Thursday, February 26, 2015

Majority Rising: Inspired by Kathleen McKenna

The fourth installment in my series of blogs leading up to the Majority Rising show which curated and participated in at the Artist Archives of the Western Reserve for Women’s History Month. 

Majority Rising, subtitled, Cleveland’s Female Gaze, opened March 12th and featured work by legendary Cleveland figurative artists, Shirley Aley CampbellLee HeinenKathleen McKennaMarsha SweetMarilyn Szalay…and me, Judy Takács.


My contribution to the show as curator and participant, was the portraits I painted of the living artists in this exceptional grouping.

Today I’m shining the spotlight on Kathleen McKenna.
Kathleen McKenna, Walking, Walking Man, Walking

Kathleen and I share some of the same history as portrait artists coming of age in Cleveland during a time when portrait painting was still looked at as the illegitimate stepchild of fine art. We both studied portrait painting extensively under José Cintron, who for many years kept the portrait torch alive in Cleveland higher art education, when no one else was. We both have stories of portrait commissions and their frustrations, as well as their triumphs.

And, I also must thank Kathleen, who was the one who first contacted me from the Artist Archives with the invitation to become an archived artist.

When speaking with Kathleen about her work, she used the words “nervous energy” about six times, so I shall appropriate that term when I talk about what inspires me in her paintings.

Pentimenti is a Renaissance Italian term that refers to the many marks made by artists as they are finding the essential form and gesture when drawing a figure or object. Left in place, those searching lines, along with the heavier and more definite form those lines have ”found,” serve to show the decision making process the artist went through. It also shows us that these artists were indeed human and completed a process of sketch and search before profound brilliance took over for the final and exquisite masterpiece.
Kathleen McKenna, Malala’s Muse

The same is true today, and these pentimenti lines are evidence of the nervous energy Kathleen puts into the beginning, middle…and end of her paintings. They are also calligraphic, and reminiscent of drawing (as opposed to painting)…which, in my book, is the backbone of serious portraiture.


Kathleen’s painting, Malala’s Muse was inspired by the heroic fourteen year old Pakistani girl, Malala Yousafzai, who simply wanted an education for girls in her country and was targeted, shot and left for dead by the Taliban…on a schoolbus no less.

Kathleen’s models for this painting are girls from her neighborhood who safely attend the local public school and enjoying the freedom to learn, play music and be inspired. She thought it a fitting tribute to name the painting after the young hero who fights for these basic human rights for girls in the Middle East.

I too, am incredibly inspired by Malala, and the powerful feminism and love of learning embodied by her story. I also loved the pentimenti aspect of Kathleen’s painting, so I chose to invite Malala’s Muse to my painting of Karen as well. 

As a life-long never-recovering addict to life-drawing, I always begin my paintings gesturally. I then refine and refine with value, color, and then detail, trying to preserve the initial spontenaety of gesture, while covering the actual gestural lines. I don’t consider this a bad thing to polish a painting to a finish, because, as I like to say, “It ain’t right until its right, and when it’s right, it’s right.” And I also have many “fresh starts” that never went further because of that “leave it alone it’s brilliant” happy voice that often sings in my head as I paint.

With Kathleen’s painting, however, I decided to listen…a bit…to that happy voice, and embrace the pentimenti of my Muse drawing. Kathleen’s image in the painting, became more finished, and, in places, I had to force the return of spontaneity.  

Judy Takács, Inspired by Malala and by Kathleen McKenna

Of the 5 portraits I painted for Majority Rising, Kathleen’s image was perhaps the most difficult to render. Glasses always throw me for a loop, but she said they are a familiar part of her face, so I let her keep them on…when I paint someone, the glasses are always negotiable, even though I prefer them off. And Kathleen’s quiet, genteel presence contrasted with her exuberantly gestural paint marks, so her portrait really shows two ideas…which hopefully I have married, but also want to recognize as separate and distinct.


I call her portrait, Inspired by Malala and by Kathleen McKenna.

I’m honored that this painting and three more of mine, are to be exhibited with amazing work from Northeast Ohio’s art stars to celebrate Women’s History Month at Lakeland Community College:

from Woman IX

Artist Reception: Sunday March 6th from 3:30 to 5:00


Show dates: February 27th through April 1


Lakeland Community College7700 Clocktower Drive
Kirtland, Ohio




Wednesday, February 18, 2015

Majority Rising: Inspired by Marsha Sweet

The third installment in my series of blogs leading up to the Majority Rising show which I’m curating and participating in at the Artist Archives of the Western Reserve for Women’s History Month.

