Thursday, December 5, 2024
Dyani White Hawk, Artist and Curator (Repost)
Thursday, July 25, 2024
Surelle Strike, Artist
Hello and welcome to the 68th 3 Art Questions With Jackson interview! This time I interviewed the super skilled painter Surelle Strike. I have admired her paintings since the first time I saw them at Artistry in Bloomington, MN. She keeps getting better at what she does and I am pleased that she agreed to be interviewed. I think that you will enjoy her answers! Thank you for reading! (All images courtesy of the artist / Instagram: @surelle.strike.art / Website: surellestrikeart.com)
Jackson: Do you feel like you were born as an artist? Or did something specific happen that put you on an artistic path?
Surelle: I suppose I was definitely born with the artist gene, when I was little I was always drawing or doodling. I remember one of the reasons I loved going to my grandparents' house was because they had a printer, and I was always allowed to help myself to as much printer paper as I wanted to draw on. I have always had a hard time thinking of myself as an artist though, thanks to that nasty Imposter Syndrome. Even today I have a hard time occasionally, even though making art is currently my full-time job! That change happened last fall, when I moved. I used to run an in-home childcare, and among other things, my new (130 year old) house was hard to get approved for licensing. I decided to take the leap into making art my career! Currently I paint, take commissions, and teach a lot of classes, being a full-time artist is a smorgasbord of different jobs.
Jackson: How did you become such a skillful painter? Are you self-taught or did you go to art school?
Surelle: I guess I'd say I'm a little of both. I took a handful of classes here and there, and still take workshops when I can. But much of the painting I do now has been self taught. I went to a small high school and didn't get to take as many art classes as I wanted, but in my senior year I took a drawing class at the Minneapolis College of Art and Design. Then I went to a semester of art school at the Columbus College of Art and Design in Ohio. I took a handful of fundamental classes, but decided after one semester to drop out of school. I got a big fat F in Color Theory, and for the longest time thought this was because I was "bad at color". I resigned myself to having to do art like graphite drawing, or photography. (Later I grew up and realized the more likely reason for me failing the class was the fact that it was 8am on a Monday morning, and I didn't show up as often as I should have...) In 2018 I took a leap out of my comfort zone and began painting...in black and white watercolor...eventually I decided it wouldn't hurt to try another color and I slowly began painting in color. I worked first with watercolor, then gouache, and in 2019 I gave acrylics a try, finally in 2023 I started using oil paints. All of this was a lot of trial and error on my own part, but I think learning on your own gives you a lot of confidence in your ability to problem solve, and come up with solutions for difficulties you'll encounter.
Monday, July 22, 2024
Melissa Benedek, Artist
Hello and welcome to the 67th 3 Art Questions With Jackson interview! This time I interviewed the inspiring New York City based painter Melissa Benedek. We discovered each other on Instagram and I am a really big fan of her work and the colors she uses in her paintings. I believe you will really enjoy her answers! Thank you for reading! (All images courtesy of the artist / Instagram: @melissabenedek_art / Website: melissabenedek.com)
Wednesday, June 19, 2024
Kei Gratton, Artist (Repost)
In honor of Kei Gratton's new show at Gallery 360 in Minneapolis, I am reposting my 2019 interview with Kei with images from the exhibition. Thank you for reading! (All images courtesy of the artist / Instagram: @keigratton / Website: keigratton.com)
Jackson: Does nature influence your paintings? I think of outside when I see them.
Kei: Absolutely. I like to think of my paintings as internal landscapes, reflections from within. I grew up in the woods and spent endless hours pretending I was a pioneer living off the land. Spirit animals are my muse and I am always collecting stones...they are timeless sacred objects and their magical properties are certainly present in my paintings. I also love the female body and how she mirrors so much of nature's landscape. If you look closely there's a lot of female imagery in my "landscapes". It's all so playful and secretive.
Tuesday, June 4, 2024
Klaire Lockheart, Artist
Friday, May 31, 2024
Nicole Houff, Artist
Hello and welcome to the 65th 3 Art Questions With Jackson interview! This time I interviewed the totally unique and cool artist Nicole Houff. When I saw her art for the first time I thought it was such an excellent idea and her work is fun, clever and well executed. It has been great to watch her become more and more popular over the last few years. I loved her answers and I think you will too! Thank you for reading! (Artist photo: Anna Rajdl / All art images courtesy of the artist / Instagram: @nicolehouff / Website: nicolehouff.com)
Jackson: Did you always feel like an artistic person? What put you on the photography path?
Nicole: I definitely always felt like an artistic person. As a kid I would draw all the time, and as I got older I dreamed of being an artist. Honestly I don't remember wanting to be anything else.
After high school I enrolled at Macalester College in St. Paul, MN where I received a BA with a major in Studio Art. After college I got a job as a black and white (film) photo printer at a local lab. I did that for just under a decade, but as the photo industry started shifting to digital at an exponential rate, I knew my days were numbered. I returned to school and received my Associate Degree in Photography and Digital Imaging from Minneapolis Community and Technical College. Afterwards, I worked at a professional commercial photo studio and had a side job photographing events for a local magazine.
When both of those industries took a turn, I decided to focus solely on my Barbie photography, which I had been doing on the side for years. Now I sell my artwork online, at art fairs and at galleries.
Jackson: I remember seeing one of your pieces years ago and thinking it was a fantastic concept. How did Barbie becoming a global phenomenon impact your career? How do you deal with copycats?
