Maya Kabat: Exploring Through Art

Maya Kabat Studio

Everyone, in one way or another, wants to explore the world. What that exploration means is different, of course, to every person – both in scope and in scale.

As an artist, Maya Kabat is vast and adventurous explorer, using two different mediums – paintings and mixed media – to examine the world she perceives around her. This results in varied, fascinating work; layered in concept and construction; colors that shift like sunset reflected on water or within the depths of clouds.

“My paintings and mixed media work evolve from very different places and fill different needs I have as a person and as an artist,” Kabat says.

Her paintings are large and lovely, overlaps of texture and palette that feed one another.

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“My paintings are very physical and my whole body is involved with massaging a painting into being. For me, painting is very much like playing sports. I’m playing and collaborating with the paint and responding and moving with the flow of the piece. I’m trying things and then backing off. I’ll pull paint off if it’s not working.”

She notes that when she plays sports she’s interested in the beauty of the game, not winning or losing; she follows the flow.

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“I’m interested in…the timing and flow of everything, and the feeling of having a body in space that moves and moves beautifully when everything is right. It takes practice, but it’s the potential for beauty the drives me back to the court or field. My painting is similar as I’m very much in collaboration with the paint; the color, the shapes, the textures, and the structures. All of these things are driving me as I go, and I’m moving and engaged physically and responding to it all in the moment. Sometimes you hit it just right and sometimes you don’t! But the potential for beauty drives me along and drives my desire to practice painting.”

There is a fierceness and a sense of intrinsic movement, shifts of light as it were within her paintings.  They are bold and deep. Her mixed media work is more delicate, even transitory.

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“My mixed media work on paper evolved from my need to draw and explore language – for me holding a pencil is inseparable from writing – and to explore other materials, and conceptual ideas. I work in series, and each series has lasted about 6 months,” she relates.

Her mixed media pieces seem measured, studied, and very much tell stories, even if they are mysterious tales to the viewer, who is invited to create their own meaning from them.

“In my mixed media drawing practice I’ve explored botanical themes, sickness – I was very ill for a period in my early 40s, binary code, war and the physics of time and space. Right now I’m exploring imagery derived from my trips to the Arctic, and another series about gender relations.”

She works with a wide variety of techniques and uses materials that range from stencil to water based paints, to acrylic pens to playing with freezing and melting ink.

“Working on paper is more flexible and transportable and so I’ll bring this work on trips and residencies where I could never bring oil paints. The dry time that oil paints require is so limiting. So the drawing/mixed media practice allows for me to digest lots of materials and ideas and conceptual themes. My oil painting on canvas is really one long, ongoing and evolving series.”

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Her work has an overriding feeling of perfectly planned geometry, combined with a truly spiritual quality that Kabat says is intentional.

“The painting process for me is very much about the physical nature of being a human being. We are human beings with minds, eyes and bodies. I feel that the haptic nature of our reality is really being subverted right now with our cultural obsession with screens. Our minds and eyes are stimulated incessantly while our bodies lie dormant.”

In a sense, Kabat’s work is exploring not just the world around her and the viewer, but the world inside us.

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“Spiritually, there is a connection with touch and our bodies that’s being ignored and lost. That’s why I meditate and do yoga and play sports and paint – so I can get out of my head and into my body. My paintings with their thick, visceral textures and pushing and pulling spaces are intended to be viewed with the eyes, but also felt with body. I really hope that people don’t just look at my work, but really feel it as well. The sculptural nature of my painting is hard to see in photographs, but it’s essential to the work.”

There is a quality to her work which makes viewers want to dive into them, to touch them at least metaphorically; their textures seem real, as real as water, light, sand, soil. She’s conceptulaized and created the techniques to shape her aesthetic based at least initially on her interest in texture.

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“I was a knitter as a child and quilted,” she notes, explaining that she attened UC Davis for textiles and received an MFA in fiber. But despite that, she gravitated to painting “for the speed and immediacy it offered; again, like sports, speed and immediacy are essential to my creative process,” she asserts.

When she couldn’t build the kind of texture that truly interested her from using brushes, she turned to other tools, eventually discovering the scraping tools intended for laying drywall compound.

