Art Center Staff interviewed curator Rick Rietveld to get his take on the upcoming exhibition, Surfing the Pacific Rim. Let’s see what he has to say! 1) How long have you been working with the HB Art Center, and how has your experience been working in this gallery space? My first experience with the HB Art Center was an art exhibit that Kate and Phil Roberts had invited me to participate in. I had the honor of creating the marketing poster for it using my entry “Genesis 1”. I love the wide, open space and high ceilings. There is an easy flow through the exhibits along with the class rooms and media room. 2) Is there anything you find particularly inspiring about the surfing culture here in Huntington Beach? For me, growing up in Southern California and surfing here since I was a young teen, I really wasn’t aware how blessed I was to be at the hub of surfing’s growth and expansion to the rest of the world. Many of the top board builders started here and the surf is mostly consistent throughout the year. I’ve been fortunate to experience the growth of the surf industry as an artist working for many of the surf brands. Huntington Beach is the first place all of my international friends and business clients want to visit and surf and check out all the surf shops. 3) What was your inspiration for creating this upcoming show, Surfing the Pacific Rim? We wanted to give a platform to artists that wouldn’t ordinarily have the opportunity to show their work and to expand the scope of surf art from the USA out to the world. There is so much talent around the world that we miss out on. This exhibit hopefully inspires that spectrum. 4) What were you looking for in the artwork when curating items for this show? I wanted to see new perspectives of the surf art we have grown accustomed to seeing in our surfing community. We all experience a similar feeling when we surf yet the translation from the actual physical action to the visual interpretation can be very different for the artist that is trying to put that feeling on canvas or any other medium available. I’m always inspired by other artists’ vision and expression of the surfing experience. 5) How do you know your co-curator and how has it been collaborating with him on this exhibition? I first saw one of Phil’s illustrated ads for an East Coast surf company back in the early 80’s when we both were getting our art featured as ads in the surf magazines. I asked myself, “Who in the hell is this guy?” I was humbled at that moment and knew that we would be friends with a lot in common or crazy rivals. Over the years we have become both. We actually shared studio space for a while and that is a whole long, crazy story in itself! Phil has always been an inspiration and also, at the same time, a thorn in my side who brings out the artistic jealousy in me because of his incredible, multi-skilled talent. We are both very competitive and I think we challenge each other with each and every project we do and strive to win the art contest between us. As artists we need to keep growing and fine-tuning our skills and Phil has always inspired me to do that. 6) What motivated you to become an artist in the first place? My mother is an incredible artist and at a very young age I watched her take a blank piece of paper and with a stick of charcoal draw these beautiful children in a matter of minutes. It was like magic for me! From that day on, I knew that all I wanted to do was to learn how to create visual magic. I’m still trying! She showed and sold her art at local street art fairs in L.A. when I was a kid and set up a card table for me so that I could draw for fun. When someone asked how much I would charge for the art I was working on I was hooked! Someone was actually willing to pay for something I had created? Not to say that was my only motivation but it certainly helped. 7) What media do you use in your own artwork, and which is your favorite medium to work with? I use many mediums depending on the project or vision. I learned several at the Art Center College of Design and, at the time, pencil, pastel and pen and ink were my favorite. In the 80’s I was really into acrylic and airbrush and by the mid-80’s I was introduced to computer graphics for which I hesitated as I didn’t want my work to look like computer art. Quickly, though, I learned that there were many commercial advantages, including time saving processes and that the computer is just a tool like any other creative medium. I sometimes use it to scan a sketch and layout the composition and color palette which happens quickly on that platform in order to realize what my vision is. I don’t like wasting time re-painting something. Currently my favorites are acrylic and oil. I still use the airbrush for various segments of a painting. 8) Are there any specific places along the Pacific Rim that have inspired your own artwork the most? Because I live here, California has been my main inspiration along with Hawaii as I have been there often. You’re invited to the exhibition opening on July 17th, 6:30- 9:00pm.
