ABOUT
THE ARTIST
AND THE ART
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to miss anything!) |
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Jamie BenAziz-Zacharatos, born and raised in southern California, leads a double
life, but these two lives come together in a unique way. She has
worked as a free lance artist for over 30 years, but she is also
a third degree blackbelt and has another company with her pro- champion
kickboxing husband, teaching Karate & Kickboxing for about 20 years. She is also partners in a real estate investment frim with her parents. Her life as
an athlete, business owner, and mother, has had a great influence
on her work as an artist, and because these aspects of her life
often overlap, it enables her to strike a unique balance creatively,
physically, and mentally.
She
has expressed her art over the years in many different ways from
creating many series of fine art paintings and prints in two distinct
styles, as well as working as a graphic designer creating a line
of greeting cards, and clothing with her designs silkscreened on
them that she sold to major department stores. She has also designed
logos and corporate identities, and enjoyed doing some interior decorating,
and writing stories.
She wrote/produced/directed two television
commercials for her martial arts/sports company, "Zacharatos
Karate & Kickboxing and Soccer", and designed and created the websites for her karate school, and this one for her art.
Her two distinct styles uniquely combine an abstract painterly style, with strong graphic design elements, the fine art meets graphic design.
More recently she has incorporated computer graphics into her art,
both in combination with fine art, and in designs created exclusively
on the computer with photographs and images, as well as web graphics,
including the creation of two websites--this art website, and a website for her
martial arts company, www.zacharatos.com (where you can also view the television commercials she made)
The
many subject matters of her paintings usually mirror other areas
of her life. Teaching martial arts and target shooting, piloting
airplanes, teaching dance, and competeing in tennis tournaments as a teenager, and riding horses as a child,
and best of all, becoming a mom, inspired her many series of paintings
which include, kickboxers, olympic athletics, weapons, dancers,
horses, and carnivals.
For
her fine art, she has created two distinct styles, the Abstract series and the Greco series.
The "abstract
series" is a combination of silkscreening and handpainting where
from a distance these series look like mere abstract shapes, yet
upon closer viewing, the subject matter becomes clear. Her "greco series" specializes in graphic
silhouettes of athletes of different sports with geometric shapes.
She then fits these silhouettes together like pieces of a puzzle
to form compelling images. She first creates them by hand with black
ink on white, and then enhances them on the computer for a very
dramatic effect especially when grouped together.
The
arts and athletics have an unlikely thing in common, they are both
also a great way to escape and get lost, something Jamie needed
when enduring one hardship and disacter after another, for many
years while building her martial arts company. Their various business
locations and possessions including her original artwork were destroyed
by fire, and then only a year later, another location was destroyed
again by earthquake, but Jamie kept rebuilding, no matter what challenge
was thrown at her--(see "about us" in the zacharatos.com
website for more) All these life experiences, the good and bad, enabled Jamie evolve into the persion she always needed and wanted to be, secure, strong, and independent.
Like many artists and creative people, she many times felt like an outsider and that she didn't fit in when she was growing up (even though she grew up in a loving home with two parents who are still together today after 62 years!)
One of the poems she wrote (copywrited back in 1984) is called Lost, where she talks about being a character that is lost and misplaced in the wrong story book.
She was different, with a unique combinations of traits, creative yet disciplined, strong yet vulnerable, loves science fiction and athletics, is organized and businesslike. She likes to get her hands dirty, yet also be glamourous. (she' dosen't think twice about taking out her hand saw and miter box, and cutting wood moulding to frame the french doors in her house herself!). She never cared about folllowing others in school or work just to be popular, never gets involved in petty dramas with people, she is fiercely independent and more of a leader than follower, which can sometimes be isolating.
There are a lot of contradictions in her, that are reflected in her style of art, which is both free yet controlled, just like she is.
It may have been hard to find her place growing up, but she no longer feels lost, and has found her place both in arts and martial arts, and as a mom.
In the martial arts, kids of all ages, many who felt lost as well, and many who are also very artistic, have continued to train with Jamie and her husband for more than 20 years! and they too have found their place and a family at their Martial afts school, and at their home. Jamie loves to be home with her family, but also loves to entertain and host fight parties, where many of their karate kids, now adults, get together on a regular basis to watch the fights. The Martial arts profoundly changes these kids lives, and Jamie draws inspiraton and satisfaction from that as well.
