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Showing posts with label painter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label painter. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 7, 2015

An Art Exhibit This Weekend

Event Flyer

Moonlight and Mangos will be exhibiting her work at the CASK Visual Art Center this Saturday, January 10 from 6 PM to 9 PM. This exhibition will be in memory of those who lost their life five years ago during the January 12 earthquake in Haiti. Attendees will have a chance to purchase the artworks, and 50 percent of the proceeds will go to Haiti Relief Fund, Inc., a foundation to wich the Moonlight and Mangos artist is a vice president. Please see the flyer for more info.

Monday, February 24, 2014

Moonlight And Mangos on Communication Corner


The artist behind Moonlight and Mangos, Jessica Mitchell, stopped by Communication Corner to chat with Gail Lewis about her artwork and the role of emotions in her pieces. The different pieces varying from canvas painting, bottles to 3D art lit the Queens Public TV studio with their vibrant and sparkling colors. Lewis and Mitchell went around the room discussing the different pieces that were present and represented only a small sample of the more than 250 pieces Mitchell has in her catalog.
They talked about the recurring theme of moving forward in life seen in her art, the message of positivity she is promoting, the different things she incorporates in her work and the story behind each work. They also talked about her moonlight collection and her similarity to Jean Michel Basquiat.
Please view the video!

Thursday, February 13, 2014

Moonlight and Mangos and Her Projects

Listen to Moonlight and Mangos talk about her art and upcoming projects by clicking here to be directed to the radio interview. Moreover, her art will be auctioned this Saturday Feb. 15th at the 11th Annual Elmont Online taking place at Adelphi University at 5:30 pm. Her TV appearance will soon be available for viewing.

Monday, January 6, 2014

Article on Aton

 
Click here to read an interview of Aton with Kreyolicious, in which he
promotes his comic book on the first Haitian Superhero. Make sure to read our article on the superhero, who is no longer named Aton: The Demi God, but Djatawo. The name Djatawo is made of two names Jah, which is a biblical name for God, and Tao, which means path from the Chinese religious tradition Taoism.

Thursday, October 10, 2013

Moonlight and Mangos: The Artist

Photo by Sabine Cherenfant
"I finally know what I want to do when I grow up," the artist behind Moonlight and Mangos writes on her personal blog. "I want to color… Paint. Create… I am an artist…"

Her hair probably tied back or falling on the side, her sweats covered with a rainbow of paint colors, she leaves her garage door open to listen to the sound of the wind blowing through the entrance, the cars passing by and the birds singing their morning lullabies. She paints with no before-thought. She lets the brush take its own course because painting comes from within.

That's exactly what she tells her students from her art class at the 5 Star Sports and Entertainment Academy in New York. She refuses to dictate their drawings. Instead, she encourages them to let their feelings guide them.

The Artist, who prefers to remain nameless and refuses to be categorized, obtained her bachelor's degree in psychology and hopes to pursue a master's degree in art therapy.

"Painting is my therapy," she stated, and it was a part of her she kept private for a long time until a recent life transformation.

"Last year I fell in the street leaving SOBs," she recounted. "I broke my knee open. It was too wide to stitch and too deep to heal."

For six painful week, she was unable to work and stayed home while most of her loved ones turn their back on her.

"People don't understand how you could be so injured from a fall," she said. "They thought I was being a baby."

Confined to her home, painting was the only thing she could do. She never stopped painting from then on. She realized in life you can't rely on anyone. You have to take control of your life.

She hoarded all of her emotions in her paintings.

"I asked God 'why are you punishing me,'" she said. "[Then] I realized that it was not punishment rather something to make me stronger. I had to get up, get better and move on."

Looking back at the work she produced during that time, she remarks how different they are from her more recent work.

In her dearest painting, Mother Nature, a tear trickles on the right cheek of a mournful face.

"[Looking at it] I always go back the emotions I felt when I painted it," she confessed. This painting to her is an emotional photograph of her mindset during a painful time period.

As her emotion changed, her paintings became more vibrant, and as she became more confident in her work, she began to make it less private.

"There is no greater agony than bearing an untold story inside you," she said quoting Maya Angelou. Aside from the paintings depicting the pain, she also wrote a poem, posted on her blog to remind her how far she has come.

Six months ago, she quit her job of 16 years as a lab technician to find more time doing what truly fulfills her as a person. Furthermore, this has allowed her to spend more time with her kids.

"you will never find happiness living someone else's life," she declared. "If something makes you miserable, get rid of it."

Optimism and the quest for happiness are her intents in life. This optimistic goal is unintentionally shown in her paintings almost never drawn with sharp edges and colored frequently with glitter. It is her way of making her paintings less threatening and bringing a little bit of optimism to the complex, dark emotions.

There seems to also be a correlation among the circular lines in her work, the name of her company and her personality.

"I can see the moon from my bedroom," said The Artist, who is a nocturnal woman.

In addition to paintings, she also has a collection of bottles, titled bottled emotions. She is also an interior, landscape and graphic designer, making promotion and invitation flyers. As a writer, she published two informational pieces on relationship on a blog and occasionally posts poems in her personal blog.

She is an innovative thinker and forward-minded artist, who stopped watching TV because of the vicious coverage of Haiti after the earthquake. Her free time is dedicated to her kids and her artistry.

