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On Saturday July 17 I was part of an interesting event in Honolulu Downtown. It was organized by Hawaii Craftsmen and Plein Air Painters, to go along with the exhibition “Out in the Elements – A Celebration of Raku Ceramics and Plein Air Paintings Inspired by Nature.” This exhibition of Raku ceramics and Alla Prima paintings was on view at the Downtown Art Center in Chinatown, Honolulu, HI.

The event was held nearby, at the entrance to Mark’s Garage Art. Hawaii Craftsmen brought raku kilns, set them near the entrance to the gallery and started doing their Magic. Us, plein air painters situated nearby and were painting (sketching) the urban surroundings.

Here are some painters with their works:

Mark Brown, the Leader and the Teacher of the Saturday group of Painters.
Yvonne Manipon, one of the main organizers and curators of this show.
Joannie Stolz
Evelyn Johnson

It was my first time seeing the process of Raku firing. For me it was Magical. Have you seen it? If not I want to share:

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Aloha!

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“Pictures from an Exhibition” (Картинки с выставки) is a suite composed for piano by Russian composer Modest Mussorgsky in 1874. Click on this link to provide yourself a musical accompaniment for viewing my photos of the exhibition reception that I attended on July 2, 2021 with my family at a fabulous new building of the Downtown Art Center (DAC) in Chinatown, Honolulu, HI.

As you can see the concept of the exhibition “Out in the Elements” was to show different types of work united by the fact that they were produced outdoors: Plein Air paintings and Raku ceramics – here are the links if you are not familiar with these terms. This explains those strange objects you see on the exhibition floor – Raku kilns. There will be a public event on Saturday, July 17 from 10 a.m. t – when everyone will be able to come to learn about and make Raku glazing and watch and see this ancient firing process.

And here are again three of my paintings that found a great match with the Raku ceramics pieces made by a fabulous artist Rebecca White Taggart.

Rebecca and me

And here we are Mark Brown, and I, posing with our paintings.

Me and Mark Brown

Mark, is quite a famous artist in Hawaii: see his website. He is a Signature Member of Plein Air Painters of Hawaii. He is also an incredibly generous and kind person who bought and presented the lei that you can see on me, as well as to EVERY artist who had work in this show(!!!). Mark is also an excellent teacher. He has a large following coming to his Plein Air classes on Saturday, which I also started attending since February this year. Mark is helping everyone with his artistic advice, makes jokes and makes everyone laugh. I occasionally include him in my paintings, as you can see here in my painting below – Mark is painting in the sunflower fields.

Mark initially criticized my painting for the proportions of his figure. I promised to improve it but… well, I did not. I felt since it was made on location, under the sky and under some certain impression, this would be easily ruined by “straightening” the proportions. I was going to tell everyone that is it my imaginary “Van Gogh in Hawaii”. However, everyone who sees this painting, if they knew Mark, guessed it was Mark. So, there was no way to hide it. So, sorry, Mark! Your legs are NOT really that short!!! LOL

So, anyway, I felt honored to have my painting exhibited next to Mark’s. He presented 7 of his great paintings, and one of them already was sold even before the exhibition opening. He is a great colorist and I admire the richness of his paint application. Here are, again, Mark’s paintings on the walls:

Make sure to check out his website www.marknbrownfineart.com to see more of his beautiful paintings.

After the show we went to a nearby brewery:

A day after the reception I was volunteering at the exhibition, sitting the show, making sales and providing art demonstrations along with another artist and friend Marina Borovok. Here is Marina and her beautiful paintings:

Marina Borovok

Marina went LIVE on Facebook during the show where she literally went over EVERY artwork created by 48 artists participating in the show. I highly recommend to watch this recorded video, however, I am not sure how long it will be available online.

That is all I wanted to share about this wonderful exhibition.

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As I mentioned earlier, today is First Friday. If you are not familiar with this term – it is a day when all galleries in downtown (in many towns) are open and have something on display, and also there are some refreshments, such as cheese and grapes, and sometimes some wine.

The latter, not the wine, but cheese and grapes part, was a major argument when we were teaching our students to attend such events.

If you are familiar with First Friday events, and attended them in the past – no matter what city you live in, and no matter if it is a First Friday, or a Second Friday, or a Last Friday, or whatever – you will be happy that such events are coming back. Since COVID and lockdown started in 2020, we all were longing for such events, when artists are gathering together, when cheese and wine are in abundance and laughter and art go together hand in hand.

These events are coming back, as well as our freedom to travel and live our lives and I hope this progress will continue.

