and approach to life. The emphasis of these forays is to examine the studio setting and how the artist functions and creates art in that space.



I visited artist and curator Cathy Sorich at her rented home / studio / storefront in the near west side of Chicago in the TriTaylor neighborhood, considered to be one of the most diverse in the city. After residing in the Switching Station Artist Lofts for nearly two years, Cathy moved to this 700-sf space in October, 2008. Her space is located at the corner of Western and Taylor, where I parked on the street and walked along the ice-covered sidewalk to her front door, which is next to a storefront window displaying some of her art.





Cathy said she has been working day and night on getting the gallery ready for her grand opening in March. Entering the space from the front door on the far east corner, I saw that the room was divided nearly in half -- the side near the door and window was for displaying work, and the other side, for living and working. A small staircase in the live / work area led up to a compact loft bedroom, hidden by a filmy curtain and a row of potted plants. A wall divided the loft and live / work area from a very narrow kitchen and bathroom on the east side of the space. As we talked about the layout, Cathy mentioned that she may install another wall to separate the live / work space from the gallery. In the meantime, she was working on a mural on her kitchen wall.





Cathy had worked in arts administration for a while and wanted to have her own place to work and show as an artist, curate shows, and rent space to artists who wanted to show their work. She calls her space Canito Studio (after her dog) and is open to any type of art except anything depicting misogyny and animal cruelty. Her gallery will be open to the public for certain days starting in March, and is currently open by appointment only.

Cathy Sorich. Untitled. 2008.
Acrylic on canvas, 3' x 5'.


Cathy Sorich. Untitled. 2008.
Acrylic on canvas, 3' x 5'.


Cathy's studio practices: "I work as an acrylic and watercolor painter. I seem to really get productive in the evenings and late at night, but I am able to work at any time. I will put the radio on low or listen to a favorite CD. Sometimes if I need to fully concentrate, I will have no sound. I also usually like to keep some sort of studio journal. I never keep any of the writing. I just use it to sort of center or focus my self into the space and work mode. I also like to have my tools organized and ready to go. This is part of my process and can take me a day or two to fully get to the piece, but I consider the cleaning and organizing a part of the process. If I could change anything about my studio, I would make it larger to work out of. The space is inspiring because it is an actual dream come true. I used to visualize what a perfect day was for myself, which included me painting at my own live work space. I have also done a relaxation exercise that includes 'the perfect space' which was always me at an easel painting at my studio. I believe this translates into the feel of the space. There is a certain naturalness and harmony present that I think I brought with me."


Cathy Sorich. Untitled. 2008.
Acrylic on canvas, 3' x 5'.


"My art is the result of showing up to the canvas to create. The relationship that ensues, artist to canvas / canvas to artist, is a unique gift that exists solely between myself and the work I am creating. This process is strengthened when I complete the piece and what I have created is reflected onto those who view / experience the work. The final work also serves as the catalyst for inspiration to continue to create, relate and reflect. My current work involves taking pieces of my older watercolors, finding a specific abstract area that works, and then recreating it on a larger scale. This process allows me to live in the space of the actual creation and reflection of the piece simultaneously and live completely in the creative moment that is taking place."


Cathy Sorich. Untitled. 2008.
Acrylic on canvas, 3' x 5'.


Cathy's recent exhibitions include: Phantom Gallery Exhibition, various locations in Chicago, 2008; Murphy Hill Group Show, Chicago, 2008; Canito Studio, Chicago, 2008; Crows Nest, Kalamazoo, MI, 2008; Switching Stations Artist Lofts, Chicago, 2008; Whole Foods, River Forest, IL, 2008.

For more information on Cathy's gallery and art, contact Cathy at casorich@yahoo.com.

Credits: Art images labeled with the artist's name were provided by the artist, and all other photos were provided by Amy A. Rudberg, unless otherwise indicated.

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

The Artist's Studio: Johannah Silva

As part of my research on artists' studios, I visit artists working in the studio setting and ask them about their materials, methods, practices, and approach to life. The emphasis of these forays is to examine the studio setting and how the artist functions and creates art in that space.

