Posts Tagged 'Visual artists'

Five Questions For: Vandra Pentecost

Vandra Pentecost at work

About Vandra:

I was born at six months – 2 pounds 2 ounces then dropped to a pound and a half. I was still a blue baby when sent home after three months.

I was the smallest of three preemies in Indianapolis to live in the new Bloxam heart lung incubator. In glasses at 18 months and with a severe exotropic deviated eye, doctors did not think I should attend public school. My parents, however, thought otherwise, expecting me to do as well as cousins and their friends’ children. Not being able to see blackboards, I disrupted teachers’ alphabetical seating order, sometimes with my desk against the board. Classmates’ attitudes about differences in the 50s made school very hard – visually and socially.

A third eye surgery in eighth grade left capillaries and scar tissue that affected me into college. Throughout art was my refuge, salvation and became my lifelong pursuit. I carry these early struggles and scars from childhood that strengthened me to meet life’s challenges; embracing spirit through a dying parent, creating and nurturing a family, building a career with my life partner as we pursue a love of nature and a life full of music and art. I am so thankful for the Art Center, as the friendships and environment have helped me grow in so many ways.

 

Dryad, digitally-enhanced drawing, 18" x 24"

 

1.    Describe your work.

Vandra is a conceptual figurative painter inspired by comparative religion, culture and the subtleties and sensuality of the human spirit. She is an artist and designer who works in traditional as well as computer aided media. She is also co-owner of Linder Design specializing in large-scale public and private murals, illustration and graphic design.

2.    Describe your teaching style and/or what’s a typical class like (what can a person taking your class for the first time expect)?

Fun, informative and energetic, intensive one-on-one encouragement laced with humor.

3.    What’s your favorite food? 

Chocolate – of course! Also a wide variety of ethnic foods.

Figures in graphite

4.

    If you won the lottery, what would you do with the money?

If I won the lottery, I would travel to see art museums across Europe, take some sculpture and painting workshops, set up a few trust funds – medical and art, make some needed studio & home repairs and bank the rest.

As to hobbies, my husband and I have been beekeepers (three hives) for 10 years. We are avid gardeners and wine & jelly makers. I love to spend time outdoors, be with family and friends, create art, meditate, cook and read  – history, philosophy, world religions and good mysteries.

 

5.    List what classes you currently teach at the Art Center.

Life Drawing, Anatomy, Figure/Portrait Grisaille (B&W Value studies), Figure/Portrait Color studies (oil & pastel), 2-3 Open Studio Figure Sessions weekly. I also have taught Advanced Figure Drawing.

Five Questions for: Jason Bord

 

Indianapolis Art Center instructor, Jason Bord

  1. 1. Describe your work.

Throughout my life, my connection to art has been tied to a tradition of labor and to the natural environment. My attraction to the outdoors directly affects my material choices and the work I make. Through interacting closely with materials and environments, I am able to form an intimate relationship both conceptually and physically with the work. I am drawn to the tension that exists between intersections and boundaries such as those found in objects, environments and states of mind. Ultimately, these qualities provide me with the vehicle to communicate with the audience.

2.    Describe your teaching style and/or what’s a typical class like?

I like to keep the class energy high and constantly progressing. I teach the students basic skills to begin creating their vision and then let them loose. As questions arise with each project, students learn new skills and other possible solutions. This is done through one-on-one in-class conversations and daily class critiques/conversations. I both teach traits and help build concepts.

3. What’s your favorite restaurant/bar/food/cocktail?

My girlfriend, Emily Bohall, is an amazing cook, so my favorite food changes with each meal we have together. She does a mean artichoke dipping sauce, so it’s a toss up between that and her pecan-apple sauce cake.

4. If you won the lottery, what would you do with the money?

If I won the lottery, I would use that funding to buy property out in the country, build a dream house based off of earthships designs/sustainability, turn a barn into a working studio, get some cows and grow some peach trees.

(What I like to do outside of work) when I am not doing art, I am spending time with my amazing girlfriend, learning to play stringed instruments, taking walks with my ducks, going on adventures and applying to commission opportunities, grants and residencies.

5. List what classes you currently teach at the Art Center.

I am currently teaching stone carving but have taught the metal casting class. I am also proposing to teach a banjo building course and an assemblage (with found objects) with painting course.

For more about Jason, see his Artist Member page at http://www.indplsartcenter.org/register/index.cfm?fuseaction=page.display&page_id=120

Also, see a blog by one of his students, Eric Shotwell, on stone carving.

