Where did it all begin? Part 1 – The Software

Many people ask me how I started this series of kaleidoscopic artworks. There is no short answer, but I’ll try to address it here. As to my background, you can read about it in my About Page. But briefly, I love kaleidoscopes, geometry and unusual plant forms. My background in graphic design got me well versed in image based software. For example, I was using Adobe Photoshop and Illustrator from their inception.

My curiosity led me to some pretty amazing programs that modify images by applying advanced mathematics to alter their original structure or to generate images from scratch. These programs go way beyond fractals. The ones I rely on most are Synthetik Studio Artist and U&I Software’s Artmatic Designer, with the latter being the one mainly used in my kaleidoscopes. I have another, completely different body of work that was created using Studio Artist, but I not going to talk about that at this time.

When I purchased Artmatic in 1999, I spent a lot of time working with fractals. The program has a randomize button that is useful when learning the software. There are hundreds of parameters (tiles) that can be strung together in different structures, or trees. There is no limit on the number of tiles that can be placed in the tree. Each tile has one to four sliders that can be adjusted. So using the random button and pre-designed trees are good jumping-off points.

MD-JewelTones
Magen David – Jewel Tones

It wasn’t until 2005 that I came across the small corner of the program that worked with center-based mirrors. I was working with Judaic themes at the time and I experimented a lot with six-pointed symmetry to relate to the Magen David star that has been adopted as a symbol of the faith. These artworks were created entirely inside the computer. I wasn’t yet using photographs for the source. In 2010, I had enough of these images that I decided to put together my first calendar. This means that in six years, I had created only 12 pieces like this, or enough for me to consider them a series.

It was in early 2011 that I began using my photographs to create the stars. I had already been using Photoshop to alter what Artmatic generated–cutting up several images, layering and weaving them together to make new artworks. As an example, the piece shown here, Magen David – Jewel Tones, is made from four variations of the same Artmatic tree, each with different surface decoration. When I discovered what using photographs did for my art, I ran forward with the idea and never looked back.

At the moment, my series of photographic based, kaleidoscopic artwork numbers in excess of eighty. Next, I’ll discuss the very first one.

Reflections In The Garden at the LA County Arboretum

I am very happy to announce that I am to be the inaugural artist of the newly renovated Library at the Arboretum. The interior space has been designed with the intent to show local artists whose work complements its surrounding botanical collection. I am installing my kaleidoscopic artwork in early January with the show running through the end of June.
Reflections In The Garden notice

Solo show at the Federation

Hanging my work at the Federation
Hanging my work at the Federation

It’s my first solo show and it’s hanging on the walls of the Jewish Federation of the Greater San Gabriel & Pomona Valleys through March. As part of their cultural arts programs, a local Jewish artist will hang a solo show on their gallery wall. I am their inaugural artist.
I am exhibiting the work from my “Fresh Harvest” gallery.

Jewish Federation of the Greater San Gabriel & Pomona Valleys
114A W. Lime Avenue, Monrovia, CA 91016

Artisan Boutique

Please come and see my work:
Sunday November 16, 2014
1434 North Altadena Drive

Pasadena, CA  91107I am happy to announce that I am participating in an Artisan Boutique sponsored by PJTC Sisterhood. I will be exhibiting and selling my new prints on aluminum. This will be a great opportunity to see what this amazing print process does to my colorful artwork. I will have smaller prints on paper available, as well as my new calendar and some other gift items. I will also have my laptop on hand to show off some of my new pieces including animations.

PJTC_BoutiqueCard_APJTC_BoutiqueCard_B

Digital Painting on Aluminum

I use “Digital Painting on Aluminum” to loosely describe my artworks. They are not strictly paintings and I certainly don’t paint them on aluminum. I manipulate images using sophisticated computer software to the point where the image is no longer literal. I feel my pieces fall outside the bounds of traditional photography. I use the image as “paint” that I squeeze and tease through fantastical mirrors. Composition and shading are essential elements—and are completely within my control.

My pieces are created on a computer and must be printed for you to be able to hang them on your wall. But when I print out my work on paper, even on super glossy paper, I lose the vibrancy that I see on my computer monitor. I choose to print my work on aluminum because it offers the closest thing I have seen to the back-lit glow of a screen. The results are a vivid print, almost glowing with color. Details are crisp and there is a depth in the surface that accentuates the modeling I do with my artwork.

I do not create aluminum prints myself; I must have them printed through a service. The process involves coating a sheet of ridged aluminum with a special ground. Then, my image is printed and embedded in this base coating. They are lightweight and easy to hang. As a bonus, the print doesn’t require a frame or glass, instead, mounting hardware allows the image to “float” above the wall.

New Project Debut

Karen-Greenscreen-1_02_webOver the last six months, I have returned to an art project that has held my interest over my entire art career. In college, had to opportunity to play with image transfer, a process that used a variety of techniques to transfer printed pages on to paper. I was charmed by the possibilities of re-purposing photographs but hindered by the limits of the technique. When Photoshop was a new program (mid 90s?), I began to play around with this concept anew and have over the years, developed several methods of painting on photographs in the digital realm.

So my newest concept is to take my art into the field. I am working toward a debut date of December 15, to coincide with an artist showcase in which I am participating. By then, I will have worked out the bugs of having proper lighting and a good workflow to be able to make custom portraits while you watch.

Artists Showcase at the Jewish Federation
December 15, 2013 @ 1:00 PM

550 S. Second Avenue
Arcadia, CA

I will be demonstrating my process and maybe even do your portrait!