Category Archives: Interviews

ARTIST QUESTIONS:

Name: Michael Thomas Diaz

Most Recent Eexhibition: Broward Palm Beach New Times Artopia

Website: www.mikediazart.com

· Do you make a career out of or hope to make a career out of art, or is it a sideline for you?
I have made a career out of art as a Graphic Production Artist working for a privately held company in South Florida (www.jmfieldmarketing.com). We have a wide range of projects we do and I enjoy being part of the creative art team.

· What is it about your work that makes it speak to people or to the community at large?
Whether it’s painting about my personal experiences or something I’ve observed or imagined, I always try to evoke spiritual energy through my work. I believe that every human being has an immense amount of spiritual energy and I try to communicate with that part of them.

· How do you let people know about your work?
The internet has been a great tool for me to help spread my artwork. After I finished designing and launching my art website, I got a major response from everyone about my work.

· What do you feel inspires you to make art in the particular medium you have chosen?
I actually enjoy using many mediums. Sometimes I feel a little restricted with just one medium so every now and then I mix it up a bit.

· Why Miami?
Miami is an ultra culture saturated city, a true melting pot of people from every part of the world. It’s also one of the most beautiful cities in the world I think with its iconic beaches, sunny skies and palm trees.

· Do you have a favorite artist from the past or present?
My favorite artists are the artists that push the boundaries of art and force curators, critics and art lovers to reevaluate the true meaning of great art. My favorites are Jackson Pollock and Van Gogh.

· How would you compare the art scene in Miami to other cities you have lived or worked in?
The art scene here better in my opinion then any other city I’ve been too. There are tons of Art Galleries and Museums and we also get to experience Art Basel as well. I use to live in Atlanta and they have a great art scene as well but it definitely doesn’t have the depth I’ve seen here in Miami.

· If someone wanted to get into being an artist, what would be your first suggestion to them?
You have to really, really love it and love doing it if you want to get anywhere with art.

www.mikediazart.com

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Name: Kat Rabbitt

Current exhibition: GENDER BENDER Saturday June 13th in Miami’s Design

District during the Art Walk

Website: WWW.KATRABBITT.COM

· Do you make a career out of or hope to make a career out of art, or is it a sideline for you?

I am making a career out of it and I have geared my life to be a creative in all dimensions of my life.  The career comes residually when your life is in sync with where your passions are…. at least that’s what I think.

· What is it about your work that makes it speak to people or to the community at large?

Great question!  I almost feel like someone other than me should answer it.  I noticed that my use of colors has always caught people’s attention.  I tend to photograph material that is both conflicting and complimentary.  So the colors tend to grab someone’s attention and please them while the subject matter makes them think a bit.

· How do you let people know about your work?

I do it all the time so if you know me, you cannot help but to know my work or at least that I am a photographer.  My website it a great link to my work, but a lot of attention has been brought to this through my current photo exhibit Gender Bender.  Which is on Saturday June 13th in Miami’s Design District for the Art Walk.

· What do you feel inspires you to make art in the particular medium you have chosen?

I actually just do what stimulates me and keeps me happy.  Photography seemed like a great way to express myself and now I have realizes it slowly consumed myself.

· Why Miami?

Home sweet home.  I plan on always being a Miami artist, who can deny the warm sun mixed in with the city surrounded by sand that never fails to give the most beautiful sunset I have ever seen… everyday of my life.  That being said New York, California and Europe have my attention in the near future as well.

· Do you have a favorite artist from the past or present?

Oh yes… too many to name.  I will try.  Erykah Badu and Jill Scott speak to my soul.  Salvidor Dali was my favorite who has ever picked up a paintbrush.  Photographers I admire most are Miles Aldridge, Mert and Marcus, Mike Ruiz, Steven Klein and David LaChapelle.  For me theses individuals give so much back to the world we see today.

· How would you compare the art scene in Miami to other cities you have lived or worked in?

It is vibrant here in Miami.  The only downside is that Miami does not seem to bring the Arts to the light of attention as much as New York or Europe does.  It seems more spread out and underground.  If I had my way the Arts would be on the news everyday instead of the thieves and murderers.

· If someone wanted to get into being an artist, what would be your first suggestion to them?

Do not think twice and jump into it mind body and soul.

WWW.KATRABBITT.COM

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Name: Gus Colors

Current exhibition:  Wallace Gallery, Fort Myers FL
Website:  www.GusColors.com

· Do you make a career out of or hope to make a career out of art, or is it a sideline for you?
Currently, I am working expanding by exploring different mediums and ways to show and promote my art. However, I am not able to make it a “full time” job, but look forward to making it a career in the near future.