So, here! Please, come to the First Friday event in Chinatown Honolulu if you are around. If not, I am sorry, but hope you enjoy some photos I have taken while hanging my work.

The address of the new Downtown Art Center is: 1041 Nuuanu Ave, Honolulu. Exhibition is on the 2nd floor.

I promise I will take more photos at the event today, especially since I forgot to take photos of all my works while installation was in progress. But here are a few:

N1:

Composition with a Tree. Oil on canvas. 12″x12″.

This painting was done on plein air in Ho’omaluhia Botanical Gardens

N2:

Water-n-Rocks. Oil on Canvas. 9″x12′.

This painting was done on plein air at Makapu’u Beach

Now I have to show the photo of how it is hanging on the gallery wall. I was really excited how these two paintings fit with the raku ceramics. The ceramics artists was helping me to hang my pieces, and she was also really excited about the fact that our work was WORKING together!

We discussed the fact that we both use natural Hawaiian colors in our work – blue/green of the sky and water, browns of the trees and rocks. You can see my excited face here:

My excited face with N2 and N3 paintings plus Raku Ceramics.

And here is a photo showing you are truly beautiful space of this gallery:

Yes, as you can see on this photo – I have a special shoe on one foot – it was a foot surgery. Nothing serious, and I am recovering now.

The tree painting below N 4 was done in Foster Botanical garden in Honolulu. It is very special tree – it was presented to Mary Foster and it is a direct descendant of that very tree under which Siddhartha Gautama Buddha attained enlightenment in the sixth century B.C. I was very curious about this story and here is what I found: The story of how this tree appeared in Honolulu

This is a link to the video of how my tree painting looks with the ceramics in the gallery. I just give you a link to my instagram page since I want you to follow me there! I am not sure if you see it in the video very well, but the ceramics pieces not only match with the colors of my painting. They are also meditative ceramic lamps that glow with a soft flickering light. I think there cannot be a better match with my Buddha Tree painting!

This is all for now! I am very excited and happy and proud to be in this show!

Aloha to all of you, and I hope some of you can come to see the show in person!

Aloha!

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I am going to publish a story about each painting that means a lot to me. Self-Portrait in the Red Turban is probably number one in this category.

Self-Portrait in a Red Turban

Self-Portrait in the Red Turban

I always wanted to be an artist.  My grandmother gave me a book from which I taught myself to draw when I was five.  Then at the age of thirteen I enrolled in a four-year course of study at an Art School which held classes after the regular secondary school day ended.  There is a great system of art and music schools that still exists in Russia.  After the end of my regular school I would run to my second – art – school every day to study art history, painting, drawing, sculpture and composition.  I was unaware that in the rest of the world Abstract Expressionism was the mainstream. In my world the mainstream was Rembrandt, Raphael and Leonardo da Vinci, all the “Old Masters”.

I can say that I had a classical training in art.  The “Old Masters” were considered to be “gods of the past”, however, the present day “masters” had to create in the style of “social realism” to be approved by the ruling Communist Party. That was not too exciting. In addition, one day someone said to me that “there had never been any great women artists”.

At first, I tried to argue but I had no facts to prove the opposite.  During that time in Russia no one knew about Artemisia Gentileschi, Georgia O’Keefe, or Lee Miller.  In the meanwhile Linda Nochlin’s 1971 article, “Why Have There Been No Great Women Artists?”was published in the United States.  It is ironic that the same words that empowered women artists in the United States made me give up my dream of becoming an artist in the USSR. As I observed that all “great artists” of both present and the past were men, especially those who chose to join the Communist Party, I also heard negative remarks about “women’s art” which was often considered unimportant and limited to flowers and such. That was very discouraging for me as a young person and the desire to become a professional artist was suppressed by the time to apply to college.

Drawing always remained my way to express my emotions and feelings.  I drew to express myself and it made my life more bearable.  But I gave up on the idea of becoming a “professional” artist because I did not want to be a mediocre artist.  Mediocrity as an artist seemed to be predetermined just by the fact that I was a female.  I became a “shadow artist”.

I learned the term “shadow artist” much later, while living in the US and reading Julia Cameron’s book, The Artist’s Way.  “Shadow Artist”, according to Cameron, is a person whose “inner artist” or “artist within” was suppressed for a number of reasons. Such people do not believe they can be “real artists”.  They love art, try to be around artists, sometimes they become models, muses, or supporters of artists.  Sometimes they marry artists. Cameron did not go so far in her book as to state that being a “shadow artist” is much more typical for women than for men, but that seems to be the case.

