The Mind of an Artist

Similar documents
Bobbie Goodrich. by Lynn Eodice

Teachers Pack Whitechapel Gallery. Isa Genzken: Open, Sesame! 5 April June whitechapelgallery.org

Lesson 1 - Part 1 Hue

Joel Shapiro Talks Public Art, Henry Moore, And The Pursuits Of An Artist

Brand your blog. without spending a fortune. by Biz BFF

Ed Lai interview about Grace Lai

Native American Artist-in-Residence Program

Marcy married Burton Green. She was 19. Burton was a student at MIT. Marcy went to work to help support him. During this time, Marcy had two

DESERT magazine magazine website social newsletter SEASON

Linda Wallace: Journeys in Art and Tapestry

A Cultural Fusion. Japanese Art Gallery Mixes Past, Present and Future in LIC. Halloween fest. More Bike lanes. Pumpkins and Costumes

PURSUIT OF MEMORY THROUGH LANDSCAPE

Minister Application of Tiffany M. LeClair

Hi! I m Diane. I m a startup founder with deep experience in personalization and e-commerce whose formal training is in user research.

Current calls for papers and announcements

Antony Gormley SUBJECT Kettle s Yard 22 May 29 August 2018 Primary School Teachers Notes

National Gallery of Canada MAGAZINE

02 WE ARE EVERYDAY ADVENTUREWEAR BORN FROM NEW ENGLAND CHARLES RIVER APPAREL

IB VISUAL ARTS (HL) COMPARATIVE STUDY KYLIE KELLEHER IB CANDIDATE NUMBER:

APPLICATION PROBLEM SOLVING CENTER TASK CARD. 1. Take an Application Problem and solve in your Math Notebook.

Lady Arpels Ronde des Papillons

STYLE. Glamorous. This family home by Greg Natale maximises both glamour and functionality. adore home

Drinking Patterns Questionnaire

Sara Swink has come to suspect that clay is encoded in her DNA, as much a part of her

Boise Art Museum 2018 Art in the Park Prospectus WELCOME

A N A C T I O N P L A N F O R Y O U R F A S H I O N L A B E L

SPECIALIZED SIRRUS BIKE PACKAGE

INSIDE

Strategic Message Planner: Kendra Scott Jewelry

furnace 24/7 and I knew that wasn t going to happen for me.

Sophie's Adventure. An Honors Thesis (HONRS 499) Kelly E. Ward. Thesis Advisor Dr. Laurie Lindberg. Ball State University Muncie, Indiana

A PORTRAIT OF Emad Al Taay

Welcome to the WORLD'S MAKE-UP SCHOOL

The Business Of Joy MEGHAN CANDLER S ART GALLERY IS BUILT ON YEARS OF EXPERIENCE AND A DAILY DOSE OF GLEE. WRITTEN BY MELISSA KAREN SANCES

Peoria Fine Arts Association Newsletter

good for you be here again down at work have been good with his cat

Craft Photography * 101 E Michigan Ave * Marshall

Green Kid. Mad Scientist. GreenKidCrafts.com. a create, play, and learn activity guide for kids. Issue 10 January $4.

Pottery Camp Package

FINDING the BEAUTY in the

Robert Indiana (1928- )

Something s Happening in the Old Garage The nondescript brick façade of artist Leonardo Drew s live-work studio gives no

eing a shy guy is no problem if your work speaks up this assertively. Los Angeles-based Steve DeMan has made his mark with lowriders, hot rods, and sp

Crawling Animatronic Hand

Sibylle Ruppert WORKS FROM SWISS PRIVATE COLLECTIONS

EVA LONGORIA ON HER NEW CLOTHING LINE, PERSONAL STYLE, AND AMBITIONS

Creative Brief Logic. Tiffany Clark J451 Winter 04

FASHION DRAWING AND ILLUSTRATION LEVEL 2 GRADES THE EWING PUBLIC SCHOOLS 2099 Pennington Road Ewing, NJ 08618

Timeless. Italian. Style. Fall Winter 2017/18

Future Trends S/S 19. Bed & Bath!"#$%&'()%

Urban Planner: Dr. Thomas Culhane

Capsule Wardrobe Guide

APRIL NEWSLETTER

6 HOLIDAY 2018 southernminngirlfriends.com

Sarah Harper An Artist Inspired by her Surroundings. As seen in Latitude Magazine Issue 44. words: georgi waddy images: lucy hunter-weston

M E D I A P A C K

Make a doll* *playful

In the Dragon Lady Arlene Dickinson s den

The Litter Villain. Grade Level: K-2

haring keith Sincerely, McGaw Graphics H2785m 16x16 on 24x18 H2785pfb 10x10 on 14x11 H2786n 13x20 on 18x24 H2786pfb 7x11 on 11x14

How did you go about working toward your goal (such as processes, steps, expenses, time involved and plans, help from others)?