· What is it about your work that makes it speak to people or to the community at large?
Each piece of GusColors is filled with innocent but mischievious, and playful but rambunctious characters. Like you. Like me. My art enables a fresh point of view to ride through life daily on a magic carpet.

· How do you let people know about your work?
I use a variety of online sites for exposure online. I am currently exhibiting at Wallace Gallerly and exploring options at other galleries in South Florida. My work is displayed at the Overtown Youth Center here in Miami in a collection of 6 murals. As well as referrals from clients.

· What do you feel inspires you to make art in the particular medium you have chosen?
I choose to work with acrylic on canvas because I like my colors bold and vibrant. I do not get the same effect from using markers or any other medium I have experimented with.

· Why Miami?
Miami, with its heat and excess of beautiful colors turned out to be the perfect destination point for me.

· Do you have a favorite artist from the past or present?
Growing up I was blown away by Salvador Dali’s work. I also like Vincent Van Gogh, Dale Chihuly, Michael Godard, amongst others.

· If someone wanted to get into being an artist, what would be your first suggestion to them?
To an artist or anyone following a dream, my suggestion is to never give up and don’t let anyone tell you that you can’t do it.

http://www.redinkpublishing.net/files/GusColors_News_Release.pdf

www.GusColors.com

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Gallery Name: Daniel Azoulay Gallery

Owner:  Daniel De Azoulay
Artistic Director:  Natasha Nesic
Opening Date:  1999 at the Design District (previous location: 3900 N.E. 1 St Ave Miami, Florida 33137)
Current location:  3301 N.E. 1st Ave. Miami, Florida 33137
Website:  www.DanielAzoulayGallery.com

· How did your interest in the business of art start?
I began to work as a photographer in the year 1966. Ever since, I have worked with photography and its evolving technology. In 1999, I decided to open Miami’s first photo gallery.

· Is this your first gallery?
Yes

· What made you decide to open a gallery in Miami?
When I first opened, Miami lacked a photography gallery. I felt that there was a need to have a home for photographs, photographers, and their ideas.

· Do you have a specific artistic vision or style for your gallery?
Yes, I wish to bring together various masters of contemporary photography establishing a place for visual and conceptual stimulation.

· Who is your favorite artist ever?
Richard Avedon

· Who is your favorite current Miami artist?
Francie Bishop Good

· What about them do you like?
Her concepts are most intriguing.

· What are your goals for the gallery?
I strive to unite photographers from all over the world in various series of shows that display talent while shinning the light on photography. I want my gallery to be the epicenter for Miami’s photography scene.

· Have you seen any effects of the economic turmoil this past year?
Yes

· If so, what kind of effects and what are your strategies in dealing with them?
Effects: Artists have resorted to lowering the prices of work that would otherwise be more expensive.
Strategies: I think that now is a good time to represent/research emerging artists.

· Do you show at any art fairs, either locally or in other cities?
Yes, Photo Miami.

· If so, how have those experiences gone for you?
These fairs open an enormous window of opportunity where one can establish useful contacts.

· What would you say is the one most important idea for an artist to know when it comes to getting recognized by a gallery?
This idea encompasses notions on work presentation, selection of portfolio images, consistency, and a strong image concept.

www.DanielAzoulayGallery.com

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Name: Alison C. Eager

Current exhibition: Signs of Oneness (opening Saturday May 16 at Sailboat Bend Lofts)
Website:
www.rawhoneyinc.com

· Do you make a career out of or hope to make a career out of art, or is it a sideline for you?
Art is my career. I do intend to profit from it.

· What is it about your work that makes it speak to people or to the community at large?
I believe my use of colors and the way I compose the forms I choose is what has a strong impact on my viewers.

· How do you let people know about your work?
I have a website and I have my work displayed in homes throughout the country. I have a contact list, so when I have updates with my work, or shows happen, I send out emails to inform people.

· What do you feel inspires you to make art in the particular medium you have chosen?
My medium chose me. (oil paint) As for fashion, I have a more philosophical view to it as opposed to a strictly aesthetic perspective, so my desire for change is what inspires me to create clothing.

· Why Miami?
I was born and raised in Hollywood, Fl., family, the sun, and our gorgeous ocean.

· Do you have a favorite artist from the past or present?
Dali, Khalo, Olsen, Chicago, and Mutu, to name a few.