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Irina Smulevitch, Art Center Instructor and Current Exhibiting Artist

One could chat with Art Center instructor, Irina Smulevitch, for hours and still not know all the adversity she’s overcome to become the successful artist and instructor she is today.

Throughout her life, Irina has been uprooted, always struggling to say goodbye to people and places she has grown accustomed to. Art is her way to cope, not only with saying goodbye, but with making a connection in a new home. It was advice given to her by a good friend Barbara, who said, “it’s not only the people who make a town yours, but also the places.” She advised Irina to paint different places of whatever new town she moves to as a way to “feel ownership of the city.”

Irina’s work currently on exhibit at the Art Center features watercolor paintings inspired by photographs on old postcards of places that no longer exist. She wanted to give new life to these extinct places that many people once loved, to share her experience of keeping the past alive as a way to deal with saying goodbye.

A Dream Denied

Irina was born in Odessa, a town south of the former Soviet Union during a time when political affiliation meant opportunity…and freedom. Her talent in art was encouraged from a very young age (her earliest memories are of drawing buildings in the sand on the beach with her grandfather) and her childhood dream was to be an artist.

But without protection and promotion from the Communist party, it was a long road ahead. Irina caught her first glimpse of the changing world outside of Russia in the form of The Beatles. For Irina, The Beatles were an example of freedom of expression. Although she could not understand a word without a dictionary, she felt inspired to internally question the rules and restrictions she lived under on daily basis. And another passion, for reading, gave her that huge imaginary world where you can escape from reality and be truly yourself.

At the age of 17, Irina accepted work at a local rug factory, spending long days drawing  and painting in watercolor miniature replicas of the large rugs that they offered at the factory. Although she was doing a task she loved (drawing), there was little room for freedom of expression. Artists were expected to create in the style of the traditional Russian artists of the past. 

After one year working at the rug factory, she was thrilled to be accepted to the Textile Academy in Moscow. Through her six years studying art and technologies, and despite consistent rejection and disapproval from select professors who were members of the Communist party, she graduated summa cum laude in 1989 and began to work in the fashion industry.

Things were looking up and she opened her own business. On a personal front, she met her husband and soon married. But it wasn’t long before her world was thrown upside down.

Leaving Home

Less than a year after they were married, Irina’s husband was offered a job in Dallas, Texas. For Irina, this was one of the most challenging times in her life. She was forced to leave all possessions behind. She didn’t speak a word of English.

But soon she started to learn the basics of the English language, reading books and taking classes at a community college. Her husband took a job in Long Island, New York and before long they had a son, Jacob, and Irina spent her days taking care of him, reading, and exploring the city. When they moved again, this time to Frederick, Maryland, Irina was painting again and for the first time since coming to America, she felt like herself.

Her work was shown in the Museum of Contemporary Russian Art in New York and she was selected for a solo show at Frederick Community College in Maryland. She began working at the college teaching watercolor, drawing, and fundamentals of design. Her dream of supporting herself financially as an artist was again becoming a reality.

The Frederick, Maryland community embraced Irina. A documentary of her, titled “Russian Artist in America” was broadcast in Russia. It was the first time Irina’s mother (still living in Russia), was able to see her daughter’s success. Irina continued to participate in shows in the Frederick area as well as D.C. and Baltimore.

Leaving Home Again

In the summer of 2008, Irina’s husband was offered a more advanced job in Indianapolis. Once again, she was about to be uprooted. But this time, when it came time to survey their new city, her husband, knowing it would take Irina some time to warm up to the idea of moving, took her first to where she would be able to make a connection. He took her to the Indianapolis Museum of Art. After visiting the museum, Irina decided that moving to Indianapolis may not be such a bad thing after all.

Home is Where the Art IsWatercolor Instructor Irina Smulevitch

Before returning to Maryland to pack her things, Irina visited Broad Ripple. She was immediately charmed by the district and leafed through the Broad Ripple Gazette on the plane ride home. She saw a small ad for the Indianapolis Art Center and made a mental note.

Immediately after her family moved into their new home, Irina searched the Internet for the Indianapolis Art Center. Here she has found a new home, teaching a variety of classes including watercolor painting and drawing for future painters. Irina credits the Art Center for her quick adjustment to her new community. “Art is my natural person and my true self,” she said.

Her involvement at the Art Center provides Irina with a place to work, teach, and be inspired. But perhaps the most valuable thing Irina feels she’s gained is friendship. Her students and colleagues have become trusted friends.

At this point, Irina can only imagine what her future will hold, but one thing is for sure: there will be art.

Registration for Fall Classes, including Irina’s classes in watercolor and drawing for future painters, is going on now at www.IndplsArtCenter.org/Fall10.


 

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