I visited Johannah Silva at her studio in the Cornelia Arts Building, at Cornelia and Ravenswood in Chicago, in the Roscoe Village area. She shares a nearly 400-sf space with fellow painter Darrell Roberts. Located on the west side of the building, their space is divided in half by a north-south wall with a small curtained doorway on the south end. They have been in the space since June, 2008.

Working with watercolor paintings on paper and acrylic paintings on canvas, and more recently oil on canvas, Johannah creates most of her art in her studio and usually sketches nearly everywhere she goes. Her work space is a rectangular room with a small window on the west wall. From the window, there is a view of the El (elevated train) and the courtyard below with snow-covered kilns for ceramics. Johannah hangs her work on nearly all four walls in the space. She has shelving, a desk, shelf space for storage, and two work tables, where she does her drawings. She tends to stand and paint on the canvases on her wall and uses a taboret (portable cabinet) on wheels to hold her painting materials. (Note regarding photos: The paintings on the wall are works-in-progress.)







Johannah's studio practices: "My studio practice involves trying to spend time in my studio as much as I can. Because I teach full-time, I find myself going there at the end of the teaching day or in between classes sometimes. I come as often as I can because even just being in the space and staring at the work is part of my working process. It's really difficult to get started again whenever I take long breaks (which are sometimes necessary). I usually listen to the radio (NPR) or put on CD's when painting. Occasionally, I read to get inspired and motivated. Often, I just have to make myself work sometimes, especially during drier or more difficult periods, because it's through the working and doing that I get through these spells."



"In the last few years, I have been making work using the circular shape/form as a starting point for my paintings and drawings. The circles allude to micro as well as macro forms -- cells and atoms as well as planetary bodies, for example. My working process involves the repetition and placement of these shapes and marks on the painting surface, in consideration with formal elements such as color and space, to arrive at surprising and discovered compositions that follow an internal logic.

I am interested in theories and/or imagery derived from physics, chemistry, biology, astronomy and geology, and in philosophical and spiritual notions regarding concepts of space and time, being and nothingness, internal mind and exterior reality, as they relate to our place in the universe. Thinking about these things influence my work although the end-result is ultimately arrived at through a personal and intuitive working process."


Johannah Silva. Untitled.
2008. Watercolor on paper.


Johannah has an upcoming installation project at The Whistler in Chicago this February. Her recent exhibitions include Art Evolution, Brickton Art Center, Park Ridge, IL, 2008; Science in Art, University of Chicago, Hyde Park, 2008; Cornelia Arts Open Studios / ArtWalk Ravenswood, Chicago, 2008; and Looptopia and Around the Coyote, Chicago, 2008.

For more information about Johannah and her art, go to http://www.johannahsilva.com.

Credits: Art images labeled with the artist's name were provided by the artist, and all other photos were provided by Amy A. Rudberg, unless otherwise noted.

Sunday, January 18, 2009

The Artist's Studio: Darrell Roberts

As part of my research on artists' studios, I visit artists working in the studio setting and ask them about their materials, methods, practices, and approach to life. The emphasis of these forays is to examine the studio setting and how the artist functions and creates art in that space.

On one of the coldest days of the year in Chicago, I ventured out to visit some artists in the Cornelia Arts Building in the Roscoe Village area. After a visit to Nancy Charak's studio, I went next door to meet with Darrell Roberts, who shares his studio with fellow painter Johannah Silva. Located on the west side of the building, Darrell and Johannah's studio consists of a nearly 400-sf space divided in half by a north-south wall with a small curtained doorway on the south end. They have been in the space since June, 2008.



A long hallway leads to Darrell's studio door, which he has painted red on the inside. His drawings and paintings cover nearly all four walls in the space. He has a table for drawing and is currently working on artist's books with pencils and pastels, which cover the entire table. He also has a small table he uses to mix paints and pumice for his paintings. Generally, he works with small canvases, which he holds in his left arm as he paints with his right. To save space, he has storage racks above his studio space for paintings as well as supplies, which he accesses with a tall ladder. Near the curtain dividing his space from Johannah's, there is an area with a rug and chair for sitting and observing. He has a laptop, microwave, a small refrigerator, and a radio in the space.







Working as an art teacher at Hyde Park Art Center and other organizations for nearly 10 years, Darrell decided to focus all of his energies on his own art in June, 2008. Represented by Thomas McCormick Gallery in Chicago, he has received art grants for his art and has been well received by corporate clients. As a result, he has been able to spend 6 to 8 hours at a time in his space, which he mainly uses for creating artwork.

