IN THE STUDIO

5 Images, Drawing Series in Progress, Uncanny Life, and an alternate ending to A Room with a View

5 Images 

I’m currently taking an online drawing class with Sarah Grass and this past week we were asked to share five images that we like. I pulled some together, trying not to think about it too much. In the class we discussed the similarities of the photos and any common themes. I was really surprised to see how my images were related to my other artwork.

 
Photograph of wall in Guanajuato, Guanajuato

Photograph of wall in Guanajuato, Guanajuato

 

The first image is a picture of a wall in Guanajuato, Guanajuato, Mexico. I took it during a trip last year. It’s the city where some of my great grandparents were born. I like the image because it shows layers and textures — symbolic of the generations of people from and in the city and of the complexities of their histories. 

 
Photograph of windows in San Francisco

Photograph of windows in San Francisco

 

The second image is one I took while walking around my friends’ neighborhood in San Francisco, on March 2nd, 2020. I was reminiscing about my time living in the city, missing who I was and how I felt then. When I took the photo I was interested in the architecture and windows of the gorgeous homes. There’s such a diversity of style in the architecture in San Francisco and the various window styles made me happy. The day I took the photo was the first day my friends started working from home. We’ve all been working from home ever since, if we are still working. 

 
Artwork by Stephanie Echeveste: Isolated Chaos I

Artwork by Stephanie Echeveste: Isolated Chaos I

 

The third image is a watercolor I did recently. I made it through a meditative process of letting my hand move across the page without thinking too much. I like having an art practice that allows me to be free to move and mark as I feel, especially now that I’m cooped up inside.

I like to use a variety of mediums—this one has watercolor, ink, oil pastel, and posca marker. I like the posca marker because it is very matte and opaque. It gives me a good solid color. The colors I happen to have at home are desaturated pop colors, which I like, and I think they ground the whole color scheme of the piece. This piece is about the struggle of trying to stay away from others while walking outside. I have been having a hard time running or even walking outside because there are so many people. 

 
Artwork by Whitney Oldenburg
 

This fourth image is a photograph of an artwork by Whitney Oldenburg, a New York based artist. She was showing work at the Spring/Break art show this year. I love her use of texture and line in this piece. It is very simple while still being very complex. I also like how the line is very casual — to me it depicts a knot but it doesn’t look very planned out. I want my work to look similarly effortless yet specific. I love how the foundation of the work is so messy and tactile and yet an unblemished white.

“I see glimpses into overlooked and unheroic objects, the “mess-ups,” as potential proper nouns, as sites or heterogeneous co-presences, and as possible exchanges of control, imbalance, repression, and hopelessness.” — Whitney Oldenburg, in New American Paintings

 
Will by Manuel Mathieu
 

This fifth image is a photograph of ‘Will’ by Manuel Mathieu, a Haiti-born, Montreal-based artist who was showing at the Kavi Gupta Gallery booth at The Armory Show this year. It’s so strange to think how now the Javits Center, the location of The Armory Show, is now a hospital. 

I love the streaky smeared paint and the colors in this piece. It shows an obstructed figure that reminds me has a Jesus on the cross. 

In the class we discussed what our image selections had in common. I was really happy to hear the similarities my classmates found in my images and pretty amazed that they are also what it seems people see in my textile work. 
Space and line

Motion

Contrast

Color blocks

Showing the labor

Paying attention to texture

Free and casual

Wabi-sabi

Unfussy

Layers

Controlled chaos

Texture


Per recommendations of my teacher, I looked into the work of Kaveri Raina and Christina Graham. I found some images of theirs that I also like that are inspiring me for the drawing series that I am working on. 

Seeing Doing by Kaveri Raina

Seeing Doing by Kaveri Raina

Artwork by Christina Graham

Artwork by Christina Graham


Drawing Series in Progress

Drawing series in progress by Stephanie Echeveste

Drawing series in progress by Stephanie Echeveste

I’ve been at home now for four weeks. The first drawing I did about two or three weeks into working from home and the second drawing I did this past week when I started feeling sick of being stuck inside.

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Maybe because I have been feeling cooped up, I started listening to Ear Hustle, a podcast about life in prison and recorded in San Quentin prison. (Want to sign a petition for a more humane treatment of incarcerated people? Check out Color of Change’s campaign).  

I was interested in televisions in prison and then found that translucent televisions are sometimes used inside prisons so prisoners cannot hide things in the televisions. I also found out that an early electronic television receiver, the RCA TRK-12 Television Console, displayed at the 1939 NY World's Fair was made of lucite and translucent to show what was inside the TV.

