whenever i sit down to write to you about my latest q&a, my dear friends, all i really want to do is gush. each week i just want to get all shouty and tell you how excited i am! but i can't do that every q&a, not only does it smack of pollyannaism, it's just kind of boring. it's hard to keep it low though when you have kanye thumpin in the background as well... but peeps, this week i am excited to post my q&q w/ saelee oh!
i've loved saelee's work for years now. her delicate papercuts and fairytale like paintings always make me feel warm and happy. saelee's aesthetic has a sensibility that as a girl of the craft and diy movement i get, intuitively as well as visually. of the many things i admire about saelee's work is her ability to have a sweet, feminine aesthetic yet still remain strong in appearance. this sort of attitude comes over loud and clear in the following q&a. saelee addresses the use of craft, her take on modern femininity and the coveted name "pearl" in the oh household among other topics. i hope you enjoy this q&a as much as i did!
p.s. saelee's solo show tangled tales opened at tinlark gallery in la on may 17th and goes through june 14th. check out tinlark's website for more info and opening photos!
your work has a dream like quality to me, almost fairy tale-esque. can you tell us a little bit about your inspirations?
i like the idea of being able to make tangible dreams. lately l’ve been
finding inspiration in: romanticism, idealism, headaches and
heartaches, reading everything: fiction, non-fiction, memoirs and
biographies, libraries, puns, metaphors, traveling to places I’ve never
been before, discoveries of new species, the design of nature and how
everything is interconnected, relationships, decorative arts, folk art,
high-brow art, gut feelings, past memories, nostalgia, weather,
vagabonds and wanderers.
is there a specific narrative you return to again and again w/in your work?
i guess you could say that all my artwork together makes up some kind of loose narrative. i create settings and characters.
did you grow up around traditional crafts?
my dad used to be a carpenter and has always worked with wood even
after he quit his hard wood floor business. growing up and seeing him
make things made me want to make things too. he made a playhouse in
the backyard, a rocking horse for me, has built multiple additions to
the house and is a master re-modeler. he still helps me with
constructing a lot of my projects. he has the skills to be able to
build something even better than noah’s ark. we’re a good father
daughter team. my mom is crafty too. she says that my sisters
and i got our artistic talent from her but, she doesn’t really make anything. i know what she means though. i’m nothing without my family.
paper cutting is incorporated in your work, when did you first get into it?
i found a whole bunch of brown wax paper bags in the women’s bathroom
stall trashcan. they’re meant for tossing tampons. i really liked the
color and translucency of the bags, so i grabbed a bunch and wanted to
make something to go inside of it. paper cut outs would let the light
show through in some parts and i started exploring drawing with an x-acto knife and cutting away positive and negative space.
over time, i’ve made ones that are over 4 feet wide all cut from a single sheet of
paper. i’ve made some with slight dimensions too so that the shadows are
part of the piece. i think about lace and delicacy and fragility. i
like the flatness of paper and all of its subtle textures and
properties. i love paper. i want to make a paper burrito and eat it
everyday. i love the different smells of paper too. the process of
paper cutting is also more of a meditative exercise for me than
painting or drawing with graphite or ink.
do you sew or knit or have any other craftiness?
i like to sew for fun and i just taught myself. i wish i was better. learning how to make clothes from a pattern (and/or...finding the
bravery to pull off wearing something quirky that I made...) is on my
long term list of things to do. it’s harder for me to make stuff where i have to follow a specific steps and do everything in order. i really
admire people that can make their own clothes. maybe one day i’ll make
a cocktail dress with a matching set of place mats.
i learned how to
knit but i was horrible at it and it stressed me out. i made a few
lumpy scarves. i want to try to learn how to crochet, whittle wood and
needle felt. i used to make handmade paper. oh, and i like to dry
flowers and leaves in the microwave. does that count as crafty?
who are some of your favorite artists that implement traditional crafts in their work?
kara walker is the obvious person that comes to mind when it comes to
paper cutting. nikki mcclure also pretty much exclusively works with
paper cutting i think. lately, i’ve been admiring ceramics. i always go
to the american folk art museum when I visit NY. Everything there is
really inspiring.
who are other artists you admire?