· How would you compare the art scene in Miami to other cities you have lived or worked in?
Smaller scale.

· If someone wanted to get into being an artist, what would be your first suggestion to them?
Not a suggestion, a question: What are you willing to sacrifice?

www.rawhoneyinc.com

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Name: Gustavo Oviedo

Future exhibition: Swenson Gallery @ The Bakehouse -”Southern hospitality” opening reception Friday Nov.13th 2009
Website: www.131projects.com

· What is it about your work that makes it speak to people or to the community at large?
My work is influenced by my experiences, as I grew up I moved from one country to another many times. Adaptation and understanding of my environment was key, I live in Miami, living here is what s influencing me at the moment. I am aware of the audience when I produce my work, but i understand that what i do is not for everyone so I don’t give it priority. Most of the people I talk about my work with know me and have seeing it developed and understand where I come from.

· How do you let people know about your work?
I published a limited edition book, it s called “Deconstruction”. It’s 131 pages of images documenting my artwork and environments from 1999-2009. Thanks to that when someone asks me: what kind of work you do? I show them the book.

· What do you feel inspires you to make art in the particular medium you have chosen?
I don’t limit to one in particular, I like to explore all kinds of mediums keeping a constant concept. Lately I have being working on collages using vinyl, palm trees and resin. Video is another medium that I use, the interaction of sound and moving images gets me busy. Non-linear narrations is how i would describe the style of most of the videos I’ve being producing, Kronos has made the music/sound design for a lot of them
(www.vimeo.com/user1221327/videos). I also have an abstract stop motion animation piece that made it into the optic nerve IX:
http://ka.uvuvideo.org/_Optic-Nerve-IX-Films-Invisible-Sights/video/563088/86294.html
Sometimes it’s easier to tell a story or communicate an idea with this medium.

· Why Miami?
Because of a series of events that I wasn’t in control of, but I am glad to be here and wouldn’t want to be anywhere else (for now).

· How would you compare the art scene in Miami to other cities you have lived or worked in?
I had my first gallery exposure in Miami at the Green Door gallery, it was in 1999, Gary Fonseca and Mino Gerges ran that place. At that time things weren’t as developed, I remember there wasn’t such a thing as the “Wynwood Art District”, most of the galleries were in Coral Gables and the Design District or scattered around town. Once Art Basel came into the picture, that’s when Miami’s art scene got some sort of steroid shot and grew up really fast. It s also at that time that I moved to San Francisco, by the time I came back in 2005, it was really different to what I knew before leaving. I like the fact that it developed so fast, because in general things move so slowly. I have many friends that have moved to NYC or other big cities because they weren’t satisfied with what was going on down here, but I think those days are fading away.

www.131projects.com

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Name: Henry Ballate

Website: www.miamiartstudio.com

· Do you make a career out of or hope to make a career out of art, or is it a sideline for you?
I can only live making art. I need it like I need to breathe and it gives me the utmost satisfaction. I was born in the midst of chaos and confusion, it was already past “White on White”, and someone had already proclaimed that there was nothing more to paint. I was born after the second “urinal” and that’s too much to say. I was also born with a boot on my head and a kick in the ass (Cuba 1966) but one thing was certain, I was born to paint.

· What is it about your work that makes it speak to people or to the community at large?
The fact that it is not politically correct and very bold plays a big part. I have given myself to art and a lot of that is reflected in my pieces.

· How do you let people know about your work?
I have various methods I employ. These include exhibitions, publications, and of course my personal portfolio website and online networking sites.

· What do you feel inspires you to make art in the particular medium you have chosen?
I find my inspiration in historical works of art and in them I can observe this very moment in which we live in. I work deliberately, employing both traditional and innovative techniques. The process starts with a collage made with the use of a computer, assembling popular images and classic works of art. Disassembling Old Master and Contemporary Artist fragments from art books and the Internet to create new works that are rooted in art history while remaining contemporary relevant.

· Why Miami?
Because that’s where the raft brought me and from that day, the city captivated me and inspired me. After 15 years it continues to do just that.

· Do you have a favorite artist from the past or present?
Caravaggio, Pollock, Bacon, Mapplethorpe and many more, but these are the ones that retain my attention in front of their works.

