Showing posts with label Featured Local Artist. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Featured Local Artist. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 25, 2012

Featured Local Artist: Court Lurie


Court Lurie is an ultra-talented artist living 
and working in Austin. She's a true 
inspiration to us at Jerry's!



When did you first realize you were an artist?

I knew at a very young age that I connected to the world around me differently than most of my peers and family. I was constantly filtering information through my senses, and then needing to interact with what I was experiencing. Whether I was dancing around my living room making music videos, or painting in the basement while my mom worked, or kicking around a soccer ball, or writing poetry into the wee hours of the night, or dancing in the theater, or playing violin, I was always viscerally motivated. I made sense of the world through experiencing the tastes, smells, sensations, sounds, imagery and feelings of the things and people around me. When I recognized this was an innate nature, I realized it is this relationship to the world around me that makes me an artist. It is not that I make my living as a painter that makes me an artist, but that I take in the world through my senses, and I need to respond through my body. I don't have a choice. I am grateful for this and honor the call every day as a gift. 

What mediums do you work in?

Anything I can mix with acrylic paint! I use gel mediums, glue, rubber cement, house paint, modeling paste and spackle. Most of my works are mixed media and on the surface of the canvas you will find charcoal, pencil, pastel, acrylic paint, and maybe a little piece of collage, if you look closely.


Where do you get your inspiration from? 

Inspiration doesn't come from anywhere outside of myself, but lies within the process of creating, and the commitment to this process. Being dedicated to my career forces me to be in the studio for many, many hours a week. It is here where the magic happens. The accidents, the experiments, the frustrations, the moments of flow, the challenges that each piece presents, is where the excitement and motivation occur. The limitless nature of creating a painting moves me. There are infinite ways to create space. Living a spiritual life, focused on being as present, awake, and aware as I can be, creates a nurturing environment in the studio where time, attention, joy, experimentation, music, playfulness, materials, and tools dance in an interplay where the process and the experience stimulate me. I don't need anything else. Answering the call to create drives me. Seeing what will unfold excites me. Listening to that which is sacred and divine, guides me. 

What advice would you give a young artist just starting out?

I mentor several young artists and I work with each individual differently, taking into account their goals, ambitions, and skill. First, and most importantly, hone your craft. Take the time to really learn about the materials you use, experiment and push them. Make work that has integrity. Make sure that before you attempt to share your work with the world in a professional setting, you have confidence in it, you can speak articulately about it, and YOU know it is good. Find someone that you admire and trust to mentor you and support your creative and professional goals. When you are ready to begin showing your work, thoroughly research each opportunity before handing your work over to some coffee shop owner or gallerist. Know your market and your venue and have clarity about your commitment. Most importantly, choosing to create a career in the arts is risky, yet can be amazing. You must believe that you can do it. You have to have faith in your work and your ability. If you do not have this faith, it will not work. 


Check back soon for another installment of Featured Local Artist from Jerry's Austin!

Friday, March 23, 2012

Featured Local Artist: Jules Buck Jones



Austin artist Jules Buck Jones mixes his media in East Austin and is a member of Boozefox, one of our favorite local art collectives.

 The natural world is a big part of your art - when and how did nature & art come together for you?

As a kid I drew a lot of monsters. Hybrid animals. I watched a lot of Godzilla and Voltron. A lot of this got pushed aside in my formative years, as I concentrated making images of other things. When I started grad school in 2005, I had a new interest in depicting animals and new ideas of what I could do with that.

I know mixed media is kind of your thing. What's your favorite medium/material at the moment?

I’ve been predominately making large scale drawings for the past several years now. The drawings used everything from graphite to acrylic. Lately I feel I have beat that over the head. Recently I have been playing with more sculptural, video and audio pieces. Something about making a million collages sounds really appealing to me right now.

"Felidae" by Jules Buck Jones

How did you end up in Austin? Why did you stay?

I moved here for graduate school in 2005 from Virginia. While I was in grad school I got some gallery representation around Texas and received some opportunities to show and work with local art institutions.  I got a small studio in a really awesome complex in East Austin called Monofonus where I work today.  Texas has been treating me right, and I feel if it ain't broke, why fix it?

What does the future hold for you and your art?

Oh, well, like I said I have been trying to branch out and work with an expanded toolbox of media. This is exciting for me as it presents all types of new avenues for the work to go down.  Where this will take me, who knows, but I am having a blast and I feel great knowing I am growing and learning new things as an artist.

"Canidae" by Jules Buck Jones

Tell us about your spirit animals.

I have 2. The hawk and the fox are my spirit animals. They serve different purposes. The hawk I see a lot and tells me of day to day things like love and work and friends. The fox I see less often and has bigger stories for me. More internal things about myself as well as external macro ideas of the cosmos and such. My hawk has been following a mountain lion lately. They can form a hybrid beast similar to a griffin. Seems pretty unstoppable.

Check back soon for another installment of Featured Local Artist