Darrell Roberts. Untitled. 2009.
Oil and pumice on canvas.


Darrell Roberts. Untitled. 2009.
Oil and pumice on canvas.


Darrell's studio practices: "I get up mid-morning about 9:30 a.m. or 10 a.m, eat breakfast, and go workout. Then I walk to my studio. Once I'm there I check my email and the New York Times and other art articles. Then I eat lunch. Around 1 p.m., I may put a few marks of paint on a canvas or two or draw. I eat dinner around 5 p.m. and sometimes get into painting or drawing around 8 p.m. I have been drawing in artist books lately, and I may paint until 2 a.m. Late at night is usually when it really happens for me. I have my iTunes on my computer playing on random constantly."

Darrell Roberts. Untitled. 2009.
Oil and pumice on canvas.


"I am an abstract painter who creates paintings with thick built-up layers of oil paint with pumice for texture to the point of being almost sculptural. The paintings are definitely low relief with the edges of the canvas being just as important as the front in creating surface, texture, and color. My abstract paintings are documentations of the metropolis of Chicago as well as my environment. I work in series sometimes 10-15 paintings at a time and have over 50 paintings in progress in my studio. It takes 6-8 months for me to get a body of work to come together, or I should say for 'the paintings' to come together, as they subconsciously tell me what needs to be done. I have to wait and can not rush them or they may be ruined. The time spent looking and thinking is really important, and leads to the fun of the physical painting, which I work in an intuitive way. I just know that it is right or it will lead me in the right direction. I have to trust it."


Darrell Roberts. Untitled. 2009.
Oil and pumice on canvas.


Darrell has a solo show Surface Matters at Thomas McCormick Gallery in February.
Roberts' work is rooted in the everyday where landscape, architecture and his surrounding environment inform his paintings. Thick, richly textured surfaces convey movement and the tension of space, form, line and color are evident. Roberts has exhibited extensively in the Chicago area and trained at the Art Institute of Chicago.
In addition, he will be participating in a two-person exhibition at the Galesburg Civic Art Center in April.

Darrell Roberts. Untitled. 2009.
Oil and pumice on canvas.


For more information about Darrell and his art, go to http://darrell-roberts.com.

Credits: Art images labeled with the artist's name were provided by the artist, and all other photos were provided by Amy A. Rudberg, unless otherwise indicated.

Friday, January 16, 2009

The Artist's Studio: Nancy Charak

As part of my research on artists' studios, I visit artists working in the studio setting and ask them about their materials, methods, practices, and approach to life. The emphasis of these forays is to examine the studio setting and how the artist functions and creates art in that space.

On one of the coldest days of the year in Chicago, I ventured out to visit a trio of artists in the Cornelia Arts Building in the Roscoe Village area. Nancy Charak makes drawings and paintings and works in a 300-sf space. Her neighbors, Darrell Roberts and Johannah Silva, both painters, share a 400-sf studio (their separate blogs will appear after Nancy's).



When I got to the corner of Ravenswood and Cornelia,I decided to park on the side street on Ravenswood just west of the El (the elevated train) and promptly got stuck in the foot-high snow. I eventually arrived at the loading dock of the Cornelia Arts Building, and I encountered a locked door with instructions on the keypad. I followed the instructions and tried to locate Nancy's name, and everything came up as gibberish on the screen, perhaps because of the extreme cold. I looked for my phone to call her and in some mysterious way, the phone I had just used to call her to tell her I was going to be late had disappeared. I dialed a random number on the key pad and someone answered, and I said I was there to see Nancy but didn't know her code, and I was freezing to death and to please let me in. Coincidentally, when I finally entered the building, Nancy had just come down the stairs.



Nancy said although the building had recently installed a new heating system, there is still no wi-fi, which the artists have been asking for, as well as no air conditioning, which can be a problem during the summer. She said that the Cornelia Arts Building is very affordable in the city; her 300-sf studio, which has no windows, is about $1.25 per square foot with heat included. There are three floors in the building, and each studio has a different configuration with enclosed walls and a locked door, but the studios have open ceilings. There is a shared slop sink in the hallway on each floor. As someone who has a full-time day job in another profession, she spends about 20 hours a week in her studio, which she has occupied for the past 5 years. She normally works in her studio in the evenings and weekends.