88th Annual Robert T. McKee Student Art Exhibition March 14 April 28, 2019

Why is The Bookstore a great teaching tool for the classroom? It s all about COLLABORATION!

EVENT & PERFORMANCE SPACE

Color Analysis Color Solutions International

Cool, warm and bold. Now at the same address.

Welcome to the team! TOGETHER, WE WILL TURN MOTIVATED GIRLS INTO UNSTOPPABLE WOMEN.

Marnie Weber on Fairy Tales, Performance Art and Edward Kienholz

Vocabulary. adjectives curly. adjectives. He isn t slim, he is chubby. frizzy. His hair is very frizzy. wavy. My hair is wavy. adverbs.

Made in Vorarlberg. Series of short films

The Visit. by Jiordan Castle. There are never any white families. It s a medium security prison with some

One Item, Worn Three Ways

90th ANNUAL NATIONAL OPEN JURIED EXHIBITION at the Slater Memorial Museum 108 Crescent Street, Norwich, CT 06360

Tommy Goes to Ireland. Tommy Goes to Ireland BOOK 15. Tommy Tales Book 15 Word Count:

To provide guidelines for the operations and maintenance of the Cypress Gallery. The Lompoc Valley Art Association By-laws shall prevail.

Before. Ben Davis University High School

SPÄ NS T DESIGNED BY IKE A

MAKE YOUR FASHION STATEMENT

H Fashion Revue

2015 Sony Computer Entertainment America LLC. Horizon Zero Dawn is a trademark of Sony Computer Entertainment America LLC

Wide-Brim Sun Visor. by Vicki Welsh. A free project, compliments of...

softly. And after another step she squeezed again, harder. I looked back at her. She had stopped. Her eyes were enormous, and her lips pressed

Throw a party. Catch a leprechaun!

MIUA THE INSTITUTE OF MAKEUP ARTISTRY

PressRelease. GoS Watches. Nordic Seasons - A new series from Gustafsson & Sjögren Watches

You may be unfamiliar with her name, but if you follow pop culture you would definitely recognize New York City based designer Bliss Lau s work.

January HAPPY NEW YEAR

HOLY CROSS CEMETERY PRICING INFORMATION Effective July 1, 2017

Peripatetic Georgian artist Andro Wekua on work, war and wandering

Reprinted with permission from SignCraft Magazine

MediaVista Public Relations

Sketch Pad. The crochet ties the disparate materials and techniques together with structure, transparency and pattern.

The importance of the sun The damaging effects of the sun What ultraviolet rays and the UV Index are The SunSense Guidelines

An interview with Tim Reynolds

FINE ARTS PORTFOLIO CAPSTONE PROJECT

THINK AND GET LAID: THE 11 KEYS TO UNLOCKING FEMALE ATTRACTION BY DOMINIC MANN

Baking with. Johnny Cupcakes

Jeffrey Gibson has long felt like an outsider. Born in Colorado Springs, Colo., in

By submitting this essay, I attest that it is my own work, completed in accordance with University regulations. Maia Hirschler

Interview with Doug Harbrecht, Director of New Media, kiplinger.com. For podcast release Monday, September 24, 2012

Transcription:

ARTIST OF THE WEST Brian Schott The Mind of an Artist Rooted in family history within Glacier National Park, Kelly Apgar digs deeper into her craft You might think that a prolific artist with the last name Apgar would be churning out bucolic national park scenes complete with spilling waterfalls and resplendent, colorbursting wildflowers. But not Kelly Apgar. At least not for now although things have a way of changing in the mind of this artist. Artist, Kelly Apgar in her studio in Somers, Mont. With a name like Apgar, you should paint Glacier Park, people tell her. If I had a passion for it, I would, she says to them. It has to be on your path. This is not to say that she does not love Glacier. Apgar, 50, speaks with a deep pride of her historic ties. As she tells her family history, from her Somers, Mont., home, it s hard not to notice the sheer quantity of art that is carefully placed on every available wall of the airy, light log cabin built by her husband Glenn. Offset by massive widows and tall ceilings, the artwork fills the space naturally, without a crammed, forced look. In 1904, her great, great grandfather, Milo Apgar, arrived in Glacier National Park, looking for a retirement fishing place, a young settler of the West. To get there, he pushed a two-wheeled hand cart over Marias Pass and claimed land at the foot of Lake McDonald, which is today Apgar Village in Glacier National Park. RED - SUMMER HORSES SERIES Cattle marker on board 48 x 36 Milo had a passion. So does Kelly. The strongest thing I say to others about art is that you have to have a passion for the imagery, she tells me with an inquisitive smile. You have to have a passion for it. It s easy to feel the passion and energy that emanate from this fast-talking woman. Fellow artist, Mary Kelly, one of 12 who share space with Apgar in the Kalispell co-op, Paint Metal and Mud, affirms this testament. Kelly is so absolutely passionate about art she just lives and breathes it. It s almost to the point that she doesn t talk about anything else. 44

