Artist Gina M.
In all my work there is a whimsy with a dark side. My personal narrative uses innocent childhood imagery like teddy bears, toys, puppets and games, to create the reactionary expressions of my inner emotional life. I was raised by a funky and creative family. My mother owned and operated a puppet theater where my family spent many weekends developing shows, building puppets and hosting other children's birthday parties. Art and creativity were a way of life.
For a child nurtured by puppets and their puppeteers, my affinity for the anthropomorphic was fashioned to help me cope and accept the divorce and divide of my family.
In college, I studied interior design and color theory. As a sideline I attended workshops and received private training in painted trompe l'oeil, faux finish, and decorative wall treatments. This educational background influences all of my art making.
I select materials based on their authenticity to my process. I choose clay because of its fragility, its relationship to the earth, and its tradition in arts and craft. I incorporate recycled materials and found objects because of their nostalgia and reference to aging, decay and decomposition. Encaustic wax and resins speak to my faux finish experience and love of historic art materials.
Combining assemblage with ceramics is one body of work. Trompe l'oeil “fool-the-eye” sculptures are made of high-fired ceramic clay, oxide washes, encaustic paint and found objects. Their homespun construction and textured surfaces simulate threadbare fabric, tattered fur, and the broken button eyes of careworn, faded toys and carnival games.
Found objects are also in the sculpture series Toy Box Kids, creating life-sized circus friends: a menagerie of melancholy misfits with coded narratives bursting from their proscenium bellies.
Photography, painting, and installation projects round out my artistic practice. Sometimes all the above melds together to present political commentary like my series, ”The New Normal,” where each piece of art takes a sardonic look at the subconscious conditioning of America’s children that normalizes domestic terrorism while feeding them the lie, “You just deal with it.”
Selected Solo shows:
Cerritos College Art Gallery, Selling The New Normal. Norwalk, CA, Window Dressing project 2024
The Last CA10, Redondo Beach Historical Library - Solo Space: Hate the New Normal 2023
Beverly Hills Art Show, for the Los Angeles Art Association 2022,
The Don B. Huntley Gallery, Through the Toyshop and Behind the Curtain, Pomona, CA, 2020
Gallery 825, Midway, Los Angeles, CA, 2017
Selected Group shows:
The Kellogg Art Gallery, Ink/Clay 45, Pomona, CA., Keiko Fukazawa, Clay Juror
The Kellogg Art Gallery, Ink/Clay 44, Pomona, CA., Juror, Susan Elizalde-Henson
Gallery 825, LAAA'S 2021 Open Show, Juror, Peter Frank
Gallery 825, VS Exhibition, Los Angeles, CA, LAAA with artist Courtney Rackley
Dab Art, installation: Under The Big Top, for Latent Ability -Yessíca Torres, Director, Ventura, CA The Loft, Hard Mud Soft Threads, installation Ceramic Circus, Los Angeles, CA Carolyn LaLiberte Blue Roof Studios, Let Me Eat Cake, Too, Los Angeles, CA -Kristine Schomaker
Burbank Creative Arts Center, PSA 94th Juried Exhibition, juror, Mr. Jay Belloli
The Kellogg Art Gallery, Ink/Clay 43, Pomona, CA., juror Joan Takayama-Ogawa
The Irvine Fine Arts Center, ALL MEDIA 2018, Irvine CA, juror Dave Barton
The Kellogg Art Gallery, Ink/Clay 42, Pomona, CA., juror Joan Takayama-Ogawa
El Camino College Art Gallery, Mother and Child, Torrance, CA, curated by Susanna Meiers
SMC: SOLA Gallery, Fresh 2017, Los Angeles, CA, juror Fatemeh Burnes, Peter Frank
Orange County Center for Contemporary Art Gallery, Art As Protest, Santa Ana, CA, Tyler Stallings
Gallery 825 LAAA'S 2017 Benefit Auction, Los Angeles, CA
CA 101 - It Takes A Village, Redondo Beach CA, juror Nina Zak Laddon
Gallery 825, Multiple Feeds, Los Angeles, CA
White’s Gallery, Pasadena Society of Artists 92 Annual, Montrose CA, juror Toby Tannenbaum
El Camino College Art Gallery, Personal Matters, Torrance, CA, curated by Susanna Meiers
The Loft, South Bay Contemporary, Dear President, San Pedro, CA, curated by Peggy Zask