In both groups of paintings is the artist’s use of simple forms and lines that are both strong and mysterious, translating onto canvas her thoughts and observations on the life that surrounds her. There is a spontaneous, free use of color. In the viewer’s euphoric reaction, the sound of color, is the inner world made visible. In all of the work, the process is intuitive, but under strict conscious control. Although no sketches are used, the artist has a vision in mind of the process of the paintings from beginning to end.
A work begins with the artist painting random patches of color on the canvas with acrylic and metallic pigment, and ceramic paste. Next, the canvas is placed on the floor and acrylic and oil paint are squeezed from tubes, and liquid acrylic is poured, creating the outlines of people, animals, plants, and other imagined forms. Brushes and wooden sticks are used, along with scratching and textures.
Running through the artist’s work is her concern with the visual and emotional poetry of painting. Her focus is on the process of continual invention. The message is the freedom to imagine and express. It is the artist’s intention for the viewers looking at her art to experience their own vision, complex feelings, and positive attitude toward life.
John Mendelsohn, New York