HE CARRIES THE WORLD Cattle Marker on Board 24 x 24 When we get together, we just talk about art the whole night, Mary Kelly says. This zeal began as a child when Kelly was a self-described little art geek. Ultimately, her schooling led her to achieve a B.A. in Fine Arts from MSU-Bozeman where her interest in cattle marker art began, the unique medium for which she is best known. Her cattle marker paintings are her trademark and you recognize them immediately, says Mary Kelly. They don t look like anyone else. She is so creative and not only creative, but prolific too. I think she is one of the best new artists around. Kelly Apgar s use of cattle markers began in Bozeman when a group of art students started using them because they were so inexpensive. They are oil paints in a stick form, but you could pick them up at a livestock ranch supply store Big Sky Journal 45

ARTIFACT NO. 5 WHAT REMAINS Cattle Marker, mixed media 24 x 24 for 50 cents, she says. It was about big, bold, abstract, colorful stuff, which was a perfect medium for students. But her love of the handheld pigment goes beyond economic. You have an intimate connection with what you are applying. There is a limited palette available and it teaches you about colors. If you want to make a color, you have to figure out how to do that how colors have to harmonize with each other. While raising a family and working as a graphic designer, true to her nonlinear form, at age 40 she enrolled in the University of Great Falls and received her elementary-special education certification. Later, she moved on to work as the education coordinator for the Hockaday Museum of MAGPIE Oil 3.5 x 10.5 46

Art in Kalispell and as an elementary school art teacher. On school breaks she would work on her own art, but teaching left very little room for her artistic spirit to grow to the heights she aspired to. That s really what broke it for me the lack of time. I was in my late 40s and I always knew I wanted to pursue my work full time and just knew I would have to jump. And so that s what I did. So she quit her job, sold their house in Kalispell, and bought a four-acre property in Somers. She began her fulltime art career in the winter of 2006 while living in a 28-foot camp trailer, painting in a shed with a propane heater through the winter while Glenn worked a full time job and built their new home. Fourteen months later, they moved in. Today, Apgar is ever-experimenting with new directions and applications. The upstairs loft of her home is a clean, open studio without railings and she usually works with one or two German Shepherds at her feet, dogs that she rescues. A sure way to authenticate her work in the future will be to look for a Shepherd hair embedded in the pigment. She is working on a series of shelter dog oil paintings. The biggest change in her recent work is that she is doing more storytelling with her imagery. One example is a series of people whose faces hold no expression, just a crossed line where the eyes and nose should be. Looking at the forms, the viewer is forced to come up with a story and emotion from the seemingly expressionless faces. People really love it or they really don t. I can take a flat two dimensional surface, two or three colors, and a T on a facial form, and that s all the information you need to create a story. Who are these people? What are they doing? It s irrelevant but the viewer has to interact with it. And it s true. You can t help it. The neat and orderly loft upstairs represents one part of her mind, complete with a computer that lists juried shows, deadlines, and submissions; but leave the soaring views of the big windows and descend the stairs to the basement, the chaos down in the muted light shows a different part of her psyche. Circle 31 on Reader Service Card Big Sky Journal 47

This basement is more how an artist is thinking and working, she admits, almost immediately, referring to the cluttered scene. You are almost overcome with the amount of stuff, the amount of potential, and the amount of mediums that you can use. Black and white linocut prints hang from a string, clipped with clothes pins, a medium she most prefers to work on during the winter months when she feels like she has more time to explore, carving out the backwards images on heavy pressed cork board. I love the black and white the timelessness of the imagery. In the winter I always feel like I can spend the time on the woodcuts without asking myself if I am getting anything done. In the summer, with the weather and the light and the opportunity to paint outdoors, I feel like I really need to focus in those areas. On a table below the hanging prints, all manner of artistic supplies are scattered, and on the wall hang mixed media experimental pieces, rocks and limbs from birch trees placed inside hand-cut board colored with cattle marker and graphite. The basement is a mess of a scene but somewhat beautiful. Apgar plays with shapes, color and texture, creating the elevated and ethereal images that dance amidst the bold colors. She s creating colors and playing with new techniques while grasping at ideas from the soaring reaches of her open air loft to the ordered chaos of her darkened basement. And while Apgar isn t linear, is any true artist? Would any true artist want to be? She s breaking away, bouncing and bounding, recreating and reinventing her art on the move. BSJ BILL AND I, 1964 Linocut 8 x 10 Brian Schott is a freelance writer/photographer and the founding editor of the Whitefish Review. His travel and outdoor writing has appeared in the The Boston Sunday Globe, Mountain Sports + Living Magazine, National Geographic Traveler, the New York Post, New York Daily News and Skiing Magazine. Circle 32 on Reader Service Card 48