· How would you compare the art scene in Miami to other cities you have lived or worked in?
Miami is the future, while everything else is just the past.

www.miamiartstudio.com

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Name: Dan

Current exhibition: Just Dance
Website:   www.dan-vidal.com
www.seenightlife.com

· Do you make a career out of or hope to make a career out of art, or is it a sideline for you?
Right now it’s what I do, and I want to do more of it. I can pay the rent, so I guess I’m doing alright! There’s always room for more though.

· What is it about your work that makes it speak to people or to the community at large?
I would say what people like the most is my usage of existing lighting sources and lack of post-shoot manipulation. Unless the client asks for something specific, what comes out of my camera is what gets published.

· How do you let people know about your work?
My own website, of course, as well as talknightlife.com, and the usual array of social networking sites like Facebook.

· What do you feel inspires you to make art in the particular medium you have chosen?
I capture fleeting moments, and last time I checked that was pretty difficult to do with a paintbrush and canvas.

· Why Miami?
I just sort of ended up here twelve years ago.

· Do you have a favorite artist from the past or present?
Andres Serrano. I only wish I had the financial freedom to piss people off like he does.

· How would you compare the art scene in Miami to other cities you have lived or worked in?
It’s, “different”. Some people love to drag out the usual comparisons to New York and so forth, but Miami will never be New York, and that’s a good thing. Miami needs to be Miami.

· If someone wanted to get into being an artist, what would be your first suggestion to them?
Get a roof over your head, get the tools you need to do your art, and put food on the table. With some creative juggling you can actually free up a lot of time to concentrate on your art. I’ve seen a lot of talented people get swallowed up by their “day jobs” and not have any time to do what they really want to do.

www.dan-vidal.com
www.seenightlife.com

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Name: Dena Stewart

Current exhibition:
Website:
www.denastewart.us

· Do you make a career out of or hope to make a career out of art, or is it a sideline for you?
For more than thirty years, art in one form or another – painting or writing – has been my life – either doing it or teaching other people how to tap into their own creativity.

Growing up I had no opportunity to test my artistic talents. I majored in business education and psychology in college and worked as a high school office-skills teacher, an editor for a major textbook company, and as personnel manager/job trainer for a national department stores chain. I had no passion for any of my jobs. Then, shortly after the company I was working for closed its doors in bankruptcy a friend asked me a hypothetical question:

“If you had all the money in the world that you ever needed and didn’t have to work for a living, what would you want to do with your TIME so that at the end of each day you felt gratified and looked forward to doing it again the next day and the next?”

I answered my friend’s question whimsically with the first thing that popped into my mind. “I want to be an artist and spend my time painting and writing. I want to use my time creatively.”

Of course, I did have to work for a living, however, for my birthday that year, my husband (Stewart Stewart) gave me a set of watercolor paints, some brushes, a pad of watercolor paper, and a wooden easel — the very best gift I ever received. I painted every day after that. With no formal art training, no rules and no boundaries, I developed my own style of painting to portray my life experiences, dreams and beliefs.

I ended my serious job search and, as most artists do, made trade-offs. By doing a little bit of this and a little bit of that, I found innovative ways to cover my bills. I customized jerseys and T-shirts with hand-painted scenes based on personal stories told by the buyers. The New York Daily News and New York Magazine featured my designs in their “Best Bets” column. I hand-painted house portraits from photographs people mailed to me. Country Living magazine featured these portraits. When I had a big enough body of work, I had my first public exhibition at the Greenwich Village art show. A passer-by recommended I contact America’s Folk Heritage Gallery on Madison Avenue; and the gallery became the first of many to show my art. My paintings were selected for a prestigious “Eight Woman Show” at the Interart St. Amand Gallery in New York.

· What is it about your work that makes it speak to people or to the community at large?
All of my paintings tell stories that people can relate to. They are personal and universal in message, yet visually pretty and non-threatening to look at.

For example, while still living in New York, when the holiday season came around, I painted a Christmas tree. The following season I added background to the painting. The next year I submitted the artwork to UNICEF. It was selected for the 1982 UNICEF Greeting Card Collection. UNICEF issued Christmas Tree in the City again in 1983 and 1984. What started out as my eighth painting, helped to feed starving children in third-world countries. In 1989, Christmas Tree in the City once again was part of the UNICEF Greeting Card Collection. My card sold more than 3 million copies worldwide, generating over $300,000 for UNICEF. In appreciation, I was awarded the honorary title of Goodwill Ambassador for UNICEF, a humbling experience.

The work I do through CFCA, with and for the community-at-large, is specifically designed to address social and health-related issues and improve the human condition.

