Showing posts with label art meets fashion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label art meets fashion. Show all posts

3.17.2011

Introduction: Nora Kassajikian, Teacher

Nora Kassajikian was born in Beirut, Lebanon and moved to the United States at the age of ten. She was trained as a classical violinist from childhood all the way through age eighteen. She studied Fashion Design for two years after graduating high school in 1991. Nora then pursued her career in Accounting for twelve years while continuing her college education to complete her B.A. in Liberal Studies. In 2009 she decided to move to San Diego to attend San Diego State University to work on her teaching credential. Today, Nora is substitute teaching in four districts and tutoring. She is currently seeking a permanent teaching position while working on her second credential.

Place III: Nora Kassajikian


Place Part III: The place that we chose to make our home speaks to who we are. The items we surround ourselves with and the manner in which we choose to arrange our living and work spaces-especially when the two overlap-can reveal insights into our everyday personas as well as the people we aspire to be. Here the place where educator Nora Kassakikian lives, creates, and sometimes even teaches...


Q: What do you love about your home?
A: I love the fact that I'm surrounded by nature. At the end of the day I feel as though I can relax and clear my head. It's the first time in my life where I've lived in an area where I can truly hear the sound of owls, frogs and crickets as well as the occasional howls of Coyotes. I can finally hear myself think instead of the chaos of the city.

Q: What are your thoughts on how traditional public classrooms are run/structured?
A: I believe that schools should have students spend more time learning outdoors. Many students do not take the time to investigate their environment. They don't take the time to question and observe. Learning by observation is a big part of life and a good life skill to acquire.
Many public classrooms are also dark. As a substitute teacher, I have walked into several classrooms where the first thing I've done is to open up all the blinds and windows. The students walk in and express that something is different but it often takes them at least half an hour to figure out that they are no longer learning in the dark.



Q: Describe your ideal classroom
A: I would love to have an outdoor classroom where students have the opportunity to learn from their environment. I believe an outdoor classroom would be ideal for me. I was able to experience teaching outdoors for Art Meets Fashion and I believe that it worked out pretty well. The students were engaged and the group had a lot of fun introducing their topic to the students.

Photographs: 2010 Melissa Au, Dandelion Dreams Photography

3.05.2011

Place II: Cathy Breslaw




Place Part II: The place that we chose to make our home speaks to who we are. The items we surround ourselves with and the manner in which we choose to arrange our living and work spaces-especially when the two overlap-can reveal insights into our everyday personas as well as the people we aspire to be. Here the place where artist Cathy Brelaw creates...






Q: What do you love about your home?
Cathy: My home is what I call my 'sacred space'--my safe place--my studio is also adjacent so it's important to me to create a space where I can also work--as well as just be.





Q: Tell me about the sign in your space, "If not now, when?"
Cathy: "If not now, when" means this is it--life in the present moment is all we have--we are not guaranteed anything more than the moment we are in. So, all my goals, dreams, art pieces need to be created now.



Q: Describe your physical working environment:
Cathy: My working environment is a space of about 400-500 sqare feet and well lit with specialized ful spectrum lights.



Photographs: 2010 Melissa Au, Dandelion Dreams Photography







2.21.2011

Place: Stacie Taylor



The place that we chose to make our home speaks to who we are. The items we surround ourselves with and the manner in which we choose to arrange our living and work spaces-especially when the two overlap-can reveal insights into our everyday personas as well as the people we aspire to be. Here the place where Stacie Tayor of Stacie May creates...



Q: What do you love about your home?
Stacie: All the things and people I love are right there. The structure itself doesn't matter when you have that.





Q: Describe your physical working environment?
Stacie: Messy. It's always messy. I try to clean up and organize between each project but there are always multiple projects going on at once. I believe that it's important to have a space where I can feel free to throw things on the floor, make piles of fabric scraps, have trims and sketches thrown about without feeling like I can't walk away and shut the door! The space itself is cozy and comfortable and provides the right inspiration.

















Photographs: 2010 Melissa Au, Dandelion Dreams Photography

Interviews: Part One

List a few things about yourself that may be previously unknown to many around you?
Stacie:
1. I once met the legendary Clint Eastwood as his waitress in a restaurant in Savannah, Georgia.
2. I always wanted to be a figure skater.
3. I was a ballet dancer for 11 years.
4. I love listening to cheesy 70's soft rock.
5. I've visited 38 out of the 50 states.


Nora: I don't know how to swim (I sooo want to learn but I'm scared)


Day or Night?
Cathy: Day

Stacie: Night

Nora: Day
Melissa: Night


Awake or Asleep?

Cathy: Awake
Stacie: Asleep

Nora: Awake
Melissa: Asleep


Book or Movie?