Come meet Rick and his co-curator Phil Roberts in person!
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Art Center Staff interviewed curator Phil Roberts to get his take on the upcoming exhibition, Surfing the Pacific Rim. Let’s see what he has to say! 1) How long have you been working with the HB Art Center, and how has your experience been working in this gallery space? For me it goes back to 2014 with my first guest curatorial job in the Art and Soul of Surfing exhibition. Since then I’ve contributed to 5 other exhibitions including this one. For me it’s been a great experience learning the business side of building and hosting museum quality exhibitions. Working with HBAC Director Kate Hoffman just giving me carte-blanche in my ideas for shows has been a treat and a confidence booster. And I’m grateful to have the platform to contribute to my art community as a whole in creating good shows to feature some of HB’s most talented artists of all mediums. 2) Is there anything you find particularly inspiring about the surfing culture here in Huntington Beach? Well what can you say? HB is one of the historical locations for the birth and evolution of surfing for the West Coast of the United States. So many of surfing’s legendary board builders, innovators, designers and professional athletes all live here. This area of So Cal is the hotbed of creative talent that sets the style bar in creating the image, lifestyle and surfing economy for the rest of the world. The amount of talent in these neighborhoods is off the charts. It’s only natural to showcase the rich resource we have here in HB. 3) What was your inspiration for creating this upcoming show, Surfing the Pacific Rim? To give a space for established artists and new talent discoveries to showcase what they’ve been working on during these unique times of isolation and seclusion. Artists never stop creating, and it’ll be great to see how they creatively made use of the last year in a positive way. 4) What were you looking for in the artwork when curating items for this show? New talent, new voices, artists that we haven’t seen before that bring a refreshing spin on ocean art. Surfing had a blockbuster of a year during the pandemic when everyone decided they finally were going to learn to surf and headed for the beaches. Surfing has influenced and infiltrated itself into so many other genres of art that normally haven’t dabbled in it before. I’ve got artist friends that have got the bug and are now obsessed with surfing. So it’s great to see new eyes and ideas from fresh perspectives. 5) How do you know your co-curator and how has it been collaborating with him on this exhibition? Rick and I go all the way back to 1982 when we discovered each other’s work at the Florida Surf Expo and in the surf magazines, and the competition was born. We’ve been “Frenemies” ever since. "Keep your artist friends close, keep your artist enemies closer!” hahaha. Rick has been a constant source of inspiration in my life for always striving to push the levels of quality and skill out of our talents in a very fun rivalry that has resulted in a great many accomplishments from both of us. I can’t imagine where my Surf Art career would be if I didn’t have Rick annoying me with his talent. I think Rick and I are on the same page of “Sharing the Wealth” in having this exhibition and to give other artists the same opportunities we get. 6) What motivated you to become an artist in the first place? I was born this way. I don’t think there was any other life path for me, really. It was kind of obvious from a really young age, and the Universe guided me by putting all the right people in my path to assist in everything I was supposed to do. It’s been an amazing journey filled with the most wonderful talented friends. 7) What media do you use in your own artwork, and which is your favorite medium to work with? I’m a renaissance artist with multiple disciplines and skills. I use whatever medium I feel is right for the art project. My favorite lately is oil painting, but I’m still doing bronze sculpture work. 8) Are there any specific places along the Pacific Rim that have inspired your own artwork the most? The California coastline and the Polynesian chain of islands from Hawaii to Tahiti and beyond. Love Australia as well. You’re invited to the exhibition opening on July 17th, 6:30- 9:00pm. Come meet Phil and his co-curator Rick Rietveld in person! Email Phil Roberts and check out his art on Instagram: Shop Phil Roberts Art on Etsy: www.etsy.com/shop/beachesandcoconut
