Friday Film Slate Rocks at Mammoth Lakes Film Festival 2019

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A wide variety of entirely unique film-going adventures marked Friday’s packed slate at the Mammoth Lakes Film Festival 2019.

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Shorts Block 2 began our programming day with a mix of comedy, drama, and even a musical. From the U.K., Deadpan is an hilarious dark comedy about a stand-up comic’s true love: who can’t laugh, or she literally might die. Ready for Love was also brilliantly funny, a three-time approach by the mythical Amber Lee Weatherbee as she attempts to become a contestant on The Bachelor. Hastings quietly projects a disconnect – and a connection – between mother and daughter when one of several siblings flies home to celebrate her mother’s birthday.

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Heirophany is an evocatively shot black and white work in which two teens plot to steal a backpack full of rabbits; one witnesses a dramatically beautiful falcon,  and changes his mind. Director Kevin Contento explained that the short’s unique location in Bell Glade, Fla. was chosen in part because he lives 40 minutes south of that community. “Before I went to film school, I was into falconry and went to that area with an experienced falconer who lost his bird while we were there. He got it back, but I wanted to give the story more of an abstract feel but use the location and also include a simpler story about rabbit hunters in the sugar cane fields.”  He chose black and white in part because he’s an Ingmar Bergman fan,  but also because he felt the approach “allows you to give yourself more to the story.”

Difference, a cleverly constructed short from Iranian director Ali Asadollahi, follows the funny/sad story of three young men who accuse each other of hallucinating one of the three,  insisting that each is correct and the others are wrong.

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Rewind was a stunning film from Ying Liu Hatch. The Chinese/American short dazzles with its original music and a delightful, moving twist involving true love an A.I. The lush cinematography by Sean Odea contributed to the film’s magic. Hatch says “We shot in eight days, and my biggest accomplishment was the use of the metro in the first scene. I had to write a special proposal – and shamelessly used my crew’s credits – to get clearance. We had a four hour limit, and shot late at night. In the metro station we had to find a guy to turn on the escalator again, as it was turned off for the night.” The crew was able to add a second 3.5 hour session the next day, by convincing the metro’s powers-that-be that the film would be good publicity. Hatch’s passion project was the first production she’s shot in China.

Feature doc Buddy, from acclaimed international director Heddy Honigmann, crafts a moving story about six service dogs and their owners. The poignant story shapes beautifully realized portraits of each dog and their person.

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Preceding Buddy, was a terrific stop-motion short, Dani. Director Elizabeth Hogenson, appearing with  the real-life cancer survivor and titular character of Dani, says the film started after she overheard her roommate’s actual conversation with her mother, which Dani had taped for use in a podcast she created. “It moved me, so I asked if I could take her phone recording and turn it into a stop action animation, which I was studying in grad school.”  She felt that the “use of stop action is so tactile and connected, it makes it more comfortable when dealing with something so heavy.” Dani, who just finished chemotherapy this February, had not listened to the recorded conversation since Hogenson first made the film. “It made me emotional all over again,” she attests – the same affect the short had on many members of the viewing audience.

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Juan is an international documentary that touches on elements of magical realism in the story of director Adrian Geyer returning to the site of his parents’ transformative visit to iconic folk artist Juan Felix Sanchez’ mountain home. Set in the voluptuously beautiful mountains of Venezuela, the film offers a poetic view of the meaning of art and find in purpose in one’s life. “It was magical discerning the same steps my parents took. This is the third part of a project I’ve been working on about Sanchez. I did a short film, and an art installation. It was really complex to do it,” he says, touching on the months-long process of securing some of the interviews with those who knew the late Sanchez when he was alive, and the 8-hour rugged horseback trek to Sanchez’ former home the site of many of his carvings and chapel. With an altitude of 13,000-feet and absolutely no amenities available, Geyer rose to the challenge literally in terms of creating this insightful work.

Paired with this feature was Autumn Waltz, a palpably tension-filled depiction of an encounter between a couple fleeing a besieged village and encountering hostile soldiers.  The Serbian film is edge-of-your-seat thrilling.

Rounding out the films viewed was something much lighter, the Nick Kroll-starrer Olympic Dreams, a loose romantic dramedy between a lonely volunteer dentist and a young cross-country skier athlete. The film’s setting was undeniably fresh and exciting: shot in the actual Athlete Village during the Winter Olympic Games, and featuring real Olympic athletes including romantic lead Alexi Pappas. Director Jeremy Teicher is an area local; the film had a strong improvisational flavor, doubtlessly attributable in part to Kroll.