When I moved to the US in 2001 my life changed. I was greatly encouraged and supported by my loving husband and started becoming a “professional artist”, getting my degree in art, coming out of a “shadow”. The more I learned about female artists the more interested I became in “women issues” in art. One of my favorite artists, Katherine Ace, once said that as a woman she should be careful about what she chooses to paint.  She said: “painting flowers is politically dangerous for a female artist, playing right into cultural stereotypes. It sets you up to be dismissed“.  But she painted flowers anyway, as well as other subjects.

Self-representation, like painting flowers, risks being stereotyped as “feminine.”  Many of my works are based on some form of self-representation.  Even if use models, I still often identify myself with the models, their life stories and feelings. I believe, that engaging with self-representation places me within the mainstream of contemporary female artists who took themselves as subjects.

In her study of female surrealist artists W. Chadwick characterized them with: “the affinity for the structures of fabulist narrative, and a tendency towards the phantasmic and oneiric.” Other qualities shared by female surrealist artists, according to Chadwick, include embrace of doubling, masking, and masquerade as defenses against fears of non-identity. Chadwick pointed out the following representational strategies that continue to resonate in the works of female surrealists:

  • Self as Other;
  • Self as Body;
  • Self as Masquerade or Absence.

Many women adopted practices of “self-othering” – identifying with moments prior to historical time and/or outside the civilized cultural spaces identified with patriarchy.  Chadwick sees these categories as broad frames “within which it is possible to enact dialogs between contemporary women artists and Surrealism.” You can see fabulist narrative, phantasmic and oneiric qualities in some of my work. One example is identifying myself with Van Eyck in Self-Portrait in the Red Turban.

I represent myself in this painting as “Other” and as a male.  This is my way of reflecting on my role as a woman artist in contemporary art world which still treats women artists differently than male.

The crows included in this work are connected with my childhood memories and experience with my mother’s pet crow. It combines my feelings of bitterness of rejection. Once at the age 4 while being rejected by a crow (see the full story in this post), and then again, at the age 14 being rejected by the Art World when I was told “there had never been great women artists.”  The images of the crows in this work symbolize great artists whom I admired and wanted to belong to their world but was not allowed. This work is a statement that I do belong to the Art World.  I state this by wearing Van Eyck’s famous red turban and the coat with crow’s feathers.  This connects me to the Art World as well as to the Crows’ World.

This painting is very important to me, so when it was sold after my MFA thesis show, I felt that I had to make another one. That is why there are two version of it:

2011   DSCN1479

and 2013:

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When I was in grad school I had to study my own art and artistic process and write a thesis about it. It was then that I discovered the niche where my art belongs in the Art World – a style called Magic Realism.

The term “Magic Realism” was first used by Franz Roh in his book, Nach-expressionismus (Post-Expressionism) written in 1925.  He later used the same term in 1968 in his new book German Art in the 20th Century.  He also called this new development in art “The New Objectivity” (F. Roh, German Art in the 20th Century. Greenwich: New York Graphic Society, 1968, 112.) By using the term Magic Realism Roh is referring to Post-Expressionistic artwork in which some mystery or secret seems to be hidden within the subject matter.  As opposed to Expressionism, “Magic Realism emphasizes the object and the everyday life in new and unfamiliar ways.  Juxtapositions of sharply rendered and detailed elements, both in the foreground and back ground, are used to develop an air of mystery or ambiguity.  They remind us that there are still many mysteries in life.”  http://www.tendreams.org/magic-art.htm

Roh used the following dichotomies to highlight the differences between Expressionism and Magic Realism:

Expressionism: Magic Realism:
Ecstatic subjects
Rhythmical
Extravagant
Dynamic
Loud
Close-up view
Monumental
Thick color texture
Rough
Emphasis on the visibility of the
painting process
Centrifugal
Expressive deformation
Sober objects
Representational
Puristically severe
Static
Quiet
Close and far view
Miniature
Thin paint surface
Smooth
Effacement of the
painting process
Centripetal
External purification of the object
(Roch. 113)

I found more similarities with my artwork among the attributes of Magic Realism than Expressionism.  I believe that my style developed more towards representational, quiet, static images in painting, turning daily life into eerie form, with a thin paint surface, although I experimented with the opposite qualities as well, never finding much satisfaction in them. Some of my works are more surrealistic (Caged and If I Could Have Opened My Heart), while others (In the Room With Memories or In the Room With the Magic Ball) can be referred to as Magic Realism.

