interview with artist Seren Moran

The Interview Series continues with artist Seren Moran sharing her thoughts on painting, art, and the creative process. Learn more about the artist and visit pivotartgallery to see the featured portfolio.
From the 'Brazil' series by Seren Moran

From the ‘Brazil’ series by Seren Moran

1. How did you first become interested in painting?

Ironically enough, my parent’s actually forced me to study art.  I was a super creative and artistic child and won all kinds of awards for my art citywide and even some pieces went statewide as early as 5 years old.  But during my adolescent years I was pretty rebellious and ended up dropping out of high school.  My parent’s were convinced that had I had an artistic outlet, I wouldn’t have acted out as much.  So when I decided I wanted to go to college, they said they would only pay for my applications if I applied as an art major.  So I did.  The agreement was that I only had to try it for the first year and could then change to any major I wanted.  But of course I fell head over heals in love with art within the first few months, and haven’t fallen out of love since.

2. What do you learn through your work?
As time goes on I find that my art really is just an extension of myself, so it’s hard to separate between what is me and what is my art.  What I learn in life is reflected in my work and what I learn in my work is reflected in my life. They are really just one in the same.

3. What is most satisfying to you about the creative process?
Being able to be and do anything.  I love that in art there are no rules, and even if there were you could break them.  I can act on all my impulses and be whoever I want without having to worry about how that translates to acceptability in society.  It’s extrodinarily satisfying to know that you can truly create something from nothing, and I honestly don’t know how people live their lives without some form of art.

From the 'Brazil' series by Seren Moran

From the ‘Brazil’ series by Seren Moran

4. If you have artistic/creative role models, who are they and how do you relate to them?

I’ve actually found that most of my artistic role models are non visual artists.  I have friends and collegues that I really admire and who inspire me. These are poets, actors, musicians, directers, and writers, yet few painters.  I think my inspiration comes more from the way people think, feel and how they view the world, rather than which art form they use to express their creativity.The creative process and artistic mind are similar regardless of medium.  I will say that my brother is a huge role model, and I really can’t imagine being where I am without him.  He is an actor and director and I couldn’t feel more proud or lucky to be his little sister.

5. Can you describe your technical processes? How do you make the images, what materials do you use, etc…?

It really depends.  I don’t have one way of working, and I like that.  Sometimes I work from life and do sketches that then turn into paintings, sometimes I take photos and paint directly from those withtout sketching at all, sometimes I sketch from my imagination or from photos and then paint, sometimes I make collages and paint from the collage using that as a sketch, and then sometimes I just paint, with no plan or image ahead of time.  In regards to medium, I’m in love with oil paint.  In Brazil and some months prior, I was forced to paint in acrylics which initially was frustrating but actually turned out for the best.  I experimented with more geometric styles and linear forms that I might not have otherwise.  And now I actually do a lot of my paintings with an acrylic undercoat and paint with oils on top, which I am loving.

6. You have traveled quite a bit. How does this influence your work?

Greatly! My environment influences my work regardless of where I am, traveling or not.  If I am present and in the moment, then where I am, who I am with and what I am doing in my life are always going to be reflected in my work.  So traveling has of course changed my work significantly.  Adjusting to a different culture, language, lifestyle and country has had a huge impact on who I am, how I view the world, and therefore my art as well.  I think one of the contributing factors to my “Brasil Series” being so stylistically different than my other series’ was that literally the style and way of my life was so different when living there.

From the 'Brazil' series by Seren Moran

From the ‘Brazil’ series by Seren Moran

7.  Where do you see yourself and your art practice in say 10 years?

Honestly, I just hope I’m still painting.  However that happens, whether I’m successful as an artist or not, I just hope that regardless of what job I have, family or not, that I am at least painting…even if no one sees it.  That’s what matters most to me.  But of course it doesn’t hurt to have some recognition along the way.

8. How do you feel about contemporary art and your contribution to it?

Gosh, “contemporary” art… I suppose I could ramble on about what that even really means, but all in all I have mixed feelings about most of what I see in regards to “contemporary” art.  Not always, but at times I feel that a lot of art today is becoming overly conceptualized.  I don’t think there is a better or worse between conceptual art and emotive art, but I find more and more artists becoming highly concerned with the ideas behind their works which for me often times falls flat and doesn’t move me.   Something primarily conceptual can certainly cause you to feel and something primarily emotive can certainly cause you to think, and in my eyes both are equally important. I’m contributing by allowing the emotive aspect to take form and the thinking and relecting to happen afterward, by myself and my viewers.  This is the most organic and honest way I have found to approaching my art.

From the 'Brazil' series by Seren Moran

From the ‘Brazil’ series by Seren Moran

9. What is the most important thing you want viewers to come away from your work with?

Anything a viewer takes from my work is important, whether it’s a feeling or idea, bad or good.  The worst thing someone can say about my art is that they don’t remember it.

new featured artist: Seren Moran

pivot art gallery is pleased to present the next artist portfolio in the ongoing series at pivotartgallery.com. See Seren Moran’s vibrant paintings from her Brazil experience! Click here to explore the featured portfolio.