"Sometimes, desperation is the best inspiration," she said regarding her ability to create art from nothing. Art crafts are expensive. Thus, she creates 3D art or mixed-media art from tiles, wood, glass, nail polish, hand sanitizer, stones, ink or anything else she could find around her.

Some of her paintings and bottles are sold on Etsy [click here to be directed to her shop]. On december 7th, she will have an art opening in NYC. Location and time are to be announced.

Her blog is filled with quotes from respected figures, such as Alice Walker, Pablo Neruda and Bob Ross. In fact, Bob Ross's quote, "whatever makes you happy, you put in your life," is her life mantra.
Sh strives to expand her knowledge of the world.

"What is the opposite of 'ignorance is bliss?'" She asked to explained the importance and effect of knowledge in our life.

Everything she does is to inspire emotional freedom, empowerment and strength.

"[In Haitian paintings], even if a woman is sad, her chin is always up," she pointed out. In her own painting, she emphasizes the strength of women. Eyes, which are the windows to the soul, are also an important aspect in her paintings.

She wants to transform her brand into a household name, while bringing other innovative Haitians together.

"Something I noticed is that Haitians are proud," she said. "[Moreover] our generation is our future."

Saturday, August 31, 2013

Makeda: The painter and her vivid flowers

Makeda, the Queen of Sheba, also known as Nakuti, Nicaule or Balqis means beauty in Amharic (One of Ethiopia's official languages).
Beauty manifests through the paintings of Christina Clodomir, artistically known as Makeda. With acrylic as her main paint, Makeda prefers lively flowers as her subjects.
Flowers speak to her. She summarizes their monologues in the titles of the paintings, such as "Majestic Bird", "Congo Trio" and "Find Me Taste Me".
According to her, flowers are a representation of the world.
"Inside flowers, there is a similarity with everything that is, whether [they are] human beings or nature," she explains. "It is a divine prototype."
Makeda enjoys burying herself in her paintings.
"I take pleasure in focusing," she says. "In art, hours don't matter anymore."

 ***

Today, Saturday, August 31, Makeda is hosting an exhibition for her paintings at the Art Center Wynwood in Miami, Florida from 10:00 a.m. to 10:00 p.m. A reception will be held at 7:00 p.m. until the end of the exhibit.

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Aton, A Work in the Making


Anthony Louis-Jeune, known artistically as Aton, is a 26-year-old artist who has the ability to put his hands on many different projects.
A native of Haiti, Aton has been drawing since primary school.
“When I started, my mother did not want me to draw,” he explained. “She would even tear up my drawings.”
This did not stop Aton from living his dream, neither did being colorblind.
"I feel normal because I never saw colors. I was born this way," he said.
Aton still manages to create colorful, dazzling paintings.
"I have a concept of the colors," he explained. "I concentrate more on the intensity of the colors. I know that yellow is brighter than orange and green is paler sometimes."
He buys tubes of paint and pencils that have the names of the colors written on them to help him. 



"I always knew I wanted to draw," said Aton. 
He was inspired by those artists or those minds per say who created the comic books he owned.
"I wanted to be like them when I get older," he explained.
Aton explored the idea of pursuing drawing as a profession when he sold one of his drawings to a band in Haiti as a logo for 300 USD at just 15 or 16 years of age.
"I was like 'man, I can make money out of it'," he said.
As a result, he began working for a marketing company named Graphcity to create logos. He then created his own company, Aton Concept, and freelanced. 
When asked about what his company offers, Aton listed graphic designs, illustrations and logos.
"[For graphic design, I make] business cards, billboards, shirt designs, [and] anything related to designing...[something]," he added. "I can conceive it and people can do it."
Aton also worked for other Marketing Agencies, such as Image & Marketing and Publi Gestion, and illustrated for big companies, such as Comme Il Faut.
In addition, he illustrated for the famous Haitian writer's, Gary Victor, popular series, Djamina, shown below.



Aton actually comes from an artistic family. 
"We all have some sort of love for doing stuff," he said.
They each embrace a different type of art. For instance, his grandmother is a dressmaker.  "She draws also,"  Aton added.
His mother is also artistic.
"My Mother... is really manual," Aton explained. She sewed the curtains for her house.
None of the members of his family, however, use his/her artistic skills as a profession. 
"I am the only professional artist," Aton explained. 
He does admit that one of his cousin is considering using her skills professionally.
"She's working on it," he said.
 Among Aton's art projects is a poster that he recently designed for a juice company in Haiti.
“[The poster is designed] for them to post anywhere they are selling,”he explained.
Aton is currently attending Altos de Chavon in the Dominican Republic, where he is getting a degree in Fine Arts/Illustration. Here are a few more of Aton's works:


Right-handed Aton drew the self-portrait, shown above, with his left hand. This was his first time using his left hand.
"In school, they teach us how to draw with our left hand and ...our feet," he explained.


 

 



Aton also enjoys to rap, which is a hobby for him. He did a remake of Gregory Isaacs' Night Nurse.


He also recorded his own song called "Get Foktop," which gained him fame on campus. 


Aton would actually like to release an album with 15 songs ranging from Hip Hop to House.