“The tools changed everything from that point on: the movement of the tool and learning how to wield it to create lines, slabs and textures drove the development of the work from there. Compositionally, my interest in quilts and quilt makers like the improvisational quilt makers from Gees Bend always provided inspiration, as did artists like Richard Diebenkorn. Trips to Iceland, Greenland, and Machu Picchu also have had a big influence on my work and vision.”

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Her color palette is also highly experiental, vivid and alive, what she describes as a push and pull of color. “I think that push and pull of color and form in space expresses another way we relate to the world, and the landscapes that surround us, with our bodies, not just our minds and eyes,” she explains. “When I was in Eastern Greenland on a boat sailing through the fjords and surrounded by icebergs and glaciers, scale and perspective were all askew. Since there were no typical scale markers like buildings or trees in that landscape, your only context is your own body in relation to the objects around you and it’s very disorienting.”

She found it was difficult to tell the size of an object if she couldn’t tell how far away it was.

“It’s exhilarating and powerful to feel like your body is so out of context, and it forces you to question your experience in the world in a very existential way, and to question your body in relationship to the landscape in a way we often take for granted. It’s very profound and overwhelming to be confronted by a glacier.”

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Kabat says that she’s trying to recreate that sense in her work, pulling viewers into the works, and recreating the intricate dynamics of body, scale and space.

As to her use of color itself, she calls her work in that area evolving. “Mostly I’m trying to find interesting and unexpected combinations of colors. I think unexpected color combinations help us think differently; to see things with fresh eyes and maybe to open our minds to new possibilities. Each new series of paintings seem to require a different set of rules with regard to color. Every time I get comfortable I try and toss it all up and engage with new ideas…”

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To truly experience the colors, textures, and the physical and emotional depths of Kabat’s work, she wants viewers to experience it first hand. “In this age of computers I think we really miss out on the direct experience of art. It really does need to been seen and experienced first hand to be fully understood and appreciated,” she stresses.  

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And viewers will may have a chance to do so soon. In the past year, she moved from a residency at the Sam and Adele Golden Foundation in New York to LA’s StArt Up art fair in LA in Venice, exhibiting around the Los Angeles area at a variety of galleries over the summer. “In November one of my binary code drawings will be in a show at Root Division in San Francisco, 140 Characters, curated by Margaret Timbrell and Lauren Etchells. Next year I’ll have a show at SLATE Contemporary, my gallery in Oakland, and also at The Sam And Adele Golden Foundation Gallery in New Berlin, New York.” She will undoubtedly show again in the LA area, too.  

And when she does – that will be the time to take a dive inside her work, to feel the shifts in her work, much as the tides shift, or metamorphic rock forms. You can see photographs of the outcomes of course, but being there to experience it, to explore the world – that’s the best of all.

  • Genie Davis, photos provided by Maya Kabat

Gay Summer Rick: Transporting Viewers in Beauty

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Gay Summer Rick is a quintessentially Los Angeles artist. It is in her color palettes, in her images, in the innate glow of her work. Even when she is not creating works that epitomize Southern California, her LA-state-of-mind fuses her images with something recognizable, wonderful, and soulfully West Coast.

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She says “The work will likely transport the viewer to a very calm and quiet place. My paintings are impressions from moments on my journey. I have discovered an unexpected beauty in commonplace elements within the urban landscape.” She adds “Once I took the time to really see and experience that, the tension associated with being stuck in the middle of the freeway, or circling over a city for landing, endless delays, noise, etcetera, the positive elements outweighed those stressors and beauty won.”

Rick says that her color palette changes depending on where she hopes to take the viewer and the feelings she wants to share.

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“I have a thousand images running through my head that I know I will paint. They are the impressions I have taken with me of moments in time in places I’ve been, primarily throughout Los Angeles and New York.”

Sometimes the paintings are saturated in color, and warm, and sometimes they are muted with light, and cool, she relates. “It just depends on what feeling I was left with from that moment in time, and what I would like to share with the viewer from that experience.”

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Rick says she’s always lived on one coast or another, east or west. “There’s something about the moisture in the air where cities meet the sea, the diffusion of light through mist that, for me, has a calming effect. Being at the ocean gives me the ability to tune everything else out, breathe, and focus.” 

This sense of simply breathing and being is intangible and yet present, a thread of communion with the viewer through her work.