Seren Moran, from the Brazil series.

Seren Moran, detail from the Brazil series.

The Bay Lights

The Bay Lights is a monumental light sculpture inspired by the 75th anniversary of the Bay Bridge. Artist Leo Villareal will network 25,000 individually programmable LED lights to create  patterns across the western span of the bay bridge. It may be the world’s largest LED light sculpture!

After it is officially lit on March 5, 2013, it will be on display every day from dusk to 2 a.m. for two years, viewable from San Francisco and points north.

More info here: thebaylights.org

Silence at BAM/PFA

Silence

January 30 – April 28, 2013 at Berkeley Art Museum/Pacific FIlm Archive

Giorgio de Chirico: Melancholia, 1916; oil on canvas; 20 x 26-1/2 in.; The Menil Collection, Houston.Photo: Hickey-Robertson, Houston

Giorgio de Chirico: Melancholia, 1916
Oil on canvas; 20 x 26-1/2 in.
The Menil Collection, Houston.
Photo: Hickey-Robertson, Houston

In today’s digitized world, silence is increasingly elusive. For composer John Cage, the absence of sound was not merely elusive, it was impossible. His groundbreaking composition4’33” contained no actual music, but instead called attention to the ambient sounds surrounding the performance and its audience. He asserted “there is always something to see, something to hear.” On the occasion of Cage’s hundredth birthday, Silence presents nearly a century of modern and contemporary art and film to examine the spiritual, existential, and political aspects of silence.

Co-organized by the UC Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive (BAM/PFA) and The Menil Collection in Houston, Silence presents a broad range of works, including iconic pieces by Joseph Beuys, Giorgio de Chirico, Marcel Duchamp, René Magritte, Christian Marclay, Robert Rauschenberg, Doris Salcedo, Andy Warhol, and many other leading artists.

BAM/PFA’s presentation of Silence features a host of public programs, including an opening conversation between Toby Kamps, curator of modern and contemporary art at the Menil Collection, and UC Berkeley psychology professor Dacher Keltner; a three-part series of Sunday morning meditations in the galleries; performances by sound artists Jacob Kirkegaard and Loren Chasse; and a series of L@TE: Friday Nights @ BAM/PFAevents inspired by the theme of silence.

Sol Grotto art installation

I went to visit Sol Grotto at the UC Berkeley Botanical Gardens this past weekend. It is, according to the designers website, a “…spartan retreat—a space of solitude and close to nature where one is presented with a mediated experience of water, coolness and light .”

I found it be be a contemplative space filled with the sounds of a running stream and amazingly lit with light streaming in through the glass tubes. Definitely worth a visit.

It is also hard to escape Solyndra’s role as a controversial bankrupt company. The installation re-uses 1,368 high tech glass tubes that would otherwise have been destroyed. For more info, see the website here: rael-sanfratello.com.

Take 5: Art Break Day

What: Take 5: Art Break Day. Hosted by Art is Moving
Where: San Francisco Bay Area, California
When: September 2, 2011

Details: This free public event encourages attendees to “Take an Art Break” and provides supplies and a space to create art. It will happen simultaneously in five different cities – San Francisco, San Rafael, Richmond, Berkeley, and Oakland from 9:00 AM to 5:00 PM.

Booths and tables will be set up and there will be free access to art supplies, including paint brushes, paper, pencils, paints, and crayons. Everyone is welcome to make art for free. No prior art-making experience is necessary to attend the event.

More Details: artismovingnow.com

featured artist: anonymous 

this month, in order to more fully consider that art which we interact with on a daily basis – in and on the street, outside of galleries and museums – pivot art gallery is pleased to showcase anonymous public art. check it out at: pivotartgallery.com

we will be adding more images throughout the month as they are discovered. we also invite you to share your images of anonymous art that you notice. just send it to info [@] pivotartgallery.com along with where you found it and it will be added to this months featured portfolio.

Surface : Pattern :: Pattern : Surface

pivot art gallery is pleased to announce Surface : Pattern :: Pattern : Surface

An exhibition of works by Hadley Williams and Talulah Terryll, guest curated by Peter Hayes at Local 123 Cafe in Berkeley, CA.

Opening reception Friday, July 15, from 7-9 pm at the Cafe, 2049 San Pablo Ave, Berkeley. Live music, popcorn and, as always, great coffee, wine and beer. On display from July 11 to August 11 at Local 123.

Guest curator Peter Hayes organizes a show around the rich lines of resonance between Hadley Williams and Tallulah Terryll’s work. Attention concentrates on their work’s connection to a framework of a pattern, to a repetition of marks applied to a surface. In every piece, the patterns are interrupted – sometimes subtly, sometimes forcefully – by the nuances of each artist’s material, hand, and vision. The result is a joint collection that inhabits the space between mechanism and gesture, control and flexibility, stencil and spontaneity.

