From the monthly archives:
January 2009
‘Mystical Artist’ Paints
from the Soul, for the Soul
A Conversation With Michelle Oravitz,
Translating a World Beyond the Senses
Since discovering the work of Miami-based artist Michelle Oravitz a few weeks ago, I’ve been captivated—regularly revisiting the images as I search for the right words to accurately assess it, without understating its brilliance while avoiding the trap of hyperbolic adjectives. The former has proven far easier than the latter.
Her paintings transcend typical classification, managing to touch opposite ends of the creative and emotive spectrum in each of her pieces: free-flowing yet intricate, stirring yet serene, at once personal and universal, spiritual yet sensual, trance-inducing and thought-provoking. Her fusion of potentially inharmonious colors—bright and intense warms playing off vibrant and soothing cools—triggers an electric dance on the surface of the canvas, revealing a multidimensional world akin to one experienced by the meditative mind.
In an effort to capture the essence of Michelle’s creations, one word, alas, best applies: captivating. As the welcome screen of her Web site accurately proclaims, “When Colors Dream, Eyes Listen.”
And while the Internet plays an increasingly important role for artists, expanding exponentially opportunities for exposure, the true power of Michelle’s paintings—like most—is fully realized on the wall, not the computer screen (as my wife and I can now attest).
The 35-year-old mother of two, yoga instructor and independent artist—featured last month in Yoga Magazine—draws on her personal experiences practicing yoga and meditation, channeling those peaceful vibrations into dreamlike images on canvas. Her work elicits no immediate or obvious comparisons to more well-known, influential artists; her style is all her own. One of her pieces appears in the film “The Unborn,” others on album covers and in books. She has also been invited to the prestigious Biennale Internazionale dell’Arte Contemporanea, an international juried exhibition in Florence next December.
Michelle recently took time to discuss her work and her creative process, where she turns to for inspiration, what role art plays in her life, how she would advise aspiring artists, and much more with The Madness of Art. Read more…
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Reviving the Arts,
Resurrecting The Dead
Despite the increasingly unambiguous value of arts education in American schools, thanks to scores of studies and surveys in recent years, government funding of arts education, and the arts in general, seems to ignore those established, consequential benefits—not only for students that are directly impacted, but all of society. Read more…
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