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“Perhaps it has something to do with the scientific phenomenon of the ‘Blue Space’ effect and the change in negative ions from open water. The coast has always had this effect on me, and this carries into my work. From my studio I can see the bay, and even in my cityscapes that quality is definitely present in my work.”

She embraces a sense of peace in her process and her creation.  “As loud as the city or the ocean may be, the light and atmosphere that comes through in my work is always quiet and calm. There’s something about the water. I’m drawn to it.”

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Rick has a new body of work opening October 13th at bG Gallery’s new location on Ocean Park Blvd. at 30th in Santa Monica. Titled Skyways and Highways, her new body of work includes her well-known urban and coastal atmospheric land and cityscapes, but includes images culled from “the sky with a window-seat view over the landscape. The view is gorgeous up there,” she enthuses.

Her inspiration for this body of work came in part from a change in flight patterns over the past year that found her looking up at air traffic and shaking her head, initially.

“I’d be sitting in a friend’s backyard in Los Angeles and we would have to stop talking because jets were flying low in this new concentrated pattern overhead. But then I thought about how my view of highway traffic changed as I began to notice just how beautiful the view from the highway really was, with headlights and tail lights, the colors of road signage, and the silhouettes of palms, power lines, and light poles against the sky…So, I thought about my most memorable trips, looked back through many photos and video from flights I had taken, and I even rerouted some planned travel, carefully choosing which side of the plane on which to sit, to ensure that I had the best window-seat views over places I thought I might like to paint.”

She adds “When I look at these paintings I feel like I am traveling. For me it is almost Zen-like.”

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Along with this upcoming show, Rick currently has paintings of fireworks and surfers in a group exhibition, Love in Color 2 at Art Project Paia on Maui in Hawaii, which runs through November. She’ll also be a part of a group exhibition, Out and About, opening this coming weekend, September 22nd at Rebecca Molayem Gallery on Fairfax in Los Angeles. 

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As to the dreamlike nature of her work that many viewers note, she says “Because it is all about capturing the feeling of a particular moment from some place I’ve been, I include elements that make a place recognizable, sometimes by only a small detail. It is never an exact representation, but it is exactly my impression of a moment in time.”

In regard to her process, Rick stresses that her work makes use of an environmentally responsible process. “I use oil paint and palette knives to create my paintings. No brushes, no toxic solvents. This process not only helps me tell a visual story through layers of paint that create a history and a certain vibration in the juxtaposition of colors, it also helps me achieve a goal of being a good steward of the environment.” It takes the artist one to three months to complete a painting.

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Asked for a few words that describes her work best, Rick considers before replying “Calm. Quiet. Mnemonic. And, I’ll throw another in because I keep hearing it from people when standing in front of the work: luminous.”

Come feel the glow.

  • Genie Davis; photos provided by the artist and by Genie Davis

 

Artist Talk from Sant Khalsa: The Perfect Closing for Forest for the Trees at MOAH

Sant 3With the Museum of Art and History’s stellar multiple-show exhibition Forest for the Trees closing this Sunday, it’s time to take a second look at all the exhibiting artists, and to enjoy an artist’s talk by Sant Khalsa (above), whose solo show includes contemplative, luminous work from a period of over 40 years. Khalsa will be holding an artist’s talk to discuss her work, which shimmers with light and motion.

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As with each of the shows that comprise the museum’s exhibition, her work presents the natural environment and man’s interaction with it. Khalsa’s perspective is contemplative, as she opens a portal to viewers in order to examine their relationship with both nature as a place and as a part of our society. While documentary in style, her works none the less reveal an inner richness, a devotion to the prayer that is water and the dream that is light. Reflective and immersive, Sant Khalsa invites viewers to step inside her special visual window on nature and experience it. Her talk begins at 1 p.m.

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Afterwards, be sure to take a look at the main gallery show, Tree Fiction from LA-based artist Greg Rose, who presents beautiful, narrative gouache works are based on his hikes through the San Gabriel Mountains.

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Constance Mallinson’s Me, Me, Me offers a visceral depiction of the detritus of man, presenting what others may view as post-apocalyptic trash as jeweled, vast wastelands of monumental scale. Her vivid images are both horrifying and beautiful, seductive and dismaying.