I also watched A Room with a View, the 1985 film directed by James Ivory based on the novel by E.M. Forster and set in the Edwardian Era in England. I loved seeing a young Helena Bonham Carter, but the final twists of the movie made me cringe. I don’t want to give it away, but let’s just say I’m glad that women have fewer constraints now, and that we aren’t forced to accept advances just because they are the only passionate experiences were are allowed to have. The film is worth a watch for the acting, bizarreness, and historical cultural experience. 

Uncanny Life

This week I tried taking a hip hop class online, from my favorite teacher at my favorite studio. I was one of two students and the administrator person made me feel guilty for not having my video on — not the zoom etiquette I am used too — and so there I was trying to let go while being surveilled. I hated it. On top of that, the connection was spotty and the instructor kept freezing on me. 

I realized how abnormal this all is. We are trying to live through screens and translate in person experiences with inconsistent digital experiences. It is completely inequitable since many people don’t have internet or a good internet connection or even the most up-to-date devices to be able to use up-to-date technology. I can’t even use the Zoom background image replacement feature because I don’t have a more up-to-date laptop, which is crazy because I’m using Jeremy’s relatively new laptop. I come out as a ghost on a screen when my fellow zoom participants are crystal clear against their desired background image. 

Artwork by Liana Finch

Artwork by Liana Finch

We are also having to expose our private spaces — bedrooms, kitchens, attics — to strangers. My sister put a sheet up over a closet so she has a cleaner background for her college classes, which are all online and all with tons of actual strangers. I am fine with my fellow crit club members and art class students seeing my bare bedroom walls, but it’s still awkward. Since I am home during these calls now, I also want to eat a snack or have a cocktail (most of my classes are during dinner time), but I don’t want to be eating or drinking on screen and I feel weird turning my screen off. 

Then there’s the texts were getting from the NYC COVID-19 alert line. It’s just dystopian — stay inside and look at our parks online?


And Michaels is boarded up.

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I saw this post on Next-door. Some one thought this guerrilla art work was dystopian while others found it thought provoking.


I have found some solace in the following:

  • Octavia Butler’s Blood Child: And Other Stories. This edition includes short stories and essays by Butler, each with her notes about the piece afterward which are both delightful and inspiring. I will be rereading many of these often. 

  • Drawing and painting and weaving. Which I feel very lucky to be able to continue doing right now.

  • This essay about how we use our bodies in a pandemic by Gia Kourlas

    • “The pandemic has created something fascinating: a new way of moving, a new way of dancing in the streets. It can feel like a game of chicken. Who will be the first to make space? What is the latest swerve or hop to become a step of survival?” — Gia Kourlas in How We Use Our Bodies to Navigate a Pandemic, The New York Times

  • This essay about the body and how we talk—or shouldn’t talk— about it by Gordon Hall

    • “What’s more ubiquitously human than feeling bad in relation to our bodies? Or what bodily experience is more common than voluntary and involuntary bodily transformation, from puberty, pregnancy, aging, and illness to make-up, electrolysis, fitness routines, and the acquisition of gender-appropriate speech patterns, facial expressions, and gestures?” — Gordon Hall in Why I Don’t Talk About ‘The Body’: A Polemic, volume 4, Monday Journal

    • “Our institutions still have an incredibly long way to go to meaningfully change which artists they collect, invest in, and offer career support to over the long term, and these types of spectacles-of-difference arguably have very little to do with these fundamental changes.“ — Gordon Hall

    • “This is very serious, because it means that artists still don’t feel welcome to make whatever work is in them to make, no matter how inscrutable their own body might be, for fear of risking being passed over by a museum looking to visibly diversify their program.” — Gordon Hall

    • “This is not a way of being valued that we should accept for ourselves or promote for the benefit of institutions and their publics. Our job is to make specific artworks with our many different bodies, whether we ask to be read or refuse to be visible at all.”— Gordon Hall

I had a dream that the final scene of A Room with a View was Lucy Honeychurch jumping out of a plane, sky diving. I think that is more what love feels like. 

Take care, 

Stephanie

Home Art Studio During COVID-19

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I’m stuck at home in my Brooklyn apartment during COVID-19. Day 4 of social distancing. I’ve been working from home for the past week and now have few clients to even work for, but it is giving me time to work on my business Distill Creative. I also put together a list of all my craft tutorials and online craft courses if you need some craft inspiration.

I finally found a resource to making a heddle for my large tapestry loom, but I won’t be going into the studio anytime soon, so in the meantime I’m pulling out every art material I have at home and trying to create even though I’m stressed, sad, and confused.

