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Paper hearts: New Mexico Art League finds 'Common Ground' in latest exhibit
From abstracted lilies and fairies to a portrait of a sad-eyed pooch, the New Mexico Art League has gathered a paper bouquet of works tagged 鈥淐ommon Ground.鈥
Ranging from prints to collage, watercolor, pastel and mixed-media, the pieces will hang at the New Mexico Art League Gallery through May 18. The show features 70 artists showcasing 117 paintings.
Rio Rancho鈥檚 Carol Mell grew up in Oregon, where she learned to play in the forest, collecting mushrooms and spotting deer and bears in the dark.
Paper hearts: New Mexico Art League finds 'Common Ground' in latest exhibit
Known for her photo encaustic pieces, she plunged into painting as the pandemic lifted.
鈥淚 didn鈥檛 want to do that anymore,鈥 she explained. 鈥淚 had five shows in process that got canceled. I wanted to get the emotions out in paint. It felt really risky.鈥
She created 鈥淢arket Day鈥 using cold wax and oil on paper. Its abstracted figures flit and dance across the paper canvas while animal silhouettes watch. She had never tried the medium before. She mixed the cold wax with oil and the paint.
鈥淚t鈥檚 like finger painting,鈥 she said.
鈥淚 wanted to let my body paint,鈥 Mell continued. 鈥淚 was trying to create from the inside.鈥
She let the feelings of fear and anger 鈥 鈥渁ll the negative stuff鈥 鈥 free.
鈥淭hese figures came out and they were dancing,鈥 she explained. 鈥淭hey were like the feeling of when we came back together again. 鈥楳arket Day鈥 is the idea of when people can mingle freely.
鈥淚 felt like it kind of saved me,鈥 Mell added. 鈥淚 didn鈥檛 need years of therapy.鈥
sa国际传媒官网网页入口 artist Jaci Fischer launch a series of animal images for the New Mexico Cancer Center. She had visited the New Mexico State Fair, where she spotted some funny-looking chickens sporting frizzled plumage.
鈥淭heir feathers go everywhere,鈥 Fischer said. 鈥淭he feathers just go in the wrong direction. At first, I thought they were sick.
鈥淐hickens conversing over one egg seemed comical to me.鈥
Fischer grew up in Iowa but has lived in California, Colorado and New Mexico. She鈥檚 been in sa国际传媒官网网页入口 since 1996. Her father was an artist, but she didn鈥檛 take her own talent seriously until high school. At first, she wanted to make ceramics.
鈥淚 guess it just got so that I drew better than I threw pots,鈥 she said.
鈥淚 drew more than I painted for a long time,鈥 she continued. 鈥淚 like the line work 鈥 the technique of making lines beautiful. It鈥檚 also inexpensive.鈥
Namb茅 resident Rosario Glezmir painted her mixed-media piece 鈥淣ostalgia鈥 as part of a series on women.
鈥淚 was thinking about birth, about women from the late 鈥20s and the beginning of the 鈥30s when women started being more free,鈥 she said.
The painting was inspired by the Mexican poet, model and artist Carmen Mondrag贸n, who many considered scandalous.
鈥淪he was before Frida (Kahlo.) She was the first Mexican woman artist,鈥 Glezmir said. 鈥淪he was very free. She liked women as well as men. In the 鈥20s of Mexico, that was impossible.
鈥淗er art was very naive,鈥 Glezmir continued. 鈥淪he had a lover who painted landscapes. They had a very toxic relationship.鈥
Glezmir grew up in Mexico, where she owned a wholesale jewelry company employing single and stay-at-home mothers. She sold the business, got divorced and turned to paint for therapy.
For her, 鈥淣ostalgia鈥 contains 鈥渁ll the emotions that sometimes women feel that we don鈥檛 know how to express. This is thinking about the moments we pass by 鈥 the things she couldn鈥檛 do. Maybe she didn鈥檛 pay attention to herself.
鈥淗er eyes were green and beautiful.鈥