Majority Rising, subtitled, Cleveland’s Female Gaze, opens March 12th and features work by legendary Cleveland figurative artists, Shirley Aley Campbell, Lee Heinen, Kathleen McKenna, Marsha Sweet, Marilyn Szalay…and me, Judy Takács.

My contribution to the show will be the portraits I am painting of the living artists in this stellar grouping.

Today, I’m inspired by Master Printmaker, Marsha Sweet.


Marsha Sweet, Colette


There is no forgiveness when you’re making a woodcut print.

It’s black or it’s white. It’s cut or it’s not cut.

And, while you’re cutting you never actually see what will be black and what will be white. You must instinctively know, and be able to predict from subtle shades of beige on the giant wood plank you’re carving into.

Also, your hands must be strong and precise; the hands of a master crafts-person and a master draftsperson.

Marsha told me that you eventually get into a Zen-like rhythm with your cutting tools, but that Nirvana goes hand in hand with hours of intense hard work.

Marsha says that “Great strength is needed is for ‘controlled cutting’ across the variegated density of the grain (in poplar or pine) and powerful force [is needed to cut into] a hardwood such as cherry. There are tight passages of fine detail that do not allow for a slip of the gouge or knife; it is an unforgiving process.”

The drawing and carving time from her initial drawing to bon a tirer (ready to print) often takes about 160 hours; some of her largest woodblocks are 36 x 20.

Once the woodblock is meticulously carved with an image, Marsha then creates a limited edition of prints from the large block by using a baren to burnish the ink onto paper by continually caressing archival paper for about 4 or 5 hours for each print. This is the second controlled and unforgiving process necessary for this master printmaker to create her monumental woodcuts prints

Marsha’s creation process is vastly different from my own; oil painting being eternally changeable with instant gratification at your fingertips. And the physical strength required only comes into play when framing and transporting. During creation, I don’t get much of a workout…besides stepping back for a look.

For each of the Cleveland art legends whom I’m painting for the Majority Rising show, I made a commitment to inhale deeply that which they were inspired by in order to make my painting. So, from Marsha I took inspiration from the monolithic dark shapes she uses as expressive pedestals for her intricately carved faces and hands.
Judy Takács, The Hands of the Woodcut Printmaker, Marsha Sweet

And, these intricate carvings…along with her own beautiful and expressive face…inspired my painting of Marsha Sweet.


When I visited her studio in November, we discussed art, feminism, raising kids and her participation in the Equal Right’s Amendment Marches in the 1970s (remember the ERA? It seemed like a slam-dunk back in the day before we all got comfy and complacent, but it never did pass…though that’s a discussion for another day).

We also discussed the almost exclusively female subjects of her woodcuts. Her work draws inspiration from strong, creative and iconic women from recent history; George Sand, Georgia O’Keeffe, Gertrude Stein, Clara Bow and more.


Marsha Sweet, Georgia O’Keeffe

As we talked about how she depicted ballsy chicks in her art, the discussion inevitably turned to my own Chicks with Balls project. In posing for my portrait of her, Marsha grabbed a naturally polished and perfectly round smooth stone she had picked up on the shores of Lake Erie. She held this round “ball” in her beautifully weathered and skillfully expressive hands.

I called her portrait, The Hands of the Woodcut Printmaker, Marsha Sweet


Judy Takács,
detail from The Hands of the Woodcut Printmaker, Marsha Sweet




Hope to see you at the opening reception

Majority Rising
Cleveland’s Female Gaze

Public Opening Reception: Thursday March 12, 5:30 to 8:30

Show dates March 12 through May 2

Artist Archives of the Western Reserve
1834 East 123rd Street
Cleveland, Ohio 44106

Or stop by during gallery hours:
Wednesday through Friday: 10:00 to 4:00
Saturday: 12:00 to 4:00



Private Studio tours in conjunction with the exhibit:

Lee Heinen Studio Tour, March 21, 2015, 1:00 to 2:30

Shirley Campbell Studio Tour, April 4, 2015 from 1:00 to 2:30

Judy Takács Studio Tour, April 11, 2015, 1:00 to 2:30

Kathleen McKenna Studio Tour, April 18, 2015, 1:00 to 2:30

Individual $20
AAWR Member $15

To reserve your spot and buy your ticket to any of the studio tours, email Katelyn Gainer, Gallery and Administrative Assistant at kgainer@artistsarchives.org or call 216.721.9020. 