there’s way too many to name and i admire different, contradicting
things about different people and/or their work. there’s all of my
close friends...and then there’s people i've never met, both alive and
passed away. i guess to give a little less of a cop out answer, i’ll
say that i always admire people whose work doesn’t easily fit into one
category.
you've said that your artwork explores modern femininity. can you tell us what that means to you?
women are expected to be and also naturally so many paradoxical things
at once. thanks to the feminist movement, we have a lot more freedom,
independence and many things to be grateful for but, there’s still more
room for progression and i want to help contribute. i don’t want to
suppress my feminine instincts in order to be accepted as a serious
artist. to be able to make artwork with an obviously feminine aesthetic
is very empowering to me and all women. i don’t think girly-ness
should be considered to be weak or less of anything in any way. things
can be delicate but still strong.
water is an ever appearing subject in your work...when you were a girl did you believe in mermaids?
of course. i believed in a lot of things when i was younger. i remember
looking out into foggy oceans and imagining the thrill of being the
first person to spot a mermaid in the distance. my sisters, cousins and
I would play in the pool and pretend to be mermaids. we’d swim with our
ankles crossed and let our hair float around in black curls around our
heads, underwater. we’d fight over who got dibs on the name “pearl” and
we’d reenact that scene in disney’s the little mermaid where ariel
rises above a rock and water splashes behind her like giant angel
wings. we tried to perfect that splash. i think we just wanted to feel
pretty.
you've done a little bit of animation, any thing else like that in the future?
yes! i’m very excited about an upcoming stop motion animation project
with stephanie hutin of the echo park animation laboratory. i’m their
first official artist in residency and the plan is to use real 16 mm
film and spend a full month or two to make a minute or so of
magical-ness. the process will be very experimental, open ended and loose and so
we’ll see what ends up as the result. doing anything for the first time
is always the most exciting. i can tell already that stephanie is ok
with not having any concrete plans or strict guidelines and I’m loving
that freedom.
are there any other mediums you are exploring?
i would love to be working on a book. i think that sort of counts as a
different medium. and ceramics, which i mentioned earlier. i also want
to get back into printmaking and i always admire people who recycle in
clever ways. i guess i’m most consistently drawn to mediums where it
looks obvious that the human hand was there but, i want to always
embrace new technology and be open to trying new things.
you were recently out of the country, spending two months in buenos aires, how has that come to influence your latest work?
buenos aires is the best! i’d highly recommend it to anyone curious
about visiting. i wish i was still there right now. i really needed to
get away by myself to clear my head for a while and get some space and
perspective and so my trip was supposed to be healing and growing time. i think anyplace on the globe where i was an obvious outsider would
have been just as influential to the work i was making while i was
there.
since i freelance, i can work from anywhere theoretically, so why
not go live someplace i’ve never been to before? everything sort of
filters slowly when it comes to making drawings and paintings though. the work made during that trip was more about my state of mind at the
time rather than trying to document all the typical tourist attractions
of buenos aires like tango, dulce de leche and steak. but, i have a
fondness for argentina now and appreciate many things about their
culture which i hope to incorporate into my own lifestyle and thus my
future work.
it’s my third solo show and a new body of work with themes of
transitions, travel, love, vagueness and confusion. it’s all works on
paper, mostly drawing based. it had both the largest drawing/painting
I’ve ever done in my life (60 x 105 inches) and the largest sculpture
that I’ve ever made too (5 feet 4 inch wide wooden suitcase diorama
that my dad helped me build... my height is 5’4”.) it’s up from May
17th – June 14th 2008. please come see it!
your shop lemonade maid is currently closed & reopening this month. can you tell us about some of the products we'll see?
jill bliss and i are already working on our fourth collaborative
calendar for 2009 to be released at the end of this year! i’ll also
have some new prints and products. it’s been a while since i’ve
produced those sorts of things. i run the shop as a side project so
things aren’t set on a strict seasonal schedule.
what else is coming up for you this year?
i’m trying to decide when and where i want to settle down. actually, i
don’t ever want to settle down. there’s forecasts for a lot more travel
plans so... all of my projects are designed around being portable and
easily transportable. that’s why a book project would be perfect for me
right now. i want to stop time and never grow old.
Recent Comments