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The film was paired with the truly tear-bringing – yet also richly humorous – short Jack, in which lead and writer Ryan Gaul successfully culls humor and heart-felt poignancy from the necessity of putting a beloved cat to rest. Gaul says “I’ve watched it about 600 times and it still affects me. The genesis of it was a sketch at the Groundlings (comedy theater), but our decision was to make it more real.” Director Nick Paonessa adds “There was a little improv in it, but the script was pretty tight. I cut three minutes out of the film because I worked to find real balance between what was sad and what made you laugh.” Although the film took literally just five hours to shoot in its entirety, it took the cast and crew a year to set it up and make.  “We purposely wanted to shoot something simple. It just felt meant to be. It’s really a film about this character’s unwillingness to confront the reality of this situation, and come to terms with it.”

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Post-screenings, the festival hosted filmmaker and other screening attendees at Mammoth Rock n’ Bowl for pizza, beer, bowling, and talk about films, of course.

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  • Genie Davis; photos: Jack Burke, Genie Davis

First Full Day of Film Programming at Mammoth Lakes Film Fest 2019

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The first full day of film programming at the 2019 iteration of the Mammoth Lakes Film Festival kicked off with two strong shorts programs, included a brilliant documentary, and moved on to coming of age film that accented feminism and fantastical situations.

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In the Mojave to Mammoth shorts block, each film was entirely original and dynamic. Among the standouts: Remission, gave a mix of abstract animated images and profoundly moving live action sequences filmed in the desert and mountains. Visually astonishing, creator and artist Paul Kaiser was working to create a personal experience that was relatable to any audience, based on the fact that he served as Special Ops during the Iraq war, was kidnapped, and escaped, and the adjustment traumas he went through on his return. Director John Charter said that “One of the driving forces was that Paul lost contact with his children. We chose different creatures and locations for the film to express a tone of longing and loneliness, and express his dedication at an cost.” Kaiser described using Jungian images to express “my experience in a way that trasnferred my story.” A fine artist by profession, Kaiser paired with Charter make an awe inspiring team in a dazzling tour de force. The film is party of a trilogy, Kaiser says. “We are completely a three part series of shorts dealing beyond the typical tropes.” The second in the series will deal with mental illness, PTSD, and suicide.

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With Follow, director Byron Stankus and his half brother, writer Gregor Patsch, along with lead actress Alison Blaize, created a taut suspense thriller about an ominous stalker following a woman on a solo trek along a Sierra Nevada trail. Stankus, who appeared with his lead, related that “We used a DSLR and four lenses in a two day shoot because the first day got rained out. Most scenes were shot in one take.”

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It also serves as a cautionary tale about what one posts to social media.

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Miracle Desert was a perfectly crafted prize, directed and written by Mark Hosack, the short depicted a supernaturally ominous El Diabolo and a dangerous sheriff both after two buried-in-the-sand hapless semi-criminals.  Hosack first wrote the short as the concluding scene for a feature project 14 years ago. “We almost had the feature up and going, but it fell apart, I had three babies, and then a friend of mine, who produced this film said, let’s do it.” They flew the accomplished actors into Las Vegas but were short on cash. “My friend had $1000 and we pushed it up to $4000 in black jack, but then lost. On our way back, we did it again, and this time we won $8000 and were able to complete the film. Proving it’s easier to get funding in Las Vegas than in Hollywood.” Despite enduring a sandstorm and two and a half days of shooting in a dry lake bed in high heat, the short turned out letter-perfect; Hosack is currently in pre-production on the feature version of the film, and looking for additional completion funds – in our opinion, it will be a worthy investment.

Also in the Mojave to Mammoth line up: Sound of Silence is a doc short about a severely deaf young man overcoming obstacles to become a downhill skier of great skill; Climb-It Change, also a doc, discusses researchers and rock climbers investigating the impact of climate change,; and the emotionally powerful Red and White doc includes astonishing and terrifying first person footage of an actual avalanche in Iran.

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In Shorts Block One, Tunnel Ball offered a hilarious tgake by Australian director Davis Jensen about a new school in which everyone but him is an identical person named Brett. “It was based,” Jensen asserts, “on a toxic environment in a private school experience.” He’s currently writing a school-based murder mystery; this was his grad school film.

