Artist: Cynthia Milionis (authored by cymili)

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Cynthia Milionis
Artist Statement: 

My works on paper begin at the printing press, with multiple runs or plates, and often take final form as collages. The imagery emerges in squishes, overlapping colors, intersecting linework, and the perfect paper scrap. Shapes, lines, and colors conspire in ever shifting ways, each interaction bringing surprise, delight, and possibility. Pure play, each turn of the press wheel offers up opportunities to inhabit a new space—to breathe in orange, green and red, to go like this.

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Artist: David Ortiz (authored by David Ortiz)

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David Ortiz
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David Ortiz, a native Californian, and youngest of 5 children, was raised in Mexicali Baja California, Mexico. He entered San Diego City College, before studying traditional painting at Middlesex University (New Jersey). He returned to San Diego to continue his arts studies at California State University San Marcos (CSUSM), where he started a Japanese language curriculum, immersing himself in Japanese culture, specifically Sumi-e painting and Japanese cinema (1949-1987), and spent a semester at kansai Gaidai University in Hirakata City, Japan. Upon returning to the United States he continued to explore the artistic media such as video arts, painting and Internet based arts. His video work focuses on incorporating traditional visual techniques with novel approaches to still photography. In painting he is explores surrealism, using Japanese painting techniques with modern acrylic media, incorporating both with his interest in his Mexican cultural heritage.

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Artist: April Hankins (authored by April Hankins)

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April Hankins
Artist Statement: 

It is my intention to be as spontaneous as possible in my painting.  As an abstract painter I rely on strong impulsive action and response to "create" my imagery on a canvas. 

Much of what I discover on the canvas I have recalled to be observed in reality – in nature or art – and long forgotten.  The appearance and combining of these snippets is spontaneous.  I am enthralled and my work sustained by the depth and breadth of unconscious information at hand.

 This makes my work loosely improvisational, strong in color, gesture and brush mark.  It is direct and unpredictable in execution.

 I work on a series of paintings to see how variations play out.  Often I will work on three or more paintings simultaneously.

 A strong, clear color will come to mind.   Mixing the pigment and choosing the size of brush I’ll make a broad calligraphic mark on the canvas.  In response to that mark, the color, size and placement of the next stroke will occur to me.   After every brush mark I wait for the awareness of the next step, while contemplating what is already there. 

 The brush strokes and color move the eye over the canvas in a pattern, a choreography, if you will.  My eyes move with the direction of the mark or marks, and very much like in a dance I feel where the next step, the next mark should be.  Insight can be rapid and exciting, or require patience.  Working on a painting steadily will exhaust the call and response mechanism, while I understand there is more to come.  I can refresh this mechanism by focusing on another painting.  

 I will work on a painting until information no longer comes, the movement rests, the painting completed.  There may be feeling of fulfillment and satisfaction, or in the best work, a sense of unease in the balance, when culmination comes through the feeling of anticipation. 

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