Lolita HarperA homespun art gallery unveiled itself...
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Lolita Harper
A homespun art gallery unveiled itself in Costa Mesa on Thursday, as
local artists celebrated their opening night with a grand reception
for the new local artistic outlet.
Five regional artists -- Carrie Strom, Michele Yu, Matt Berg,
Kerry Brannan and Alex Crane -- hosted an ongoing art gallery at The
Camp on Bristol Street in which local artists have a venue to display
their work.
The gallery was well-attended, with curious aficionados who wanted
to see the talent of their hometown artists. Berg, one of the up and
coming artists who showcased their work at the gallery, employs a
variety of media in his paintings but has an affinity for watercolors
and oils.
“There’s a freedom in working with an element,” Berg said. “Water
can soothe or kill. Being a child of contradiction, I have grown fond
of using two dramatically opposed mediums.”
The gallery was created to provide an outlet for the numerous
Costa Mesa artists searching for a place to display their
accomplishments. Strom, a Costa Mesa resident, gathered painters,
sculptors, photographers and sculptors, as well as musicians and
dee-jays to perform at night receptions at a 2,200-square-foot space
at the Camp, across Bristol from the Lab Anti-Mall.
Strom said she encountered many creative and innovative fellow
artists in her hometown but felt they did not have ample opportunity
to get their work out there. The blooming artist said she wanted to
give herself, and her colleagues, an opportunity to expose their
community to its own art.
Various pieces were imaginatively presented, allowing the audience
to enjoy every aspect of the work. Bright colors, elegant angles and
effortful masterpieces caught the eyes of all who wondered through
the rough showcase space. A variety of dimensions were represented
and guests of the show stared intently at their favorite work,
obviously struck by the work of art before them.
Strom said she got the idea for a gallery when she heard the
Trilogy Playhouse had mysteriously disappeared in December. She
contacted the management at the Lab and asked if she could use the
theater space for her display. The old Trilogy space was not
available, but the Anti-Mall officials, who have a history of
supporting local art, offered the space at the Camp.
Shaheen Sadeghi, owner of the Lab Anti-Mall, said his company
takes pride in using its available space as a venue for local
artists. His company promotes a campaign called Made in Costa Mesa to
encourage city artists to present their products.
Strom is an abstract artist who usually works with oil paints and
sticks. Her latest project is a series of red paintings designed to
create an atmosphere using the color. She mixes shades of red with
splashes of oranges and yellows to ad some texture and depth to her
pieces. Strom likened her conceptual art to scribbling and then
coloring over it.
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