The Synergy of the Arts
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Synergy, from the Greek word synergos, means working together. As the word has evolved it refers to the phenomenon in which two or more discrete influences or agents acting together create an effect greater than the sum of the effects that each is able to create independently. Synergy creates a mutually advantageous conjunction where the whole is greater than the sum of the parts and the end result develops into a more dynamic state then merely the sum of individual component actions. What better word to use than this one when one converges on the area of North Laguna Beach from the
In the fall of 2006, The Laguna College of Art & Design was the first college in the nation to offer virtual drawing and painting courses. Michael Savas, Chair of Illustration of the College, teaches traditional classes in illustration, yet knows well the importance of pixels and bytes. A pioneer of the digital revolution in the early 1990s and known for his ‘tradigital work,’ Savas explains the reason for these innovative classes, “More and more venues are requiring artist’s to use digital imagery, especially in the entertainment and commercial advertising fields.” And so it is here again that the concept of synergy brings separate entities, the canvas and the screen, together in unison.
The course will integrate the use of a laptop computer, graphics tablet and a pressure sensitive pen. Students will learn to draw and paint directly from observation using live models and still life props working completely on the computer. Says Savas, “It’s only fitting that a school which prides itself on promoting strong representational and figurative skills will be the first to implement the use of the computer in this way.”
Nearby the college, the
As chief curator, Stallings organizes exhibition schedules and often seeks out traveling exhibitions that fit into the museum’s mission to be the premiere
Each year Stallings has three exhibition periods with two to three shows in each period. “We put on about six to nine shows a year. I try to balance each year's programming between what we loosely phrase as historical, contemporary, and popular culture.” The Museum has been important in bringing attention to
“For me, visual art is important because it provides a meditative space,” muses Stallings. “Generally, you stand or sit in front of an object that does not speak to you––it is not time-based like a film or book; that is, it does not take you on a journey. So all that you can do is project all sorts of ideas on the object as you try to figure it out and experience it. But this is the point about the visual arts––to elicit multiple layers of meaning.”
Stallings points out that the Museum has also pioneered the importance of popular culture to
“We hope that audiences will be introduced to new ideas and will also see connections between what is new and what is in the past. Just like anything else, there is a history to art, and in general, artists are a dialogue with that past. So for example, I like to juxtapose works from different time periods in permanent collection exhibitions in order to show the connections.” Ah, there is it again––synergy––that mutually advantageous conjunction.
Turn back along the
Each evening through September 1, 2006, her selections of artworks will be transformed into tableaux vivants––living pictures. These scenes are incredibly faithful art re-creations of classical and contemporary works with real people posing to look exactly like their counterparts in the original pieces. “There are so many gorgeous examples of paintings and sculptures that fit this theme, it’s hard to narrow down the choices,” Challis Cavy notes. Among the artists she felt had to be included is the Italian master of Baroque sculpture, Gianlorenzo Bernini, whose extraordinary “Ecstasy of St. Teresa” will be featured. Calling him the greatest sculptor of all time, Challis Davy explains, “You have to have a passion to make stone come to life the way he did.” Summing up her hopes for this summer’s Pageant: “I’d like the show to be a love letter, if you will, to Art.” Watch this magic then that becomes a much more dynamic state then merely the sum of individual component actions.
Complimenting the Pageant of the Masters, across the street, is the Sawdust Art Festival––in its 40th year this summer. While Laguna has been an art colony for more than a century, it was in 1966 that a group of
Moving from this lively ambiance to a solitary setting, artist
Her work is only one more example of the synergistic cycle that makes the art of life in our area so very extraordinary.
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