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“Get Up Pierrot,” an animated short from Gurleen Rai and F Anthony Shepherd features an archetypal sad clown. Rai says “It was all intuitive work. Every work we put out a new short episode on Instagram about this character, then base our next episode on audience response.” Shepherd adds “It’s about rejection, and includes Commedia Dell’arte even in the naming of his character.” The images are drawn by Rai on printed paper and scanned into photo shop, Shepherd adds music and shaping.

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Enough is Enough is an intense, brilliantly executed dramatic standout from director/writer Jess Kellner. New Jersey-based, Kellner shot on location in the state. “I consider myself a funny guy, but my favorite movies are dramas such as There Will Be Blood. All are very visual and so was this film, which I approached with minimal dialog.” Kellner also cast himself in the film. “My brother DP’d the project, and having him aboard was really helpful. It was a real team effort. My lead actress I cast from seeing her in a play after reaching out for recommendations from theatrical directors and filmmakers.” He shot on an ARI Alexa, on a very low budget, but the short looks like it cost a great deal more to produce. The story of a a woman forced to question her fidelity to a chronically sick husband was compelling and intense; it’s pitch perfect, and left the audience wanting far more.

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Nobody Likes You as Much as I Do features the dry with of Jerzy Rose, directing and writing a piece that pushes relationship issues to the fore in the story of a pair of American academics who met up with a former student and worry about her welfare following a drunken night on the town in Paris.

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Other films include the surreal One about the deadly dreams of three Iranian boys, which included vivid animated images with live action; and Liberty, from director Faren Humes, an intimate look about the upheaval brought about when redevelopment occurs in the oldest public housing space in Miami.  “That spurred ideas of grief and loss and long standing bonds torn apart. i was trying to materialize that feeling,” Humes says.

Cold Case: Hammarskjold is a riveting documentary from director/writer Mads Brugger intent on solving the mysterious death of U.N. leader Dag Hammarskjold. The case leads him into uncharted territory, uncovering a hidden South African-based organization also responsible for spreading the AIDS epidemic. Fascinating, conspiratorial, funny, and frightening, Brugger’s work here echoes his satirical docu-series and past feature docs which won awards at Sundance in 2010 and 2012. The compelling and terrifying film – while also managing to be amusing – is already scheduled for release through Magnolia pictures.

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In competition here at Mammoth Lakes was Knives and Skin, a highly feminist high school coming-of-age story that also involves the horrifying inciting incident of a teen girl’s death,  a passionate young lesbian relationship, and the trauma-induced coping-mechanisms of three hardly-stellar mother figures. Edged in fantasy, vividly costumed and colored, the slightly surreal narrative feature includes brilliant use of acapella 80s and 90s pop hits. Director Jennifer Reeder’s visual palette and exceptional cast wowed, even if the story-line occasionally strained. Undoubtedly, the film will make a cinematic mark.

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Actress Marika Englehardt appeared for a q and a with fest programming director Paul Sbrizzi. “Shooting the film was magical and bizarre. Here we were, out in the sticks of Illinois, and there was pink and glitter everywhere.” Citing the director’s “strong vision,” she noted that the film is currently a hit on the festival circuit, and will be soon headed for Toronto. “It had a mystical scale and time line,” she notes. Englehardt herself is currently at work on the Netflix series Easy.

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Rounding out a full festival day: a late night happy hour at Mammoth’s craft brew emporium The Public House, where the beers were diverse and the soft pretzel and honey-mustard as tasty as the conversation with filmmakers.

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Above, Mammoth Lakes Film Festival director Shira Dubrovner with filmmaker Mark Hosack of Miracle Dreams.

Looking for something extraordinary to do this Memorial Weekend? – Mammoth Lakes Film Festival, now its 5th year, should fit the bill.

  • Genie Davis; Photos: Jack Burke

 

 

 

Mammoth Lakes Film Festival Opening Night: In Fabric Haunts

 

Shira Dubrovner, festival director with Paul Sbrizzi, director of programming
Shira Dubrovner, festival director with Paul Sbrizzi, director of programming

Entering it’s 5th year with a snowy salute – yes, it is snowing in May in Mammoth Lakes, Calif.  – the Mammoth Lakes Film Festival opened tonight with In Fabric, a film at once haunting and campy, filled with hand wringing scares and tropes from horror films past.

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Weird and wonderful, the feature is both homage to horror movies and full-on send-up of same. There’s a crimson dress that is literally and figuratively a killer, purchased at a high-end department store run by a coven of sexually deviant witches.