And don’t miss a look at Revised Maps of the Presentfrom muralist and oil painter Timothy Robert Smith.

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His interactive installation gives us sound and video projects, sculpted figures, and painted walls in a wonderfully involving, multi-dimensional work that takes personal experience and makes it both communal and transcendent.

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With High & Dry: Land Artifacts, photographic artist Osceola Refetoff and writer/historian Christopher Langley create their own immersive work, an exploration of their regular KCET Artbound feature exploring the California Desert and those residing there. Lush and evocative infrared images from Refetoff reflect the intensely human and revealing text from Langley; the show also includes historical objects from MOAH’s permanent collection.

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Last but not least, explore the assemblage art doll houses of Treasured Again from artist Gilena Simons, who works with collections of discarded objects to form mixed-media sculptures that riff on family and home.

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With her Prana: Life with Trees, Sant Khalsa offers viewers a wide range of evocative images to explore from her early landscapes to images of trees to beautiful, zen-like sculptures and installations that reflect her passion for nature and her research on air quality and the planting of trees. Activist and artist, Khalsa makes a terrific choice for the artist’s talk that closes Forest for the Trees.

 ​The museum is open until 5 p.m. Sunday; Khalsa’s talk begins at 1 p.m.

MOAH is located at 655 W. Lancaster Blvd. in Lancaster.

  • Genie Davis; Photos courtesy of MOAH

 

 

 

Randi Matushevitz Rocks Her World

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Randi Matushevitz’ recent residency at Shoebox Projects invited viewers into an installation that was it’s own world. Like many of the artist’s recent works, her images here were layered, socio-political, filled with the energy of our times. “My images explore the psychological dichotomies of dark and light, the tension of anxiety and fear, and the quietude of contentedness and assurance,” Matushevitz remarks.

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Her work is designed to immerse her viewers in a reality they may usually refuse to acknowledge, to draw them into a visceral conversation about “the fact that many of us live in a state of illusion, where entitlement, safety and security are only a barrier to hide the disparity and inhumanity that others live.”

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The haves, the have nots. How many of us have what we really want? How many of us appreciate what we have? How many of us walk in the shoes, sleep in the bed, see through the eyes of those who have little or who tread a thin line between the comforts of home and hearth and the cold of the streets.

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“The goal of my Shoebox Projects Residency was to find the thread that runs through all of my art projects. I connected this residency to my previous installation Conundrum, thinking about cultural fear,” she relates.  “I began with the horrors of homelessness and looked deeper into the darkness of the other, the invisible, and illusions of safety to find that I am interested in pointing to the connective tissue of being human, without race, gender or culture.”

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As she worked, however, she says her sense of purpose and the strong linear poetry that suffuses her work, both shifted.

“My ideas evolved as I had real and hard conversations, the tent, my shelter, became a space where all thoughts co-exist. I realized the crux of my artwork is, and has been, to point to human equity. ”

So rather than depicting a habitation that was outside many viewers experience, she dug deeper into something more inclusive, yet riven with intense hope and dread.

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“I created this space, where the coexistence of all thought exists, contrarian and temporary, to reflect the nature of life itself.  This space is fragile yet strong. It has been constructed, deconstructed and re-organized from cardboard, wallpaper, string, clamps, personal ephemera and phrases that represent the emotional and contrary inner workings of our minds.”

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Matushevitz’ process in creating it  was dynamic and highly visceral. “I cut, punctured, tore, only to tie and clamp the fragments back together.  The divisions mimic the physical, social and psychological walls that often divide and separate community and individuals; only to counter these barriers with ideas of commonality, safety, love and joy.”

The most overriding sensation in viewing this installation was of being deeply involved in the world she created.

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“This work is my first to focus on viewer engagement. The viewer is prompted to walk through, sit in, add images or phrases to the whole, to recognize shared human experience.”

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Matushevitz succeeded entirely, and this is just the beginning of this particular body of her work.
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“I am continuing to build upon the experiences of this residency, by creating more spaces for human engagement,  make objects that point to complicated space and contrary experience,” she explains.
While Matushevitz’ next project is a group show in Berlin scheduled for the Fall of 2018  – in conjunction with Enter Art Foundation in Berlin – expect to see more of her work in LA, and to live the viewing experience.
– Genie Davis; Photos: Genie Davis