Oh! And I got into the BWAC national juried art show! Not sure if they are actually still having it, but I’m really happy I got in!

I also shared a squiggle birds collaborative project — check it out and participate!

Ok, gotta get to my home studio and try to do something.

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Recent art shows I've seen and what I'm working on

I’m back in NYC and happy to be in my studio again. I am working on some new pieces, mostly mixed media and some painting. I’m also working on my business, Distill Creative, mainly focusing on connecting real estate developers and artists.

I’ve gone to some interesting shows that I wanted to share.

Charlie Scheips: Inventions Fugues Flowers at Richard Taittinger Gallery

JANUARY 9 - 31, 2020

This show was actually not interesting and rather underwhelming. I didn’t think the work was particularly strong and I was just really confused. They did have drinks and jazz at the opening, so I appreciated that. One highlight is that they had some work by other artists in the basement and I got to see this piece by Pascale Marthine Tayou, who also did the giant plastic bag tree and other large-scale plastic bag work.

Sammy Bennett at Deer Studios NYC

JANUARY 10, 2020

This was such a random treat! My friend and I went to see Slave Play by Jeremy O. Harris and she said her friend was having a show that night so we went and made it before the end.

The work was both kinetic and fantastical. I loved the colors and surprise of what you would see when you twisted the blinds. I also really liked the use of a very lame and recognizable material — those cheap vertical blinds that you see in like a motel or crappy apartment. This work helped me visualize how to move one of my works by just literally laying them out next to each other to paint across. It’s a stupid easy thing, but his work helped.

Work by Sammy Bennett

Work by Sammy Bennett

An example of how I’m laying out to get parts connected the way I want. In progress artwork by Stephanie Echeveste.

An example of how I’m laying out to get parts connected the way I want. In progress artwork by Stephanie Echeveste.

Hans Haacke: All Connected at the New Museum

OCTOBER 24 - JANUARY 26, 2020

I really liked this show, well most of it. It is always nice to see the work of an artist who paved the way for much of today’s status quo. It puts you in your place. Nothing is original, everything has been done. It’s a good reminder.

The surprising part of this show was the weird science fair work on the top floor (was it the third floor?). I mean, I really felt like I accidentally took the elevator to the wrong educational institution. Maybe all the work on that floor together is what made me feel like a second grader on a field trip? I think a lot of this work is older, so perhaps this very work inspired science museum installations as we know them today?

There’s something about his work that feels very familiar. This is probably because it has influenced so many other artists whose work I now see, and also inspired the very way exhibitions are setup.

Anyway, Haacke is a pioneer and I am very thankful for his institutional critique work and also wish I got his kinetic work.

Hans Haacke: All Connected at the New Museum

Hans Haacke: All Connected at the New Museum

Below is just something I saw while out with friends in St. Pete’s.

Mural by Elle Leblanc in the bathroom of a bar in St. Petersburg (I was there for a writing retreat with some friends).

Mural by Elle Leblanc in the bathroom of a bar in St. Petersburg (I was there for a writing retreat with some friends).

Linnéa Sjöberg: Upwards Through The Ceiling at Company Gallery

DECEMBER 13 - FEBRUARY 2, 2020

I wish Company had said ‘we are on the third floor’ on their instagram, because I walked around the block trying to find it. I realize it says so on their website but still.

I loved this show! It was very inspiring for me and also made me jealous. How did Linnéa create such wonderfully intricate work?! Why haven’t I completed all the work I have in my head?!

I don’t love Linnéa’s style, but I do love her artistry and craftspersonship. Her exhibit for some reason gave me permission to just go for it — use all the things, put all the things together, make all the things, do all the themes. It was refreshing and really fun to look at and dissect.

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Another in progress work by me, Stephanie Echeveste. Inspired probably by Linnéa’s work.

Another in progress work by me, Stephanie Echeveste. Inspired probably by Linnéa’s work.

Zilia Sánchez: Soy Isla at El Museo del Barrio

NOVEMBER 20 - MARCH 22, 2020

I am so glad I got to see this exhibit! It was amazing. I only even found out about this because there was a piece in the NY Times (Zilia Sanchéz’s Island Erotic Forms by Jillian Steinhauer) and I happened to see it. I, probably like many other people, did not even know about Zilia’s work and I feel really upset that she is not as well know as her contemporaries since she’s been working for over 50 years making gorgeous abstract, sculptural work. The way she forms canvas and uses that as the structure of her work is amazing. I almost want to write her and see if I can study with her, but I’m sure I’d be like one of hundreds of people.

