ArtView March 2015 | Page 47

Mural for Sarabeth's Tribeca restaurant, New York (2012) invested in their careers. I was extremely fortunate in my young years as an artist and did not fully realize that until later on; but I have never regretted my change in direction. During those parenting years I kept creating: costumes and set designs/painting for theater (which is really where I learned to apply paint – nothing like a 30-foot olio or 10), fundraising, curriculum development and program development for schools, etc. What I ultimately gained, in terms of art, from that turn in my life‟s direction is that now I am richer for the sensibilities and knowledge gained in those many years, and am extremely excited and committed to making a full and dedicated return to art. It is as if I get to live a new life, one in which making art once again is my life. I am so very lucky to have that and be returning to it. (No matter how one engages with art, I highly recommend to all to make art, be it visual, musical, theatrical, etc. The time spent giving that to oneself is a gift). Anyway, as the children grew, I primarily parented, did some teaching stints (art), and homeschooled my kids for a few years, creating my own art-inspired curriculum, and then when they went to school, I went back to school through an offcampus program at Goddard College to secure my Masters in Ed and certification. I went through a divorce, single parenting our children, and taught in local schools for a number of years. I love teaching and curriculum development. After a remarriage and several moves due to my husband‟s work, I tried to re-engage in art by doing some murals. It was also a way to try to re-enter the working population (between moves for his job, licensing requirements and my age, teaching was not going to work). When my husband retired, I agreed to winter in Arizona. From theater sets, murals was an easy transition and I have always loved working large, it is an extension from my color field interest, and an interest in works that have a different kind of relationship to the viewer than small paintings do. One of my last mural jobs was for Sarabeth’s Tribeca in NYC. That job was completed the same summer in which a number of family events took place. When I came out to Arizona two years ago, I came out exhausted but inspired and in the habit of daily painting. At that point I wanted to paint singleday small works. No major commitments for a while so I turned the corner of our living room in Arizona into a studio and bought some canvas and stretchers. I called my son, Ian Marion, a painter (attended RISD and NY Academy of Art) and said… now what? Ian had seen some of my detailed high school work and I still have a landscape floating around, he also saw the murals which are a bit representational as well as a couple of odd nonobjective paintings (I tried to paint a bit, nonobjective work, while living in Long Island), and suggested I paint representationally. SCARY thought, as I had not done it for over 30 years. While Mark Rothko is one of my all time favorite painters, in terms of representational work, Jamie Wyeth heads the list with Richard Diebenkorn a close second. Others on the list: Corot and Courbet, Bonnard and Vuillard, Durer, Picasso‟s Rose Period, Blake, Gabriel Rosetti, Thomas Hart Benton, Frank Gehry (I know that is architecture, but his work