In Art History, Magic Realism acted as a portal to Surrealism, and many artists shifted back and forth from one to another, especially Magritte (Roch, 138).  When I discovered the website ww.tendreams.org  I found a few artists there who I knew before and considered them as influences, but did not realize that they belonged to the Magic Realism group, among them Andrew Wyeth, George Tooker and Charles Scheeler. These artists sometimes crossed the boundaries between Surrealism, Symbolism and Magic Realism. My work also shifts back and forth across the boundaries of Surrealism and Magic Realism, while a large number of other works as you can see on my website www.allaparsons.com are just studies from life: Figure, Still Life and Landscape. I feel the need to work on these Life Studies and I am constantly working to improve my skills in observational drawing and painting. However I consider Magic Realism my major work which takes a longer time to go through the process in my mind, before ripening and appearing, first on sketchbook pages and then on canvas.

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Image

 

The image in the center is a watercolor painting made from a photo of my mother I took when we visited the University of Virginia in 2004. After that the idea was born to use this portrait for a bigger painting and add small scenes on the edges. This idea was influenced by the structure of Russian icons where the main image of a Saint is in the center and the smaller images “klejma” are located on the sides, illustrating the Saint’s life.  So, in “My Mother’s Life” her portrait is surrounded by the most important scenes of her life. I conducted a series of interviews with my mother clarifying which events in her life she considered the most important. Some of the events she considered the most important I used in the painting. For example, one is “the birth of her first child, the son” (let me note that it was not me). Some of the events I had to add by myself based on my understanding of what was important in her life. Some of the small images are based on real life photos and some are “invented”  – based on my imagination, but also based on real facts of my mother’s life.

First in the series of small images (top, left) is the detail of a real photograph. My mother is sitting on a chair, she is maybe 2 or 3 years old and her face looks angry. My mother told me she felt angry and unhappy when they took her photo, because she had to pose in an old coat. She inherited that coat from her older brother, as he did from somebody else. She felt that the coat was very old and ugly and she felt terrible that she had her photo taken in such an ugly coat. She later told me about her  thought process: <<Why did we always say in school “Thank you to the Comrade Stalin for our happy childhood!” while in fact I am not that happy – I have such an old coat?>>. That moment I depicted in this first image and that’s why there is a text there in Russian, translated as “Thank you to the Comrade Stalin for our happy childhood!”

Image

Центральный портрет был написан с фото которое было сделано в Америке, на территории университета Вирджинии, когда мама приезжала в 2004 году.  Я решила использовать это фото для портрета, но потом родилась идея – дополнить портрет сценами из ее жизни, заимствуя идею Русских Икон. В “житийных” иконах в центре всегда стоит большой образ святого, а вокруг – маленькие картинки – “клейма” с изображениями жития святых. Так и в “Жизни Мой Мамы” ее жизнь – наиболее значтельные сцены – по краям в маленьких картинках. С мамой были проведены небольшие интервью, проливающие свет на те части ее жизни, которые она считала наиболее важными. И кое-что было принято во внимание. Так, например, одно из наиболее важных событий в ее жизни было “рождение первого ребенка, сына” (примечание, я не была ни первым ребенком, ни сыном). Но некоторые важные события в жизни были определены мною, по моему собственному усмотрению. Некоторые “картинки из жизни” были прямые заимствования из существующих фотографий, а некоторые – были “изобретенными фотографиями” и я изобразила некоторые моменты просто из воображения.

Первая картинка – это прямое заимствование старой фотографии. Мама маленькая, ей года 2 или 3, она сидит на стуле и лицо ее очень сердитое. По ее словам, она помнит, что была очень недовольна фактом, что ее фотографируют, а она сидит в старом пальто. Пальто ей досталось от старших братьев, а им – еще от кого-то. Она действительно очень страдала от осознания уродливости этого старого пальто, и в те моменты ее маленькую детскую голову пришла мысль – <а почему в школе мы всегда говорим “Спасибо Товарищу Сталину за наше счастливое детство!” ? Когда на самом деле я себя совсем не чувствую счастливой и у меня таkое старое пальто?>. Это я и изобразила. В нижней части – текст  “Спасибо Товарищу Сталину за наше счастливое детство!”

Продолжение

Part 2

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I was going to publish more stories about my paintings and then a friend asked “Why the crow?” So I will start from this one.

In the Room With Memories

In the Room With Memories. Oil and collage on canvas. 48×36.