Nicole: Thanks! I have been using Barbie in my photography for 17 years, so admittedly, when the Barbie movie was announced I really didn't give it much thought. Then the promos started coming out in the summer of 2022 and every other person that stepped into my booth at the art fairs mentioned it. One of my fellow artists looked at me and said "next summer is either going to be a dream for you, or a total nightmare." To say that the summer of 2023 was the former would be an understatement. The movie created a whirlwind and I got to go along for the ride.
Even though I had NOTHING to do with the movie, when it came out I was interviewed by the Star Tribune, Pioneer Press, Fox 9, Lori and Julia on myTalk 107.1, the list goes on! Everyone wanted to talk Barbie and I was more than happy to join the conversation. One of the most impactful phenomenons was that people were coming into my booth at art fairs and sharing their experiences going to the movie and Barbie in general. I mean, totally opening up to me. In many cases, these were people that I had never met before. It was absolutely beautiful and a once in a lifetime experience that I will never forget.
As far as copycats, that's a tough one to answer. Artists are influenced by fellow artists all the time and the references to others throughout art history are innumerable. With Barbie being around for 65 years, there have been, and currently are, countless artists that use the doll as subject matter. I'm not the first person, nor will I be the last, to take photos of Barbie. I'm friends with other photographers that use Barbie and we all have our own style and quite honestly, there's always room for more. It's more productive to view it as a community, not a competition.
I think most folks, even if they reference another person's work, are not doing it maliciously. As they say, imitation is the highest form of flattery. And sometimes we don't even realize we were influenced by something we saw and incorporated into our own work.
I think the hurtful part is when someone deliberately tries to piggyback on an artist for their own financial gain, which is different than just fellow artists being creative.
Regardless of the situation, it's always best to remember that we're part of a larger community - no one creates in a total vacuum. I'd rather look at MORE art, not LESS.
Jackson: If you could meet any artist living or dead, who would it be and why?
Nicole: If I could meet any artist, it would be Andy Warhol. The whole Pop Art movement generally, and Warhol in particular, really changed what was considered "fine" art. He blurred the lines between art and mainstream consumerism to the point that, in my eyes, brought a new approachability and transperacy to art. He made it ok to talk about his art as a business, all the while not being afraid to do experimental work. As an artist that literally uses a doll as my subject matter, I feel like his contribution to the trajectory of art and the business of art is paramount.
Sunday, May 19, 2024
Mari Marks Mondanelli, Artist and Curator
Friday, February 23, 2024
Russ White, Artist (Repost)
Hello! In honor of Russ White's new show Somebodies at The Phipps Center for the Arts, I am reposting my February 2020 interview with Russ with updated photos. It's a good one! Thank you for reading! (All images courtesy of the artist / Instagram: @russwhiteart / Website: russ-white.com
Jackson: How did you decide you wanted to be an artist? What inspired you?
Russ: I've been drawing as long as I can remember. When I was a kid I had a big gallon-sized bag full of markers and pencils and pens that I would bring with me on family trips - never left home without my "drawing stuff". I was inspired by comic books especially, first Ninja Turtles and superheroes, later the weirder stuff like Dan Clowes and Evan Dorkin. In high school I was inspired by punk and hip hop albums and started making collages non-stop, cutting up local newspapers and old National Geographics (which I also brought along on family vacations). In college I got really into found object sculpture and fell in love with making things in a woodshop. Once I started working in an actual woodshop after college, standing on a concrete floor over a tablesaw seemed less fun after a while, so I got back into drawing. Full circle. So I guess I never decided to be an artist, it's just always been part of my life. Going full-time with an art career, in addition to other freelance work, was a whole other calculation, based on the blind faith that if other people could make an art career work, surely I could figure it out too. Plus Minnesota is a great place to find an audience and a funding infrastructure. And my wife kicked me in the butt and told me to go for it.
Jackson: I really like how you make different kinds of art. How do you get your ideas?
Russ: Thanks! I try to find the medium the best represents each idea. Sometimes an image works best as a drawing, other times it could be a sculpture or a screenprint or a photograph. I've collected a lot of skills in all the odd jobs I've worked over the years, and it's fun getting to put so many to use.
But as for where my ideas come from, that's one of me favorite questions. The short answer is "my brain" or "current events" or something like that. But the long answer is that creative people have both a muscle and an antenna for ideas, and they work together. There's a great book by Elizabeth Gilbert called Big Magic, in which she talks about ideas as these things that float around, looking for an antenna, and if you get an idea but don't use it, eventually it will move on to someone else. She started writing a novel once, a love story set in the Amazon, but eventually she abandoned it. A year later, in a chance meeting with another writer, she found out that person was working on a new novel, a love story set in the Amazon.
I've had that happen several times as well, where ideas I've had but not worked on or developed have shown up in other people's work. Maybe it's a shared visual culture inspiring great minds to think alike, I don't know. But sometimes and idea will just arrive, show up out of nowhere almost fully formed, like you just picked up a signal on your antenna.
Most of the time it's more like a wrestling match. The ideas usually come from practice, from working that muscle of thinking a certain way, of drawing a certain way, of following a train of thought over a long period of time. I also think the stronger your muscle, the higher your antenna will go. Chuck Close famously said, "Inspiration is for amateurs, the rest of us just show up to work. But I also like what Maynard from Tool had to say: "If you don't believe in magic, your artwork probably sucks."