“I definitely am not
and never have been a realist.”
Lucinda Luvaas
Lucinda Luvaas
The California
based multimedia artist Lucinda
Luvaas whose idiosyncratic narrative driven works explore the interplay
between abstraction
and figuration in an urban setting are even today influenced
by growing up in New York during the 1960’s.
In her artist’s
statement for the Brooklyn
Museum Luvaas writes “I’ve always seen myself
as an outsider, an observer, since I was little. I remember being four years
old and standing outside my home raking leaves in autumn and whispering, “I
will never be like them.” I hated the cliques who taunted me in grade school.
So, I learned to fend for myself, sharpen my imagination and be alert. I always
needed to swim in my own lane, and carve my own story. I very naturally chose
art as a way of life because of my need for individual expression.”
And over the years Luvaas has developed a unique technique
that she calls "Imprinting;"
a hybrid between painting, relief techniques and printmaking.
As she told the Huffington
Post’s John Seed “It's a painstaking process, but rewarding. The relief is made
with oils, wax, acrylics, and gel and they are on wood panels. I use drawings,
video stills from my short video art pieces and digital stills as well for my
research materials.”
And this research inevitably centers round activities within an urban
setting.
“I am
interested primarily in capturing people in environments where they are
actively engaged in something whether it is simply walking, watching a crowd,
dancing, you name it: all aspects of our daily lives and then creating a sort
of imprint of history... [But] I've never wanted to depict just what I see, but
rather alter things to find a deeper sense or meaning as though I am creating a
living being that pulsates and moves with emotions and feelings. This I feel
can really be achieved by combining abstraction and figuration. I'm very
committed to figuration, but I'm devoted to it within the context of
patterning: using abstract forms, to some extent reducing figuration to
abstractions, although very much recognizable in their depictions of real
things,” she says.
As Comrades
Magazine’s Daniel McAnulty has written “Lucinda infuses an intangible
glimmer of hope in even her darkest works, but most importantly a sense of good
humor despite depicting some of our most embarrassing human foibles. She looks
at the world with an insider’s eye and somehow manages to fill her audience in
on the joke.”
Luvaas’ current exhibition Illuminations is on show at New York’s Walter
Wickiser Gallery until the 27th of October.
2 comments:
Wonderful work. Great review. Thank you!
I've followed Lucinda Luvaas's versatile career for decades. I think she's tops. Grateful to see this review!
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