The film switches hapless wearer/protagonists just past the half-way mark, moving from the growing terrifying misadventures of a single mom in search of love to that of an engaged couple, who come into the dress through a thrift shop purchase for a bachelor’s party.

Both frightening and often absurd, the film also strikes a glancing blow at consumer culture and dating services, moving audiences from appreciation of its strange and audacious wit to jump scares and an overall aura of the genuinely creepy that lingers after the film ends.

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At the opening night party at the Polo Event Center in Mammoth, festival director Shira Dubrovner and programming director Paul Sbrizzi celebrated the festival’s epic growth and five-years-and-counting run in an intimate, pristine, and natural setting.

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The party featured some awesome beverages from Devils Creek Distillery, a family owned purveyor of rye, rum, and bourbon here in Mammoth Lakes. Rum, mint, lime juice, simple syrup, and angostura bitters were used to craft the First Chair; the Smoke Jumper was served with an impressive infusion on-site of hickory smoke with bourbon, Aperol, sweet vermouth, and orange bitters.

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Also on hand were tasty cheese, meats, breads, and fruit from Bleu Handcrafted Foods, plus Blue Moon beer, and fine wines from Black Box.

Post party, we are enjoying our stay at the beautiful, serene Sierra Nevada Resort and Spa, both rustic and chic in style, and just a great place to call “home” between and after films.  Plus there’s cool carved bears on the sign outside, and beyond the hot tub, a sweet 18-hole mini-golf course — a snowy one at the moment.

Festival gold sponsors, and sponsors of opening night and party, Paul and Kathleen Rudder
Festival gold sponsors, and sponsors of opening night and party, Paul and Kathleen Rudder

Haven’t attended the Mammoth Lakes Film Festival yet? LA residents, the snow is really pretty, the roads are completely clear, and some screening and event tickets are still available – come join us. We will be covering the festival nightly, exploring the always-interesting, stimulating, and diverse features, docs, shorts, panels, and parties.

  • Genie Davis; Photos: Jack Burke

 

Randi Matushevitz: Reflecting Her Existence Through Art

01. Matushevitz_DoYouSeeMe_...KeepYourEyesOnTheRoad_154x277cm_LgArtist Randi Matushevitz is something of a chameleon, always driven by an exploration of the human spirit and the desire to evoke and reflect the reality of existence: both her own, and that of others.  Prolific and profound, her work has shifted and changed over time, moving from pastels and bright colors to darker and edgier territory in terms of both palette and subject. As layered and nuanced as her art itself is the meaningful thematic nature of her work: regardless of style, a deep sense of kindness and hope can be extruded from even the darkest piece.

She describes her earliest works as “‘an exploration in making special,’ a phrase coined by social anthropologist Ellen Dissanyake. Dissanyake’s book proposed that making special is a social biological need necessary for good health. Her emphasis was on the need to partake in the creative act as nurturing and necessary.” The book offered examples ranging from tribal culture to today’s city dwellers, touching on creative work from body marking to designing clothing.  Matushevitz says “The idea of nurturing through artwork was interesting to me, as a woman who did not follow the traditional role model for marriage and children that was the standard.”

She created three installation works between 1998 and 2000 that explored female identity at the beginning of her career.

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The first, Milk to Meat exhibited at Leonora Vega Gallery in New York City.  It was an installation of 1500, Even-flo glass baby bottles with the company name embossed,  wooden tables, and personal ephemera.  “The quip, ‘you are what you eat,’ led me to think about how we feed our young and the priorities of adulthood,” Matushevitz says.

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The bottles were filled with everything from birdseed to battery-operated lights, insects, and plastic multi-racial babies. “The idea is connecting the baby bottle and the water bottle, that we are still suckling, that the bottles were symbolic of nurturing.”

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Her subsequent installation, The Feminine Side of Life, offered a series of miniature 6” round acrylic and collage paintings. “The bodiless dress is the protagonist in a body of work that compares and contrasts traditional expectations of women with the contemporary life style of contemporary women.”

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Matushevitz’ Rose de Amor explored life cycle of romantic relationships considering pacification. To create the exhibition which dealt with the how and why in which people pacify themselves, by collaborating with a professional glass blower in Miami, to design and create three 40-inch tall by 25- inch wide glass pacifiers.” The three, frosted glass, purple, rose, and green hand-blown nipple shapes were presented on a vertical bed of sand; the first had lost its nipple, the second was whole, and the third was in pieces.

