Artist Interviews

Artist Fabio Borges
“If you're working with collage, think about the longevity of your artwork. What can you do to preserve that piece for the longer. And if you are now facing any kind of pain but are afraid of investigating the causes of it, just trust, let go, and be open. The answers will come.”

Artist Kathy Servian (Updated)
“The most important lesson I’ve learned so far is to trust my creative intuition. It’s easy to be distracted by the plethora of images, information, and opinions on social media. When I was working in fashion, it was vital to keep in-step with current trends and to create for the consumer. This engendered a ‘hamster-wheel’ mentality with all meaning sucked out of the creative process. With hindsight, I think that’s why I moved away from fashion towards becoming an artist. I came to the realisation that my best work happened when I ignored the ‘noise’ and worked at my own pace concentrating on expressing the flow of ideas inside my head. I make work that tells the stories I want to tell. If other people like and understand it, that’s great, but if they don’t, that’s fine too.”

Artist Eric Uhlir
“You have to show up to make the work. Physically, mentally and emotionally. The most important part of any artistic practice is discipline, whether it comes naturally or you have to work at it. I keep regular hours in the studio and work almost every day. It’s important to take breaks and take care of yourself and recharge, but I try to work as much as possible. We only have so much time in our lives and we’re blessed as artists with this gift, don’t take it for granted.”

Artist Anna Zusman
The main advice that I have is not to give up. Keep making art and keep applying to shows. When I started applying to shows after grad school, I would get into one out of ten shows. These days my ratio is significantly better, but I still get more rejections than acceptances. I think that the biggest challenge for any artist is to keep producing art and continue putting yourself out into the world despite the rejections.

Juror Carolyn Young
My advice for artists wanting to have a solo show is to get a body of work together, show this to people (in person or on the internet), enter competitions, and then follow opportunities that arise. I found doing formal photography study at university, where you are trained to put together a series and exhibit, was an essential step for me towards having quality work ready for a solo show. You can also make your own opportunities by applying for shows at galleries.

Juror Oceana Rain Stuart
I am primarily a self-taught sculpture artist with the exception of a few workshops. I have been sculpting since early childhood. Growing up, my mother brought me to her art studio because she could not afford to hire a babysitter, so I guess my mother was my first art teacher. In her studio, I had my own art supplies, and this kept me busy while she worked on her own work. I have a cherished photo of me sculpting in the garden with my mother when I was 2.5.

Artist Michael Young
During Covid, but not inspired by the pandemic, I had begun to work with vintage gay pornographic calendars. For a few months I experimented with different cutouts and how I could use the materials as a way to visualize my feelings about the years I spent in the closet. I was excited by the work I was making but something was lacking. I had a Eureka moment one night when I was boxing up my work and I happened to place the background of one image I had cut out on top of another month’s image and I had this really neat overlay that caught my eye.

Artist Melody Spangaro
Returning to the familiar language of drawing in 2016, I find myself grappling to navigate the paradox of having an environmental agenda and art practice dependent on materials while living within socio-political systems that cause irreversible damage to the planet. My drawings are pictorial representations of seeing, sensing, and thinking created to document internal and external landscapes, driven by the desire to understand the current ecological crisis, the scale and complexity of which remain hard to comprehend.

Artist Alisa Shea
Making art was the only thing I wanted to do for as long as I can remember. Growing up, this passion was encouraged, but less so as I approached adulthood. I was accepted into the College of Fine Arts at the university of my choice, but before I could even set foot on campus, my parents got cold feet and insisted that I change course. As an 18-year-old kid whose parents were still writing the checks, I went along with their plan to study occupational therapy (OT) instead of art, not fully appreciating what impact this decision would have on my life years down the road.

Artist Sherry Tipton
Home life was toxic and for escape, I turned to music, horses and drawing. I married my high school boyfriend and raised two children in Boulder, CO, before finally realizing that I needed to make some major changes in my life. By chance, I signed up for a stone carving workshop and was instantly hooked.

Artist Tochukwu Darlington Obiakonwa
My name is Tochukwu Darlington Obiakonwa and 2chuxs is my nickname, a coinage from my first name Tochukwu which I sign on my finished drawings. I am a self-taught artist from Nigeria and sometimes I think that I have always been an artist even in my mother’s womb. I studied banking and finance at Michael Okpara University of Agriculture Umudike, Abia state Nigeria. Growing up on the streets of Orile, a lower-class suburb in Lagos Nigeria was a pure mix of fun and discipline. My immediate environment contributed immensely to my life as an artist. My playmates, siblings and childhood friends all played a role both consciously and subconsciously.

