ARTIST PROFILE + INTERVIEW: Ava Cotlowitz
Artist Profile
While
I love interviewing established artists, it's always fun for me to talk to a
young student artist finding his or her voice. Recently, I caught up with
fellow Swattie Ava Cotlowitz (Class of 2015), one of the most promising young
painters working at Swarthmore College right now.
I
had the pleasure of working alongside her last year in Figure Composition, a
class that explored the human form and composition and structures of creating oil paintings. Among my classmates, her work stood out for its vivid
use of color and immediately recognizable sense of individual style.
While I sloshed around paint, trying to understand how to mix colors in
oils, she worked slowly and methodically, creating paintings in a variety of
dimensions that reminded me of the sun-glazed texture of David Hockney works.
Her rendering of flesh tones alone evokes awe.
I
was extremely pleased to be able to interact with her and her works again for
this profile and interview. In person, Ava is impeccably attired and
undeniably sweet-natured, with large, intelligent dark eyes that hold mine as
she confidently discusses her art practice.
Courtesy of the artist.
Artist Interview
I On the Arts: For my first question, how did you get started
making art?
Ava Cotlowitz: Well, I’ve been making art ever since I was little,
just as a hobby… then, after creating art for a very long time… I began to
really want to pursue it as a more in-depth passion, so I enrolled in a fine
arts school, and, at the age of twelve, I started becoming classically trained
in painting…that’s how I got my start.
IOtA: So in terms of fellow artists, artists you look up to,
themes in your life, teachers you’ve had…what’s really inspired you?
AC: I’m definitely inspired by a lot of artists, especially
artists that do portraiture and figure drawing and painting. So,
specifically, Norman Rockwell, Alice Neel, and Philip Pearlstein… I also really
love a lot of Abstract Expressionist Art, like Robert Rauschenberg and Jasper
Johns. I like to follow new contemporary artists as well who are not
as mainstream as those we’d find in galleries and museums, but are always
coming up with new, fresh ideas.
IOtA: Like for example…?
AC: Adrian Patout and Ivan Alifan are some of my
favorites. I’d also say that I’m really inspired by my interactions
with people. When I create art, I love finding the psychology in the
subject matter that I’m working with, so if I’m painting a face or a figure,
I’m really interested in exploring the dynamics of expression and how the
contrast between lights and darks evoke certain moods and tones.
IOtA: Are you looking to go into art as a career and do it
professionally?
AC: I want to paint professionally for as long as I can, but
what I’m really excited about pursuing is a career in Arts Education, so I’m
either hoping to become an elementary school art teacher and/or [to] work
within the education department of a fine art museum and bring art to students
of all ages.
IOtA: That’s great! If you weren’t making art, what
would you be doing? What are your other interests?
AC: Well, I teach all the time. I teach preschool at
[The Haverford School] three days a week and I teach art lessons once a week at
Overbrook Elementary School, and I also love to sketch, which, I guess, is still
in line with creating art! When I have chance, I’ll go to an art museum or gallery exhibition.
IOtA: So you transferred from Bryn Mawr this year. What
was it about Swarthmore’s Art program in particular that made you want to study
here?
AC: Bryn Mawr did not have an art program, so for my first two
years of college I had to take art classes at Haverford College. I
found that the art program there was lacking a community of artists that I felt
in sync with, as well as instruction that I thought was in line with how I
desired to learn as an artist. So I decided to take two art classes at
Swarthmore and [to] check out the department…I took Landscape Painting and
Figure Composition with Randall Exon…
IOtA: He’s the best!
AC: Yep! I immediately found that Randall became a
professor…[who] offered more than just a typical student-professor
relationship. He became a devoted mentor who really facilitated the
growth and development of my personal painting style as well as my own purpose
for creating art. [Additionally,] I felt that the students in my art
classes at Swarthmore were really committed to not only developing their own
artistic identities and visions, but also providing their peers with positive
feedback, constructive criticism, and unwavering support.
Courtesy of the artist.
IOtA: Yeah, I noticed that in Figure Composition last year…
AC: Yeah!
IOtA: It was a great environment.
AC: I really felt like my relationships with my peers...
facilitated my ability to hone my own skills as an artist as well as what I
desired to paint. It definitely felt like the right place to be.
IOtA: What has been a really important challenge for you in terms
of growth as an artist? What has been a really important watershed moment in
terms of your artistic growth?
AC: … When I started pursuing art more seriously, I was taught
how to paint classically. So…when I was twelve and thirteen, I [basically]
spent each year creating one painting. It
really required a lot of focus and self-motivation, especially because the way
I painted was so photorealistic and precise. Because that was the way I came
into painting as a fine art, it took me a while to accept that my painting did
not have to be limited to classical rendering.
It wasn’t until high school that I really started experimenting with
other forms of art making. At this time, I had enrolled in another art school
that focused on developing each student’s artistic identity through constant
experimentation. I created large 8 by 7
foot multimedia abstract artworks, I created more realistic portraits, I
sculpted and did a lot of figure drawing, so I really got to go all over the
board; I think that opened my eyes to the excitement and possibility so
inherent in art-making. So, as I’m in college now, I feel prepared to hone my
style of creating art in a way that’s in line with my own instincts and
desires.
IOtA: Last year, I noticed that you do a lot of great
drip work in your art. Where did that come from? Because
that’s very distinctively you.
Courtesy of the artist.
AC: That’s an interesting question… that definitely
stemmed from my experimentation with abstract art in high
school. When I paint, there’s not really any rhyme or rhythm to
it. Generally, I love painting from a photograph or some kind of
tangible source. I don’t necessarily like painting from my
imagination. But when it comes to more abstract lines and textures
in my work, they are very intuitive. They’re not something you can
find in a picture… I would say that when I paint, I’m in a
flow. I feel as though I’m completely absorbed in the act of
painting and when it comes time to do so, I just let my hand and my mind
sync up together and just do whatever [they want]. And from that,
dripping has occurred.
IOtA: This is my last question. I always ask
people this as my last question: what do you hope people who see your work take
away from it?
AC: I really hope, especially in my portraits and figure
paintings that people can connect to some sort of underlying psychology about
my work… that they can identify with and/or acknowledge a facial expression or
body movement that triggers emotion and feeling. My hope is that my work
conjures a memory or a sense of something familiar through the interplay of
color, composition, and contrast.
I really like this artist's work. She creates portraits which are realistic yet edgy enough to generate feelings which go deeper than those that are simply reactions to a face. Nice interview!
ReplyDeleteI love the artist's brush strokes...and the combination of realism and abstraction in one painting!
ReplyDeleteCan her art be purchased somewhere? Etsy perhaps? I'd love to know!
ReplyDeleteYou can contact the artist for particular works or requests at avac693@gmail.com
DeleteThe Princess Leia piece is pretty Warhol.
ReplyDeleteaccessible art. love it. excellent interview by the way
ReplyDelete