Cathy: Book
Stacie: Moive

Nora: Book
Melissa: Book


Coffee or Tea?

Cathy: Coffee
Stacie: Coffee

Nora: Coffee
Melissa: Coffee


Chaos or Order?

Cathy: Order
Stacie: Controlled Chaos

Nora: Order
Melissa: Order


Plan or Whim?

Cathy: Whim
Stacie: Whim

Nora: Plan
Melissa:Whim


Busy or Idle?

Cathy: Busy
Stacie: Busy

Nora: Busy
Melissa: Idle


Inside or Out?

Cathy: Inside
Stacie: Both

Nora: Out
Melissa: Out


What interests do you take time for, other than fashion design/teaching/art?
Stacie: Movies, Music, Theater, Art, A little bit of traveling, occasional hiking and camping, paging through glossy fashion mags, spending time with good friends, my dog and my boyfriend.

Nora: Art, Outdoors and Culture.

Cathy: I am very self disciplined--I either run, bike or swim every day depending on what I am training for at the time (running or tri events) I find cardio and working out make my mind more focused and sharp and clear thinking. Some of my best ideas come while running. It's kind of a meditative thing where tons of thoughts float around and something becomes clear to me.


What do you fear?
Cathy: Not being remembered.
Stacie: Heights.
Nora: Making mistakes.
Melissa: Losing my loved ones.


Interview Questions by Melissa Au




1.12.2011

Introduction: Melissa Au, Documentor/Photographer ~ Dandelion Dreams Photography



I have been a photographer in the artistic sense for most of my life. I am in business as a family/child photographer under the name Dandelion Dreams Photography. I can sum up my passion for photography in this way: I am a light seeker...I admire the way a shadow wraps gently around a child's face or how sunlight halos a young girl's head. I love catching that 1/60th of a second glimpse into my lens as a baby wonders--just what is that big contraption I am holding. I strive to capture the real essence of my subject as opposed to a contrived shot…to catch a real moment in life, to document.



My biggest inspiration, is my family: inquisition, wonder, attention to the small things, unabashed enthusiasm, creativity, love. I think that a lot can be told in a photograph about the relationship of the family, the emotion of the individual, and I love to tell that story through the snap of the shutter. These are days to remember. My gift to the family is creating a keepsake of their moment together.



Awards:

3rd Place Portrait, 2010 San Diego County Fair

Donated Award for Portrait (awarded by Digital Photo Academy), 2010 San Diego County Fair

Honorable Mention Pet Portrait, 2010 San Diego County Fair

Honorable Mention Portrait, 2010 San Diego County Fair

Honorable Mention Digital Arts Image, 2010 San Diego County Fair



Melissa Au, Dandelion Dreams Photography ~ melissa@dandeliondreamsphoto.com ~ (858) 349.5946



1.11.2011

Introduction: Stacie Taylor, Designer ~ Stacie May



Stacie May is a San Diego based clothing company that offers women sustainable, season-less, timeless clothing for those who want to be unique and express themselves as individuals. Stacie May clothing is created in house, in the U.S., from sketches to samples. Pieces are not mass produced making each a limited edition. The inspiration for Stacie May’s graceful, feminine, yet classic looks can be attributed to an appreciation of antique and vintage collectibles, art, music, movies, history, and architecture along with an flair for experimentation with fabrics, colors, textures, and cuts that compliment curves.


Women of all shapes and sizes have always loved Stacie May, she really understands women with and without curves. Stacie stays true to her collections by not going with what the latest trend is but by finding inspiration from different areas of her life. Stacie manages to maintain her artistic flair while balancing a home life and a full-time job as a design consultant for a local San Diego business.




Stacie May's Events and Credits include: Fashion Week San Diego 2008, Scottsdale Fashion Week 2008, Escondido Fashion Week 2009, Thread Runway December 2009, Project Ethos Incubator April 2010, Lovestruck at La Jolla Playhouse 2010, Haute Magazine, Fashion Chicago Magazine June 2010 and October 2010, Viva La Moda Magazine, San Diego Reader, Smashing Darling Featured Designer, USTrendy Top 100 Designers, Industry Showroom, Hunt and Gather Boutique, Local Boutique, 34Fourteen, Burbank.


msstaciemay@staciemay.com ~ www.staciemay.com

Photography by: Gail Bowman, Modern Eye Images ~ www.moderneyeimages.com

10.11.2010

Introduction: Cathy Breslaw, Artist

My current work engages materiality in many forms. Twisting, stretching, wrapping, tapering, weaving, slashing, tucking, tying, gathering, folding, layering and sewing are ways in which the industrial mesh is

manipulated to create wall,floor and suspended installation works that often reference painting and sculpture.