She’s an inspiration to me because not only has she always been a working artist — like did other jobs to be able to make art it seems via her biography (which was on the wall!), but she has collaborated with other artists, particularly latinx artists, on other projects like literary magazines and feminist zines. She was born in Cuba, lived in New York, traveled often to Europe, and now lives and works in Puerto Rico.

This exhibit inspired some new work I did, mostly drawings and paintings but I’m still thinking about the structural aspects of her work.

In progress work inspired by Zilia by me, Stephanie Echeveste

In progress work inspired by Zilia by me, Stephanie Echeveste

In progress work inspired by Zilia by me, Stephanie Echeveste and Yoshi, the office dog (of JPG Legal — I share the main office with them)

In progress work inspired by Zilia by me, Stephanie Echeveste and Yoshi, the office dog (of JPG Legal — I share the main office with them)

Some other work I made shortly after the show (the drawings and painting). I did the textile piece late last year, but I thought they all went well together. By Stephanie Echeveste.

Some other work I made shortly after the show (the drawings and painting). I did the textile piece late last year, but I thought they all went well together. By Stephanie Echeveste.

Marcia Resnick at Deborah Bell Photographs

NOVEMBER 16 - FEBRUARY 1, 2020

This was another find by my in-the-know friend who suggested we go here after El Museo del Barrio. We walked up all the stairs in this charming building in the Upper East Side and found ourselves in the most delightful gallery. Photographs were up on the wall and some art books were on a small table in the center of the room.

Marcia’s work is hilarious. It is tactile — her pencil (I think it’s pencil) handwriting on the prints is precious. I have so many questions about her Re-Visions series but mostly I wish I could be Marcia’s friend, on Twitter — oh wait, I can! Here’s her profile. This show was excellent and I am so glad we went.

Marcia Resnick from her Re-Visions (1978)

Marcia Resnick from her Re-Visions (1978)

This was inspired, I think, by Marcia’s work, though I am only now realizing it. I did it for the Fe* Mail* Art* Postcard show at A.I.R. because the theme was ‘networked communities initiated through correspondence.’ Pen and ink on paper by Stephani…

This was inspired, I think, by Marcia’s work, though I am only now realizing it. I did it for the Fe* Mail* Art* Postcard show at A.I.R. because the theme was ‘networked communities initiated through correspondence.’ Pen and ink on paper by Stephanie Echeveste.

I also started NYC Crit Club weekly a few weeks ago and it has been fascinating and intimidating and wonderful. If you are an artist in New York City, I highly recommend checking them out!

Books I’ve read this year so far:

Alright, time for real studio time.

-Stephanie

Progress in Oil

I have been taking Manu Saluja’s Intro to Portrait oil painting class at the New York Academy of Art as a crash course in oil painting.

I originally signed up to take the class with a friend. I have never taken a painting or oil painting class before and I was super intimidated on the first day. Everyone was literally already painting (I was in the afternoon session) and it was like I walked in on something.

As someone brand new, it took some time to get used to the style and pace of the class, but with Saluja’s guidance I soon settled in. I learned a ton in my first session of classes, and even produced my first oil portrait.

1st Portrait by Stephanie Echeveste, from Manu Saluja’s class (1st session)

1st Portrait by Stephanie Echeveste, from Manu Saluja’s class (1st session)

I never thought I would be able to draw, much less paint portraits in oil paint, and had thus kind of let myself believe I just wouldn’t do that kind of artwork. This class has forced me to push through those thoughts and just keep practicing and try to believe that I can do it.

Every class is hard. But as I start painting and letting go I get into a meditative state and am able to just paint. It still is extremely hard, but if I try not to judge myself too much I make progress. Slowly.

During the second session of the course I felt much more confident and at ease. I was less intimidated by all the other students because I knew the lay of the land. Saluja’s lessons were even more helpful because I had a baseline and I was not starting out from nothing as I had in the first session.

And of course, the more I learn, the more I realize how very far I am from where I want to go. But this is good — it means I am making progress and I am improving based on my own starting point. I just signed up for Saluja’s next session and I am very excited to get back into the zone and paint.

Portrait oil painting class forces me to practice something that is very hard for me, but I get so much out of it. I learn about line and shadow, form and color. I learn about style. It’s like when I had to take ballet classes when I was on dance company as a kid and teen — you can’t do modern dance without knowing how to do basic ballet.

I don’t think I could truly call myself an artist without knowing how to paint a portrait. I’m so far from being where I want to be as an artist, but at least I’m on my way.

2nd Portrait by Stephanie Echeveste, from Manu Saluja’s class (2nd session)

2nd Portrait by Stephanie Echeveste, from Manu Saluja’s class (2nd session)