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Charlene Payton-Holt
How to find Charlene's Studio: NO. 5 Five Cent Ranch Road, Republic, WA 99166

Artist's Statement

The human form has fascinated me all my life.  From my beginnings as an artist I worked to perfect my ability to draw and paint the figure.   As a young adult, I danced and movement became a passion.    Through dance I became even more sensitized to the concept of movement as it relates to visual forms.  All my drawing, whether it is nonobjective or representational, reveals my love of movement.  In my current series of drawings and paintings, I have returned to life studies of the figure.  Some pieces are complete for their gesture alone, or the economy of line.  My intent was also to consider the individuality of the model or to emphasis the sensuality of the body’s shape or line.  These sketches in conte crayon and paint are complete in themselves, although they are also a step in the process of another oeuvre I am working on that involves the figure in relation to landscape.

It has always been my excitement as a visual artist to experience my materials and subjects as a dynamic process.  There is an involvement that allows for unexpected results that unsettle our standard perceptions.    Photography became an art experience in the darkroom when I manipulated light to alter the conventional image.  Then, there is the drawn or painted subject and here again, I seek to play with the materials so that the subject, even if it is realistic, is dictated by the abstraction within the stroke of the conte crayon, or the demand for a color that is not traditional.  Shapes take on a life of their own but can still render the form in a representational way.  It is a communication that takes the subject and the realism into account but is dependent on the elements of line, shape and color, for example, to have their voices.  One stroke speaks and the next must answer.  This is the microcosmic aspect.  The subject becomes charged with the harmonies within the structure and the expression of those harmonies makes the subject come alive.

Paul Klee talked about the line as a dot rising out of infinity, emerging into existence and depending on its dynamic, having a certain type of energy, moving in space and exiting back into infinity again.  I share this aesthetic from the experience I have as an artist, whatever media I am using. 

Charlene Payton Holt       July, 2006 

 

  Charlene at her "Eagle Ridge Studio", Republic, WA 2006

                     

Charlene Payton Holt resides in Republic, WA. She established "Eagle Ridge Art Studio" in June, 2006 along with participation in NCAT. Nestled in the San Poil Valley, she has Mount Gibraltar at the end of her road and has a focus on the various mountains in Ferry County for her most recent images. She has been working from the figure for two years and has found a venue with the nature that surrounds her home and the human form.

Charlene's career includes a BFA in Studio Art from Kent State University in 1972. She was also a student at the Cleveland Institute of Art for her sophomore and junior years in Cleveland, OH. In 1966 she spent six months studying at the atelier of Salvador Aulestia in Barcelona, Spain. For Charlene, this was the turning point to choosing art as her life long career. She was enamored of the Spanish culture in her teen years, studying Spanish and flamenco dance, a passion that has never left her and which has influenced much of her art. Dance in all its forms and the human figure in movement have been a theme throughout Charlene's work. Then, the calligraphic line and movement as it is expressed in line is another aspect of her images. If she is working from the model, then her lines seem to dance across the surface. In recent years, Charlene added this approach to her darkroom images, "painting" with the chemistry to create altered images that definitely emphasize line and almost a Jackson Pollock abandon. Her studio in Republic has many framed and available photographs for viewing and purchase.

It is not surprising, with her attitude for beautiful line, that Charlene became interested in calligraphy and the various book arts during her career. She is proficient in twenty-two scripts using the broad pen, Turkish paper marbling and book binding. She has expressed the thought of using word images with her figures as well. If you travel to Republic, the historical mural of Ranald MacDonald's life, an 8' x 12' triptych on Kettle River Rd. 10 mi. North of Hwy 21 in Curlew, you'll see her painting in a traditional style along with complete text describing the adventurer's life done in Humanist or Round hand script.

Charlene moved to Washington state in 1999, having lived in Southern California since 1990. The move West brought her to her Indian heritage and Wampanoag ancestry. This became a move toward Native American imagery and a job teaching art at Sherman Indian High School, an off reservation boarding school in Riverside, CA. Charlene taught there from 1996 to 1999. She now works fulltime as an artist, having left the teaching profession, except for occasional workshops.

Charlene has a printmaking studio in the back porch area of her home at 5 Five Cent Ranch Rd. where she is producing prints on her Graphic Chemical printing press, intaglio woodcuts and photo etched images. She has a greenhouse area for painting in moderate weather conditions and has figure drawing sessions as well. Lastly, she has additional areas of her home that house her framed art and accommodate drawing board work.

Look for Charlene’s studio. It is number 26 on the 2007 NCAT self-guided tour brochure. Call for an appointment at 509.775.0982 or visit her during open studio hours: Friday and Saturdays: noon - 6 p.m. June 15 - September 30, 2007.

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