The crow in the painting “In a Room With Memories”  is a memory from my childhood.  My mother had a pet crow.  The crow just came into the open window one day and stayed to live with us. My mother named her “Vichka” (short for Viktoria). She loved my mother and hated me, probably out of jealousy,  and tried to bite me if I came too close.  I was only 4 years old, I was scared, but fascinated with the crow and was trying to gain her trust.  In doing so, I learned to speak like a crow, but that just seemed to annoy her more.  In this painting I am finally becoming friends with the crow and making peace with my childhood memories.

The image of the crow is also appearing in “Self-Portrait in the Red Turban”. I thought about how the feeling of me being rejected by the crow in my childhood is similar to the feeling of being rejected by the art world. I felt rejected when I heard from someone at about the age 14: “There had never been great women artists.”  At first I tried to argue but I had no facts to prove the opposite.  During the 1970s in the Soviet Union no one knew about Artemisia Gentileschi,  Georgia O’Keefe, or Lee Miller.  It was obvious that all “great artists” of both present and the past were men, especially those who chose to join the Communist Party.  I heard negative remarks about “women’s art” which was often considered unimportant and limited to flowers and such.  At the same time in the United States Linda Nochlin’s 1971 article, “Why Have There Been No Great Women Artists?” was published.  It is ironic that the same words that empowered women artists in the United States made me give up my dream of becoming an artist in the USSR.

Self-Portrait in a Red Turban

Self-Portrait in a Red Turban. Oil on canvas and paper. Artist-made frame. 

The image of the crows in this work represents great artists whom I admired and wanted to belong but was rejected.  Just like being rejected by the crow in my childhood with whom I wanted to be friends.  There is a statement in this work that I do belong to the art world.  I state this by representing myself in Van Eyck’s famous red turban and by painting crow feathers on my coat.  This connects me to the art world as well as to the crows’ world.

 

 

 

One of the crows. Oil on gessoed watercolor paper

crow

 

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OK! While I really should be in my studio, painting, I will spend a little more time in a virtual world, boasting about myself. Actually, about having a great friend, a poet, Tom Kirby-Smith who wrote a great poem about my art for my book:

MAGIC CASEMENTS
“ . . . magic casements, opening on the foam
Of perilous seas, in faery lands forlorn”
–Keats

Alla Parsons’ paintings speak to me
As in the song, “Do you see what I see?”Window
Her gaze transfigures all that she beholds—
Clouds, faces, trees—the sunlight that enfolds
Those creeping wavelets, distant church’s spire—
Bare-breasted angels on bright wings aspire–
A croissant on a plate, a pot of tea,
Two smiling women—suffused with mystery—
As Jane Ann wrote me, “haunting, mystical”–
All Alla! But not one bit egotistical.
“Come to the window; sweet is the night air,”
Said Matthew Arnold to his lover there
Above the Dover cliffs. Let Alla call us
(What happier invitation could befall us!)
To share the windows of her soul, and see
Within those magic frames the mystery
Transforming common things until they seem
“The glory and the freshness of a dream”
As yet another poet wrote. Open this book,
There’s nothing else to say. Just, simply, “Look!”

Tom Kirby-Smith

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

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001_self_in_red_turban

My work “Self-Portrait in a Red Turban” was published in:

The Lexikon of Fantastic Artists (2nd german extended edition) ISBN: 9-783848263073

The official presentation of the book is Saturday, February 23, 2013 11:00 a.m. at the PhantastenMuseum Wien
Palais Palffy 1010 Vienna Josefsplatz 6

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After a long period of travel abroad we moved to Virginia just in time to meet the New 2012 Year…

March  – “Between Reality and Imagination”” – solo show at the Gourmet Frog

June – “7 Visions”” – group show with 6 other local artists who invited me to participate in a group critique on a monthly basis

July – “Figuratively Speaking” solo show of figurative works at the Artery Gallery in Greensboro, NC

August – work was accepted into the prestigious “Virginia Artists” juried show in Hampton, VA

September – Tunisia Art Festival – an artist residency with artists from 18 different countries in Monastir, Tunisia

November – awarded an Honorable mention at Danville Art League juried show

December – work was accepted and sold at the prestigious “Winter Show” in Green Hill Center, Greensboro, NC

Work accepted for publication in Vienna, Austria – Catalog of Fantastic Realism

Two solo shows scheduled: one for 2013 in South Boston, VA and another for 2014 at the Museum of Fine Art and History in Danville, VA

I guess it was a good year!

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