Things that spark my work include global social platforms of communication - shifting paradigms of how we relate, uniting all cultures. By embracing dissimilar combinations of ideas simultaneously also offers us the

possibility of seeing concepts of space and time in unique ways. These ideas have extended my interest into

creating abstract drawings that precede the wall and hanging installations as well as becoming complete finished works. My definitions of space and time have been altered and enriched, providing me a wealth of visual ideas that are an ongoing transformation of materials into art pieces.



In my travels to Taiwan, I located an industrial mesh - rolls packed in room-sized containers ready for commercial shipping to ports worldwide. Fascinated by the mesh, I visited the factory in Shanghai, and brought materials back to my studio where I could experiment, explore and expand the possibilities creating art pieces that endure. I’ve also sought out and found similar kinds of commercial materials, transforming them from their original purpose.

Concepts of light, space and multiple dimensions form the undercurrent of my thought process as I create the work. Color and light play an integral role enhancing the atmospheric transparency of the materials. The often

large scale and placement of the work from wall to ceiling to floor, recontextualizes how the viewer experiences the work. Light originating from natural to artificial sources causes the exhibition space to glow,

often casting shadows on the walls and floor, lending a sculptural quality to the pieces.

The work, sharing forms of painting, sculpture and installation, leads the viewer to take an intimate look at seemingly ordinary materials that because of what has been done to them, transcends their function.




Born in Coral Gables, Florida and raised in Baltimore Maryland, Cathy Breslaw received a BA degree in American Studies from George Washington University in Washington D.C., an MSW(masters of social work) from Howard University in Washington, D.C. and an MFA from Claremont Graduate University in Claremont California. She currently lives and works in southern California. Breslaw is a contemporary visual artist who has had a series of solo and group exhibitions across the United States in museums, commercial galleries, art centers, college and university galleries and alternative spaces. Her work is a combination of drawings, wall, floor and installation pieces made primarily from industrial mesh but also includes mixed media of other types.


Solo Exhibitions

2010 Truckee College, TMCC Main Gallery, Light Moves, Reno, NV

Rose Center for the Arts, Lower Columbian College, Weightless, Longview, WA

Florida Atlantic University, John D. MacArthur Library, Material Resonance, Jupiter, FL

Gallery 825, Light Play, Los Angeles, CA

2009 West Valley Art Museum, Light Moves, Surprise, AZ

Chico Art Center, Chico, Discovery Series: Cathy Breslaw, Chico, CA

Charleston Heights Art Center, Main Gallery, Weightless, Las Vegas, NV

Earleville Art Center Opera House, East Art Gallery, Recent Discoveries, Binghamton,NY

Southern Oregon University, Stevenson Union Gallery, Tapestries of Light, Ashland, OR

Fitton Center for Creative Arts, Bever West Gallery,Topographies, Hamilton, OH

2008 University of St. Mary, Goppert Gallery, Reflections, Leavenworth, KS

Riverviews Artspace, Casting Rhythms, Lynchburg, VA

Waterworks Visual Arts Center, Novell Gallery, Suspension: Color and Light, Salisbury, NC

2005 Claremont Graduate University, East Gallery, Claremont, CA

2001 Falcon Arts Gallery, San Diego, CA

2000 First National Bank Building, San Diego, CA

2000 San Diego State University, Corporate Governance Institute, San Diego, CA

1999 First National Bank, San Diego, CA

1998 Wyndham Hotels Corporate Offices, Emerald Plaza, San Diego, CA

1997 Offtrack Gallery, Leucadia, CA

1995 Wyndham Hotels Corporate Offices, Emerald Plaza, San Diego, CA

1994 First National Bank, San Diego, CA

Corporate Collections

American Graphics Inc., San Diego, CA

GEA Power Cooling Systems, San Diego, CA

ADC Telecommunications, Minneapolis, MN

Che Bella, Phoenix, AZ

Frontier Analytics, La Jolla, CA

Maxwell Technologies, San Diego, CA

Residential Wholesale Mortgage Inc., Solana Beach, CA

Saign & Associates, Los Altos, CA

Amerigraph LLC, San Diego, CA


Selected Awards

2004-05 Sue Arlene Walker Memorial Fellowship, Claremont Graduate Univ,Claremont, CA

2003-04 Fellowship, Claremont Graduate University, Claremont, CA

1997 International Exhibition, Society of Experimental Painters, Sarasota, FL, Merit Award

1997 Twenty-ninth Annual National Art Exhibition, San Francisco, CA, Gold Medallion Award


cathybreslaw@roadrunner.com 858-692-2351 cell www.cathylbreslaw.com