guest author LOREN BLACKWOOD The POWER OF MENDINGOrsola de Castro encourages us to love our clothes. With resolve, she proclaims, “You will mend them, not throw them,” says the co-founder of Fashion Revolution, a non-profit supporting industry reform. Her latest book, Loved Clothes Last, proposes revolution by re-wearing and repairing clothes. The author reminds us that “nothing is created, nor destroyed, everything is transformed.” This simple act can help deal with overconsumption, fashion waste, and ultimately, reducing greenhouse gases produced from fashion production. The Ellen MacArthur Foundation reported over 73% of the 53 million tons of textiles produced globally every year are discarded. One way to reduce a Carbon Footprint is through repair. By keeping clothes in use by mending and not disposing of them, we can sidestep the carbon compounds emitted from new apparel production or a landfill. Many brands offer in-house repair for those who do not have time or a desire to sew or mend. In a mission to keep things in use a little longer, some companies take their repair stations on the road. Since 2017, Patagonia’s Worn Wear Program repairs and recycles clothing through the website or directly from their traveling repair truck. Recently, in 2020, their “Tour-de-Tear” roving seamsters made stops throughout Europe and the US. These to-go tailors spread goodwill and repair, all free of charge. Alternatively, online customers traded functioning garments or gear for credit or shopped their catalog for Trade-In or Recrafted clothes, made from other clothes. BORO AND SASHIKO Boro refers to the art of visible mending with scrap fabric, demonstrating the concept of “Wabi-Sabi,” or appreciating an object’s impermanence and imperfection. This art of Japanese textile repair, developed hundreds of years ago by working-class people, was born from a desire to extend the usefulness of fabric through patchwork and stitching. The small and even stitching used for a Boro piece is called Sashiko. Imperfections are intentionally left frayed to add to the aesthetic. This folk art, developed during the 17th century Edo period, extended the use of textiles made from cotton, linen, or hemp fabrics harvested, spun, and dyed by hand. The embroidery-like stitches add texture and strength while embellishing everyday items. The Japanese value, “Mottainai,” translates to, waste nothing by seeing the value in everything. The act of Sashiko requires being in the moment, as a long sharp threaded needle passes through layers of fabric, leaving a trail of tiny even stitches. This restoration method offers a connection with our belongings and an opportunity to rethink our relationship to what makes clothing meaningful. Understanding this relationship puts us in the driver's seat. A FASHION BOOM, MUSHROOMS Stella McCartney commits to innovation and decreasing the company’s Carbon Footprint by teasing a new sustainable non-leather textile. The first luxury fashion brand not to utilize animal hides, feathers, or fur, worked with Bolt Threads to produce Mylo, a vegan leather. This plant-based fabric does not utilize petroleum or harmful chemicals for production, found in leather or pleather manufacturing processes. McCartney has used Bolt Threads’ trademarked Mylo fabric for two garments, black bustier top and utilitarian trousers. By the end of this year, the French fashion house, Hermès, plans to release a prototype mushroomed bag developed by MycoWorks. Pierre-Alexis Dumas, artistic director of Hermès, a company whose reputation stands on making products from the finest materials, recalls his grandfather telling him, “Luxury is that which you can repair.” TAKING CHARGE Donating clothes forestalls an early “End of Life,” the term used in the apparel industry designating the end of clothing’s useful lifespan. Orsola de Castro reminds us that “nothing is created, nor destroyed, everything is transformed.” Before disposing of, consider the secondhand market. We can revolutionize how and what we consume by donating, selling, or recycling obsolete clothing. The top resale clothing sites, Poshmark, Depop, thredUP, and The RealReal, saw record growth over the last year. In March, thredUP, described as the most trusted online marketplace for used clothing, went Public entering Nasdaq 30% above the IPO price. As we consider how to enjoy fashion trends more responsibly, choosing used instead of new is one of the easiest ways to participate. “The revolution will put you in the driver’s seat.” Gill Scott - Heron Loren Blackwood studies Fashion Design at Orange Coast College. She earned her Bachelor's Degree in Art History from the University of California at Irvine. She interns at the Huntington Beach Art Center.
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