· How do you let people know about your work?
My website www.denastewart.us has a fairly large sampling of my paintings. My YouTube videos www.youtube.com/cfcartmurals show some of my professional work-related Center for Folk and Community Art interviews and projects.

· What do you feel inspires you to make art in the particular medium you have chosen?
When I first started to paint I lived in a small New York City apartment. My studio was in my bedroom. Watercolors seemed the least messy medium to use. As my work evolved I switched to acrylics, primarily for the same reason. Oil paint took too long to dry and in a small room with bad ventilation, was too toxic.

· Why Miami?
In November of 1986 when it was cold and snowy in New York my husband Stewart and I took a two week vacation, our destination Sarasota. A story in the travel section of the NY Times described it as a scenic old southern city with art museums, a sizable artist colony and beautiful landscapes, seascapes and sunsets. We booked a flight to Miami because it was less expensive than flying directly to Sarasota. We rented a car and drove to Miami Beach for the weekend before driving north. Stewart had never been to Miami Beach and was curious to see the grit portrayed so vividly in Miami Vice, the hottest TV show at the time. After ignoring the clerk at Budget Rent-A-Car not to go below 41st Street because of the notorious high crime, we checked into a small, very old but clean hotel on 18th Street and Collins Avenue for twenty-two dollars a night. The next morning, we asked the hotel concierge about sights to see. We had mentioned that we were artists. He suggested we go to Lincoln Road to visit the newly opened South Florida Art Center.

We counted over one hundred empty stores. The Road was desolate and run down. Finally, near the west end we found the Art Center. We were shown several storefront properties that could be our studio; with a State grant, one thousand square feet for under a hundred dollars a month! We never made it to Sarasota. A good feeling in our gut and a warm reception from the friendly locals kept us on South Beach the full two weeks of our vacation, during which time we were formally invited to join the South Florida Art Center.

When our phenomenal vacation ended we went back to freezing New York temperatures with great tans and wonderful memories. As both began to fade, we got a call from the Director of the Art Center. The space we designated as “ours” in our fantasy game had just become available. It was mid January 1987. If we were seriously interested, she needed a rent check from us by February 1st. I looked at Stewart, he looked at me, we both looked out the window at the gray slush that had accumulated on our terrace and said, “Let’s go for it.” And we’ve been here ever since!

Shortly after Hurricane Andrew, grateful for our opportunities and a desire to give back in return, Stewart and I co-founded Center for Folk and Community Art (“CFCA”), www.artmurals.org with the mission to use visual art as a tool of intervention, prevention and education to impact social issues and improve the human condition; we created Telling Stories Through Visuals, a unique workshop and exhibition program to help people express and understand their feelings. The program was selected by the President’s Committee on the Arts and Humanities as a “national model.” At both local and national conferences, Stewart and I train teachers and mental health professionals how to use art to improve their communities. In between doing my outreach work, I continue to paint and write.

· Do you have a favorite artist from the past or present?
Grandma Moses’s primitive style was initially inspirational; the Skull Sisters (Haydee and Sahara and their son/nephew Miguel). They were good friends who were funny and imaginative in their three-dimensional work; and Tomata du Plenty – an outsider artist I had the privilege of working with. He taught me how to be loose and non-competitive.

· How would you compare the art scene in Miami to other cities you have lived or worked in?
There is no comparison!

· If someone wanted to get into being an artist, what would be your first suggestion to them?
If you are passionate about your art it is the most rewarding way to spend your time. However if you need the instant monetary gratification a weekly paycheck brings, then figure out a way to balance being an artist and doing what you need to do so that the tradeoffs won’t cause resentment or regret.

DENA STEWART
dena@denastewart.us / www.denastewart.us

Beliefs, fantasies, and experiences are the essence of the paintings created by Visionary Artist, Dena Stewart. The first time she picked up a paintbrush, with no formal training in art, she used it to express her feelings, hopes and dreams. Her heavily detailed street scenes with hundreds of people, her caricature-like portraits with personalized backgrounds, her lush landscapes, her breathtaking seascapes, and her tropical paradises include meaningful messages within beautiful surroundings.
Another Dimension – her latest group of vividly colorful, florally framed paintings, open a window of the imagination to look into or look out of and wonder about the inner spirit of those individuals portrayed, together or apart, as they enter a dimension of pleasure or leave a dimension of pain. Many of Dena’s works include her vision of a guardian angel, an illusive image of an all-knowing spirit taking the form of a face in a cloud or a figure swinging from a rainbow hovering above to watch over and keep “souls-in-need” from life’s harm.