Affecting also the space between art and viewer, the pieces animate their surrounding area — above and below, left and right — with the way they balance rhythm and chaos. Terryll creates her patterns out of paint applied through hand-made stencils in multi-layered designs: what emerges is a vibrational character that lifts pattern off of surface. Williams endows her work with an actual and relentless dimensionality by adhering a range of materials (from bubble wrap to correction tape) to her surfaces. Their approaches to surface and pattern reflect against each other, completing the analogy – the surface is to the pattern as the pattern is to the surface.

After receiving her B.F.A. in 2003 and spending 2 years in Japan, Terryll is currently based in Oakland, California. For more information, see www.tallulahterryll.com. Williams works out of her immaculate studio in Berkeley, CA, and is currently enrolled in the MFA program at John F. Kennedy University, which she will complete in December 2011. For more information, see www.hadleywilliams.com

Desirée Holman’s Heterotopias at BAM/PFA

Desirée Holman: video still composite from "Heterotopias," 2011; three-channel HD video; 13 mins.; courtesy of the artist and Silverman Gallery, San Francisco.

who: Desirée Holman
what: Heterotopias
where: bampfa
when: June 26–September 18, 2011

Desirée Holman: Heterotopias / MATRIX 238 is curated by Phyllis Wattis MATRIX Curator Elizabeth Thomas.

east bay open studios

more info at: proartsgallery.org

Daniel McCormick at Brower Center

This gallery show features installations of ecological restoration materials that are usually only experienced on site. It is a unique opportunity to learn more about the work of this important artist and his interweaving of art, design, and ecological restoration.

when: January 27 – May 11, 2011

where: The David Brower Center, Berkeley, CA

more info here: browercenter.org

artist Jill Magid at BAM/PFA

Jill Magid: Closet Drama / MATRIX 237

Jill Magid: The Sky From the Capital Steps, 2010; digital photograph; courtesy of the artist and Yvon Lambert, Paris, New York.

March 20, 2011 – June 12, 2011 More info: bampfa.berkeley.edu

new images, old film

I recently went for a hike with the ol’ Nikon and some very old film (it expired in 2001). check out the black and white c41 processed images here. coming soon, the expired color film …

expired b+w

Very Local – a Local 123 staff show

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Local 123 - 2049 San Pablo Avenue (at University Avenue) Berkeley, CA 94702

Artists: Evan Gilman, Olivia Lopez, Julia Sacket, Emma Spertus, Rebecca Stevens, Tim VanDragt, Brian Quakenbush.

Opening Reception: Saturday, February 26, 7-10pm

Very Local Live: An evening of performance -  Saturday, April 2, 7pm

Exhibition closes: April 3, 2011

Powers of Ten | A Variation

Excursions into Domains of Familiarity and Surprise

Sunday, February 6, 3 p.m. @ BAM/PFA (free)

This event frames the research process, starting from the known and reaching forward to the unknown. The program includes a screening of Powers of Ten (and other special shorts) alongside sound experimentation with Marijke Jorritsma.

more info here: futurefarmers.com/powersoften

David Lance Goines at Moe’s

 

 

David Lance Goines will be discussing and signing his book The Poster Art of David Lance Goines at Moe’s Books in Berkeley on Wednesday January 26, 2011.

 

the book highlights a four-decade career of  distinctive Arts & Crafts-style posters that promote movies, galleries, restaurants, and concerts, and other events and products. this original edition was developed in cooperation with the artist, who provides a preface and there is a foreword by Alice Waters.

 

graffiti in berkeley, ca

graffiti on the train tracks in berkeley, ca

see more images on flickr, click here

berkeley, ca

berkeley art studio

session 2 at berkeley art studio  begins on October 25

learn more about the facilities and teachers, and sign up for ceramics, photography, or drawing & painting courses here: artstudio.berkeley.edu

- dog night at BAM

Brooklyn-based avant-garde ensemble NYMPH presents new music and artist Daniel Jay projects visuals celebrating our best friends – dogs.

L@te at BAM - tonight!

Peter Greenaway lectures

September 13
Avenali Lecture I: “New Possibilities: Cinema is Dead, Long Live Cinema”
Peter Greenaway (The Cook the Thief His Wife & Her Lover; Prospero’s Books)
6:00 pm @ Zellerbach Playhouse
Note: Free tickets (1 per person) available at Zellerbach Playhouse at 5 on evenings of lectures.

September 14
Avenali Lecture II: “Nine Classic Paintings Revisited”
Peter Greenaway
6:00 pm @ Zellerbach Playhouse

September 15
Panel Discussion with Peter Greenaway
12:00 pm @ 315 Wheeler Hall, UC Berkeley

more info about the lecture series here

the Townsend Center will screen Greenaway films Sept. 8-10, details here

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