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Matushevitz continued exploring art as a nurturing medium with Salt of the Earth, in which she noted both positive and negative options for self-soothing with an installation of nine over-sized soft sculptures set on astro-turf, vinyl tablecloths, and surrounded by ephemera and site-specific wall drawings connecting “the feminine side of life with ideas of pacification and sex.”

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Overtime, her work changed and evolved. While some series were whimsical, even light-hearted, others went deeper.

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With her work in the 2014-2016 series Mysterious, there arose a stream of consciousness practice in mixed media drawing that involved charcoal, pastel, spray paint and acrylic. “A friend had given me a ream of large print paper, 42 inches by 27 inches, as a moving present. That is how the practice began.” Creating big works led to big ideas. “These open-ended narrative drawings became a metaphysical, spiritual and psychological study in my relationship to myself, to the tough and the joyful experiences that challenge fortitude for survival or madness. I began to see the wear and tear of daily life, aging, love and loss on others,” she relates.

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With her series Conundrum, Matushevitz moved into darker territory, with immersive and emotional images that can best be described as dark and intense. The work used multiple layers of charcoal, pastel, spray paint, and acrylic, and involved symbols, stencils, and a deep look at the emotion of human culture and society, bursting with the hope and fear of our current socio-political times.

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Currently, Matushevitz is at work on a richly diverse series titled Ugly Portraits, which she recently exhibited at Coagula Gallery in downtown Los Angeles. The series grew out of a desire to paint with oil, she explains, as well as an interest in “finding alternative ways to see each other.”  She adds that “The recognizable power of a facial expression transmits inaudible information that engages the viewer in a conversation that is simultaneously anonymous and identifiable. Growing up in Las Vegas provided the perfect backdrop to observe us, humankind. These portraits meet the viewer on their own terms with a silent gesture in an inaudible moment.”

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She describes the work aptly as being both sublime and grotesque, “colorful and textured, these synthesized expressions of strangers, family and friends serve as a tactile and psychological expression of humankind absent of culture or language.” The faces are not just of everyone, they are with the “every” that we each carry inside us.

Matushevitz says that what draws her into darker places is the through-line of each series she creates, an exploration of the human condition and spirit.

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With Mysterious, she began to release the darkness from inside out, making a decision to work in a stream of consciousness. “I needed to release…the dark, dystopian, and anxious came out, of me, or rather through me, and so did the light, the uplifting and the joyful.” She asserts that “The spirit of my work is reflective of my existence.  As I grow and evolve into a more complete human, I see my work as connected to the larger energy of the whole. Communicating, affecting the world to be a connected place, where humans consider all life, culture and language as special.  It is what drives me. I am the vehicle.”

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The artist terms her work both existential and figurative. It is intuitive and formal both, and it would be remiss not to note that it is also infused with elements of magic, and the power of “our ability to affect the world for positive or negative outcomes.”

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Her art often has the quality of a fairy or folktale; a narrative that’s brave, loving, and a little bit spooky. There are symbols and signs, figures and landscapes – the impact of viewing her work is immersive and emotional. Enter the world of Matushevitz and become transformed. This is an alternative universe, like our own but unlike it, both delicate and intense.

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Matushevitz says her favorite mediums are whatever she is exploring at the time. “The medium that best solves the questions I am asking,” is the one she most prefers in the moment. She also notes that palette and texture are both developed through the process of making. “Each painting develops within a wide spectrum of layered materials, hues and values to create a psychological state, an illusionistic place and time, a philosophical inference.” Approaching color both intuitively and formally is also an important aspect of her work and the development of the inferences and nuances in her work.

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As her work evolves, so does Matushevitz’ sense of both the beautiful and the bleak in human nature, and in finding the good in even the darkest moments. It is an almost spiritual place that she reaches with her work, the spiritual place that lives in each being. She attests “I do not shrink from responsibilities. I’m not afraid to change my mind. I try to practice what I preach. I am afraid of the hate human beings can have for each other.  My motto is ‘we are more connected than we realize.'”

The artist’s work is based on the idea that what we see has a deep effect on human perception and feeling – and what affects the individual also affects a larger society. She’s exploring all sides of the idea of love and the artifacts of human emotion, using her own unique combinations of symbols, palettes, and patterns.

  • Genie Davis; photos provided by Randi Matushevitz