Artist Ilze Egle
Since art school, I started to participate in shows. I studied Theology and later Art Management and Curatorship. Today I hold two Masters of Arts and the European Diploma in Cultural Project Management a nomadic study program in Greece, Portugal and Luxembourg. I spent the summer semester in Sweden and received an Erasmus grant to study art in Italy. In 2013 I graduated from Printmakers Department at the Art Academy of Latvia. And for 5 years I am a freelancing artist, teaching visual arts and I am a member of the Latvian Union of Artists.

Artist Ryan Gondarowski
My name is Ryan Gondarowski and I am an America-based fine artist. I was first introduced to art by my grandmother at the age of 12, who taught me to work from life. My passion eventually led me to study at the Academy of Realist Art in Boston with a one-year scholarship at age 17. Since graduating in 2022, I have continued the study of academic art to this day.

Artist Helene Roberts
I started to feel that I was lacking truly creative design opportunities and increasingly I found myself designing furniture, often using industrial and bold materials. I quickly realized that I needed help fabricating properly, and felt a study in sculpture should be helpful, which I pursued in Belgium where we were living at the time. However, while learning to work with varied materials I was introduced to figurative sculpture, and it totally moved me. I immediately shifted my focus to sculpting figuratively and portraying the human condition.

Artist Asha Bronicki
My name is Asha, I am a graphite and charcoal artist. From a young age, around the age of 5, I began drawing people which included full-figured people in different positions whether it be standing, sitting or kneeling and I’ve always had an interest in clothing. My background includes a corporate career in fashion design during which I designed sleepwear. Alongside that, I also did commission portraiture. I went to school for fashion design from 2011 to 2015 and received a Bachelor's degree in Fashion Design. And also an Associate's degree from the Fashion Institute of Technology.

Artist Mariana Rauscher
I am Mariana Ruscher and I live in Escobar with my husband and youngest daughter, where I have my studio. I love art in all its forms, I like to travel and enjoy nature. I am a mother of 3 women and I have 4 dogs. In my youth, I dedicated myself to garden design and worked in my parents’ nursery. I’ve been drawing for as long as I can remember but I began a career in art when my daughters grew up. It was something I always dreamed of doing and for some reason put off. In 2018, I was accepted into the Regina Pacis School of Art and from then I continue to improve myself in oil and graphite painting and graffiti.

Artist Joseph Bui
My name is Joseph Bui. I am a portrait photographer and artist based in Houston, Texas identifying as Vietnamese-American and a member of the LGBTQ+ community. I recently graduated in May 2022 from Colby College in Maine with a B.A in Studio Art: Photography.

Artist Sandra Manzi
I am a Canadian artist and always have had a passion to paint and draw. I was born and raised in Toronto and my parents immigrated here from Italy. When my guidance teacher was trying to find where I should go to high school, he looked at my grades and saw my highest were in art, so off I went and entered the art program at Central Tech in Toronto. This was the start of my formal art training and I was lucky to be starting it so early. I was drawing from a live model in grade nine and was taking many other art classes. I then went on to study at the Ontario College of Art and Design in Toronto and also received a B.A. in Fine Arts from the University of Guelph.

Artist Veronika Lavey
I am an artist specialising in conceptual imagery and self-portraiture through fine art photography. While earning a Bachelor of Arts degree in 2013 with a focus on creative writing and literature, I acquired a love for stories, which I later nurtured and focused into my distinctive artistic imagination. Originally from Hungary, I grew up in Los Angeles and Auckland, New Zealand before settling in Herefordshire in the United Kingdom with my husband and two children.

Artist Sandra Macgillivray
I am a Canadian artist with a passion for figurative art. I first knew I would become an artist at a very young age, being severely dyslexic. I drew what I could not put into words. I dabbled a bit with painting and that came so easily to me, I knew that this was what I was meant to do. However, coming from a traditional middle-class family a career path as an artist was not an option for me. So I channelled my love of drawing into studying technical Illustration at Sheridan College in Ontario which led me to a career in advertising. However, I felt that I was always pushing down my desire to paint. Finally, I decided to listen to my heart and pick up a brush and start painting.