Dena’s paintings have been shown in: America’s Folk Heritage Gallery, NYC; “Eight Woman Show”–Interart St. Amand Gallery, NYC; Galerie Bonheur, Greenwich, CT; Cuban Museum, Miami, FL; Gallery: Why Not?, Miami Beach, FL; “Two Person Show”–Amdur Gallery, Miami Beach, FL; Gallery of the Eccentric, Coral Gables, FL; Sokolsky Gallery, Miami Beach, FL; “Portraits”–Metro Dade Library, Miami, FL; “A Salute to Outstanding Florida Artists”–State Capitol Building, Tallahassee, FL; The Sher Gallery, Aventura, FL; South Florida Art Picks, Miami Beach, FL; Miami Beach City Hall; The Stephen P. Clark Government Center, Miami, FL; The Capital Children’s Museum, Washington, D.C.; The New York Public Library, NYC; The North Miami Public Library, No. Miami, FL. One of Dena’s most well known early works, “Christmas Tree in the City” was selected for the 1982, ‘83, ‘84 and ‘89 UNICEF Greeting Card Collection. More than three million “Christmas Tree in the City” cards were sold world-wide and raised over $300,000 for UNICEF. Ms. Stewart served as an Honorary Goodwill Ambassador for UNICEF in 1989.

Born in Manhattan, Dena graduated from Pace University with a degree in business education, and took graduate courses in psychology at the New School for Social Research. Dena taught High School in New York, was an editor for Harcourt Brace Jovanovich Publishing Company, and personnel manager for E.J. Korvettes, a national department stores chain, before becoming a professional artist.

Along with her husband, artist Stewart Stewart, Dena relocated to Miami Beach, FL in 1987. Together they founded Center for Folk and Community Art, a non profit organization with a mission to use visual art as a tool of intervention, prevention and education. Dena’s artistic talents, along with her teaching and administrative background have been a compelling force in creating and implementing the unique art programs for the organization. Her nationally acclaimed Telling Stories Through Visuals program was selected by the President’s Committee on the Arts and Humanities (the National Endowment for the Arts and the National Endowment for the Humanities) as a model outreach program that impacts communities and helps enrich people’s lives.

Dena is an honored recipient of the 2001 “Woman Worth Knowing” award bestowed upon her by the Miami Beach Commission on the Status of Women. Her bio is included in Who’s Who in the World (2006); Who’s Who of American Women, (2006-2007 and 2008-2009); and Who’s Who in the South and Southwest (1989). She received the Key to the City of Miami Beach in 2006.

www.denastewart.us

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Name: Deborah Weed

Current exhibition: Rotating shows. . .
Website: web.mac.com/deborahweed
www.discoveredartists.com/gallery/ArtofBliss

· Do you make a career out of or hope to make a career out of art, or is it a sideline for you?
It is a career.

· What is it about your work that makes it speak to people or to the community at large?
I incorporate water sculptures into my mixed media pieces. The result is a salubrious technique that takes color into a new arena of purity that is vivid, fluid and alive!

· How do you let people know about your work?
Through the internet and shows. So far, I have gotten quite a buzz going.

· What do you feel inspires you to make art in the particular medium you have chosen?
Residing in trendy South Beach is my inspiration. The vibe here is bold and daring and my studio is literally on the white sandy beaches of the Atlantic Ocean.

· Why Miami?
This is where my family is.

· Do you have a favorite artist from the past or present?
My grandmother is my inspiration. She was a famous artist and was one of the first women to graduate from Yale in the Fine Arts. Another amazing factoid is that she was the chairperson of the first-ever Miami Beach arts festival. How cool is that?

· How would you compare the art scene in Miami to other cities you have lived or worked in?
This is the only city I know. I was born here! Miami is vibrant, ever changing, and my kind of town!

· If someone wanted to get into being an artist, what would be your first suggestion to them?
Be passionate about what you do. I truly believe that the energy you put into something is the energy it will emit after being completed! Also, don’t let the world define you. That is counterproductive. My brand is The Art of Bliss, LLC. When I got started, people told me that artwork that is dark, really sells. I’ve lived through dark times and in no way do I want to simulate that. I want to celebrate all of the blessings and people that are in my life. Guess what? My artwork has really hit a cord with my patrons and admirer’s!

web.mac.com/deborahweed
www.discoveredartists.com/gallery/ArtofBliss

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