ELLYN WEISS


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My Interview in FindArtinfobank.com

April 25, 2009

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Malik always wears hats
Malik Lloyd
pubishes FindArtinfobank.com, the first and to my mind still the most comprehensive regional artist's e-newsletter. Bi-weekly, FindArt provides a well-edited selection of national and regional opportunities for exhibitions, commissions, residencies and jobs, as well as shows. Malik also occasionally interviews artists and he was kind enough to interview me in the April 13 online  edition. And here it is:

 

Welcome to FIND ART information bank, your premier artists locator and resource service. FIND ART distributes FREE weekly announcements to the arts community from clients that either need the services of artists or offer beneficial services to artists. To list announcements on the service, click here for pricing structure and details, call 202/582-1886 or send e-mail to: This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it . All client announcements are posted on our website until the event date or deadline date. 
 
*Winner of the District of Columbia 2000 Mayor's Art Award: Innovation in the Arts
*Winner of the Washington Area Lawyers for the Arts 1998 Rising Star Award
*Nominated for Excellence in Service to the Arts, DC's 2000 Mayor's Art Award
*Nominated for Outstanding Contribution to Arts Education, DC's 2000 Mayor's Art Award

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The Anatomy of an Artist

The Anatomy of an Artist series is developed as a result of the pleasure, inspiration and knowledge that I experienced during my college years at Philadelphia College of Art. Professional artists would come and share their experiences (good or bad), their work and their hearts, to our class of dreamy young art students. Although most of us were too amazed at their artwork to properly analyze and put in perspective a visit from say, Alexandria Calder, Mark English or Jerry Pinkney, each one of those visits provided a step in shaping our dreams.

 

 

 

Ellyn Weiss
Place of Resident:  Bethesda. MD. Studio: Mt. Ranier, MD
Education:  BA Smith College. Additional art study: Fine Arts Work Center, Provincetown, MA, Corcoran, DC.

 

 

Inspiration & Influences:
I'm still a sucker for the iconic mid-century abstract expressionists: Rothko, DeKooning, Gorky, Krasner, Motherwell, Pollock, etc. For me, they pack an enormous emotional/visceral punch and I have always most admired art that speaks to the heart of the self without the need for mediation and explanation.

I am a devotee of the dada artists, especially their development of the collage as artform; I think that the unexpected combination of unconnected, even random and jarring thoughts and images is so emblematic of the world we live in.

As a printmaker as well as a painter, I also love many contemporary, complex, layered printmakers, e.g. Judy Pfaff, Kiki Smith and an artist I have studied with in Provincetown and did more than anyone to spark the revival of the monoprint in this country, Michael Mazur.

Lastly, I had a powerful experience about 10 years ago. I went to an exhibition at a gallery in Baltimore that represented me at the time. They were showing microscopic photography done by two Johns Hopkins scientists - images of human cells and other structures. The images were so gorgeous and compelling that they took my breath away. I didn't see how I could ever paint again since I couldn't come close to the beauty and power of those images. Fortunately, that passed in a couple of weeks, but since that time a lot of my work has been based to some degree on the imagery of biological structures.


Medium/Specialty:
Painting and printmaking. Most recently, encaustic painting (wax) and oil and mixed media printmaking. I have an etching press on Cape Cod, where I print all summer, and I paint (etc.) all winter. I find this routine of changing media tends to refresh my work.


Noted experience/Bio:
I love that my piece "Twelve Linear Feet" is the biggest piece in the City Hall Art Collection. And that my work is in the collections of non-profits ranging from the Sentencing Project to the Union of Concerned Scientists to the Society of Association Executives. Who says art doesn't bring diverse people together?

Lately, I've done some curating, which is challenging and fun. I enjoy how it requires me to really look at the work of others on its own terms and to try to understand why certain pieces do or don't work well together. It really is a mysterious alchemy.

Also, I started a blog about a year ago, now called GessoHead.org, and I just love it. I did it to force myself to get out and see more art, particularly outside of the official DC arts-industrial complex and I think of it as a diary. I use it to think through my responses to what I see in a more careful way.

 

FA: Pricing ones artwork has always been somewhat of a dilemma for most artists. What method do you use for pricing your artwork?
EW: You mean beyond the arbitrary? It is hard - you can't be too low or it shows disregard for the value of your own work and too high is both delusional and counter-productive if your goal is to sell some work. It depends to some extent on your venue - if you're in a gallery, your prices will reflect the other artwork in there to some degree; there has to be a rational relationship. But understand that once you set a standard, whether in a gallery, on a website or your own studio, you can't diverge widely from that. You can't be selling similar art for very different prices at the same time or you will make your potential customers/galleries angry. You do want to go up over time, of course, as the market allows.

FA: What are some of the difficulties/challenges or mistakes that you have experienced being a fine artist?
EW: I guess the hardest part was coming to understand that one never really knows what will attract buyers. This is the most subjective of worlds and you have to learn to live with rejection. I think it is a deadly mistake to set out to make art that people will buy and/or to keep repeating yourself when you have found a formula that people like. If it doesn't come from inside you, it will be and look dishonest.

FA: Besides from the quality of your artwork, what do you feel has attributed to your level of success thus far?
EW: I kept on making art, lots of art, and I showed in a lot of venues - at the beginning, I didn't turn a reasonable opportunity down because you never know what will come of having your work out where it can be seen. It's better than having it sit in your studio. I know there are people who disagree with this - and remember, I said "reasonable" venue - but I think it worked for me.

FA: What advice would you give to artists trying to make a career in fine art?
EW: If you believe that you have the chops/personality/whatever to be one of the few artists who makes a good living on sales of artwork alone, think seriously about getting an MFA from the best program you can get into. I'm not saying it will necessarily make you a better artist, but it can get you the credentials and contacts to enter the top echelon.

Otherwise, keep working. Make lots and lots of art and don't show it to galleries until you have a coherent body of work and a voice that is distinct. As I said above, take opportunities to show in alternative spaces, group venues, juried shows. Something that a surprisingly large number of aspiring artists don't do is visit the galleries and art spaces in your town regularly. That is just inexcusable. Go to openings. Meet your peers and the gallery owners. Get involved in what's going on. You won't get invitations unless people know who you are.

 

Work can be seen at  www.eweissart.com and www.GessoHead.org

 

Upcoming Events for Ellyn Weiss:

 

1. Solo exhibition scheduled for October at Nevin Kelly Gallery in Columbia Heights. 1400 Irving St. NW, Washington, DC #132. website: www.nevinkellygallery.com

2. Open Studio: Saturday, May 16 from 12 - 5 along with many other artists in Mt. Ranier on Mt. Ranier Day. 3706 Wells Ave, Mt. Ranier, MD. Info on all of the studios open that day can be found at http://gateway-cdc.org/

 

3. The Affordable Art Fair is at 7 West New York at 7 West 34th Street, New York, NY, 10001. They have a Facebook page at Affordable Art Fair New York City. Dates: May 6 – 10. Ellyn's work will be in the Nevin Kelly booth.

 

4. Ellyn and Sondra Arkin are in the planning stages for a second "Zeitgeist" show, following on the "Under Surveillance" show they curated at Nevin's last October, 2008. Watch her blog for updates: www.GessoHead.org.

 

 
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© 2012 ELLYN WEISS