Nancy said she enjoys the camaraderie of the more than 40 artists in the building, which has housed art studios for the past 20 years. She added that the artists are planning a self-organized open house in March or April this year. Typically, they participate in the annual ArtWalk Ravenswood every October during Chicago Artists Month as well as the first weekend in December for an annual holiday show. They do not hold open studios during the summer because of the air conditioning issue.

Nancy generally uses colored drawing pencils, pastels, and acrylic paints in her drawings and paintings. Her materials are stored in organized containers on shelving, which she has installed, and on three small tables: one for her computer, another for drawing, and another for miscellaneous work. At the far end of studio, she hangs her work on the wall and has crisscrossed string overhead, where she can hang white boards to act as reflectors / deflectors for photographing her work. She has a large storage rack on one side of the wall to store her finished work.



Her studio practices: "I work just about every weekend day, starting early and ending late and as many evenings as I have the strength to do after an 8-hour day-job work day. I go to the Harold Washington library to read art books that are in the reserved stacks about two or three times a month. I have good internet access and some bits of spare time at my day-job, which allows me to do some emailing and publicity type work during the 40-hour work week. As for my art-making practices and processes, I play music, lately alternating between modern klezmer by Dave Krakauer and Scottish acid-rock by Shooglenifty. I have learned that time not spent making art, but organizing a pile or just sitting and reading is still a good thing, because I'm still in my creative space. I also enjoy talking to my fellow artists in the building, from whom I have learned a lot about art, art practice, processes, safe criticism."



"I see art as a series of visual problems asking to be defined and not necessarily to be solved; in simplest terms, how much is enough, when is it done, is more needed, another color, another line, what should that color be, how thin, how thick, how many, how much, how flat, how full, is this artwork about the edge or the center and when is it finished. As I work I am making what seem to be a thousand million decisions while trusting my hand, eye and years of experience. I am always looking at the work of other artists for two big reasons, for the sheer joy of it and to see how other artists are defining their visual problems. I am in constant dialogue with the work of other artists. I stand on the shoulders of giants.

"My function as an artist is not to tell the truth—it is to captivate viewers for as long as I can hold their attention. It is not necessary for the artwork to be any more than what it is. What is necessary is for the art to flow from inside and to allow the paintings and drawings to spring from my entire set of experiences and sensibilities as an artist.

"My current favorite giants, to name just the women, are Agnes Martin and Joan Mitchell for the purity of their thought and action on the canvas; Linda Karshan, Sandra Blow, Vija Celmins, and Katherina Grosse. Whether what they do is lyrical, expository or just plain brash to my way of thinking they are all pure abstract expressionists who make marks, lines, shapes, colors on paper,canvas, even buildings, and say to us, 'here look at this, make of it what you will.'”




Nancy Charak. Babylon II. 2008.
Acrylic, pencil, Prismacolor on acrylic-primed
masonite panel, 24" x 30".


Nancy's recent exhibits include: Marks in Time and Space, solo exhibit, Fred P. Giles Gallery, Eastern Kentucky University, Richmond, KY, 2008; October Members' Show, ARC Gallery, Chicago, 2008; Artwalk Ravenswood, Cornelia Arts Building, 1800 West Cornelia, Chicago, for Chicago Artists Month, 2008; Art Open, Chicago Artists Coalition, Merchandise Mart, Chicago, 2008; Drawing on Experience, solo exhibit, Woman Made Gallery, Chicago; Resonance, solo exhibit, University Center Gallery, University of Montana, Missoula, MT; Art on the Move, studio visit, Art Institute of Chicago.

Nancy Charak. I Took Some Lines to the Circus.
2008. Pencil, Prismacolor on acrylic-primed
masonite panel, 24" x 30"


Nancy Charak. Dragon's Teeth. 2008.
Pencil, Prismacolor on acrylic-primed
masonite panel, 24" x 30"


For more about Nancy Charak and her art, go to http://www.rounderstudio.com and http://rounderstudio.blogspot.com.

Credits: Art images labeled with the artist's name were provided by the artist, and all other photos were provided by Amy A. Rudberg, unless otherwise indicated.