Read the first Majority Rising blog featuring Shirley Aley Campbell, and the second one which talks about Lee Heinen.






Monday, February 9, 2015

Majority Rising: Inspired by Lee Heinen

The second installment in my series of blogs leading up to the Majority Rising show which I’m curating and participating in at the Artist Archives of the Western Reserve for Women’s History Month. You can read the first installment here.

 

Majority Rising, subtitled, Cleveland’s Female Gaze, opens March 12th and features work by legendary Cleveland figurative artists, Shirley Aley Campbell, Lee Heinen, Kathleen McKenna, Marsha Sweet, Marilyn Szalay…and me, Judy Takács.

My contribution to the show will be the portraits I am painting of the living artists in this stellar grouping. 


Today Im talking about the portrait I painted of artist, Lee Heinen.


Judy Takács, Lee Heinen: Bathed in Sunlight

Lee does the exact opposite of what I do as an artist.  She sees the forest, where I see trees (one of the many reasons landscapes scare me so). She simplifies and sees major shapes and colors where I complicate and also delight in specific details. She is able to distill a scene to its essence and express it unapologetically with sensitive silhouettes and bold color passages.

In assembling my dream team for the Majority Rising show, I chose each artist’s work as a unit with its own distinct voice.

In painting each artists portrait, I purposely immersed myself in that artist’s distinct voice…and drew inspiration from their work for their portrait. I was not trying to paint in their “style” (oh how I despise that word as applied to art.) I was attempting to breathe in what motivates their work and let myself be motivated by it too.



Lee Heinen, Sandman


In Lee’s work, I breathed in glowing sunny passages, sensitive contours, intimate human gestures and abstract compositions that accounted for every square inch of canvas.

Nothing more…and nothing less needs to be said about the reclining toddler that fell asleep on the corner of the couch in Sandman.

Naturally observed multi-figural groupings scare me. Lee Heinen’s paintings, however, pounce on delicious specifics like the boy with two Oreo cookies and the man scratching his belly in Day at the Beach below. Then she carefully massages large shapes and contours to their essential gestural core; never too much, never too little.


Lee Heinen, Day at the Beach

Fortunately for me, the day I met with Lee at her beautiful studio in the heart of Cleveland’s Little Italy Art District, it was sunny and bright. She’s hosting a studio tour on March 21st, so you can see it too…along with much of her amazing work.

I had her pose in front of her windows, which glowed with sunlight, creating warm halftones on her face, with almost no true darks. Lee glowed with sunlight like her paintings do.

Not venturing too far from my comfort zone, I kept the background minimal, but sunny, so as to focus on the cool fun lights on her face. After several hand positions were painted and repainted, I solved compositional problems with an eye to capturing essential shapes…the forest, not the trees. In her face, however, I climbed up into the trees and painted each and every leaf…with relish.

I call my portrait, “Lee Heinen, Bathed in Sunlight”


Detail from Lee Heinen, Bathed in Sunlight by Judy Takács








Hope to see you at the opening reception

Majority Rising
Cleveland’s Female Gaze

Public Opening Reception: Thursday March 12, 5:30 to 8:30

Show dates March 12 through May 2

Artist Archives of the Western Reserve
1834 East 123rd Street
Cleveland, Ohio 44106

Or stop by during gallery hours:
Wednesday through Friday: 10:00 to 4:00
Saturday: 12:00 to 4:00



Private Studio tours in conjunction with the exhibit:

Lee Heinen Studio Tour, March 21, 2015, 1:00 to 2:30

Shirley Campbell Studio Tour, April 4, 2015 from 1:00 to 2:30

Judy Takács Studio Tour, April 11, 2015, 1:00 to 2:30

Kathleen McKenna Studio Tour, April 18, 2015, 1:00 to 2:30

Individual $20
AAWR Member $15

To reserve your spot and buy your ticket to any of the studio tours, email Katelyn Gainer, Gallery and Administrative Assistant at kgainer@artistsarchives.org or call 216.721.9020.