Whereas painting is a solitary art, her involvment in the Martial arts is a great balance.
Many
times while getting lost in ones art, for what ever reason, beauty
is often created, and it heals the soul, and you are renewed. When
life is inconsistant and testing you to your limits, art has been
the one constant in Jamie's life, where she is creating something
from nothing, imagining it, and then creating it, It is indeed magic.
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ARTIST
STATEMENT OR "ART SPEAK",
WHAT IS ART ANYWAYS.
I
SAY, IF EVERYTHING IS ART, THAN NOTHING IS ART! (Scroll down to see cartoon below)
I
once took a class many years back to see what other local artists
in California were doing. I was the only actual artist in this small
class. Needless to say, I wasn't very popular, Here's why. We went
to an exhibit, and I looked over at the wall, and saw an old tarp
cloth draped in a pile near the wall, and I said, "oh what
a shame we had to come while the room was under repair". Oops,
my bad, that was the exhibit. Is it just me, I don't get
it, wouldn't you think the same thing if you saw that?, would you
want that hanging in your living room?
Then
I overheard the teacher describing a picture on exhibit using phrases
such as, it evokes a quiet calm, then I made the mistake of looking
at the picture she was speaking about. What I saw was an enlarged
piece of graph paper, you know, the kind with the pale blue grid
on a white background. Of course this particular piece of
graph paper was very expensive, and was considered expensive "fine
art".
I
remember years ago, my mom, who before becoming a business woman
was also a fine artist and sculptor, couldn't believe an exhibit
she saw in a museum of brown paper bags displayed all in a row.
I think some of the bags may have been spray painted gold (oh that makes it "fine" art). She even wrote a letter to the
newspaper in disbelief that this is what is now considered art.
We still laugh about it today.
Are
people being convinced by art curators, teachers, and critics that everything is art. What happened to just hanging something
up in your home, your sanctuary, that's beautiful and dramatic,
reflects subjects you like, and makes you feel good. For art to
be considered good does it always have to make some political
statement or make you think, --think at work, when you come home,
relax with cool art--hopefully my cool art!
I'm not saying there isn't a place for these "avant guard"
styles of art (OK I'm being kind), but just not to the exclusion
of of "real" art, and I hope that those who favor the
"avant guard" would not to be so elitist about it, because
collectors of fine art masters etc, is out of reach for most people.
When I would display my art work at our karate studio, sort of the
fine arts meeting the martial arts, it exposed art to many of those
who wouldn't necessarily go to a museum or art openings, and I displayed
pictures of interest to them--my fighters and weapons series, and
many new people who hadn't thought about it before, realized they
actually liked art, and could relate to it. I'm sure I'm not making
too many friends with those who count in the art world, but all
that other stuff is just not me. Any type of artist must be true
to themselves, take a stand, and stand by it, and I just want to
create and design, not worry about trends, or be exclusively consumed
by the "business" of art, and take it too seriously, and
most of all, have a sense of humor about it.
Below
is my attempt at describing my art in the language of "art
speak" something I think to be considered a "true"
artist by "them" or "those people" is required.
I tried to make sense while using big words.
OFFICIAL ARTIST STATEMENT:
Everything
I paint is an expression of my feelings of the paradox that exits
within me--a wild free spirit that desires no limitations, inextricably
combined with my need for order and containment. As an example,
my own life is filled with art on the one hand, and martial arts
on the other. The result is an explosive order, and energetic calm,
an organized disorder. (pretty cool so far, huh?)
This
paradox is best embodied by the various subject matters in my work.
The feeling of the dancers' and fighters' need for total abandon,
defined by strict discipline, comes naturally to me. The running
of powerful wild horses appears free spirited, yet is informed by
steady fluid repetitions. The carnivals with their connotation of
gypsy freedom, are nevertheless underpinned by mechanical limitations
. The weapons--swords, daggers, bullets, guns, with their potential
of havoc and destruction, appear ironically to convey a sense of
serenity as their abstract shapes suggest anything from musical
instruments to floral bouquets. (how do I come up with this stuff!)
Things
in life are rarely what they seem to be. . . and from a distance
my paintings appear to be mere abstract shapes. Yet upon closer
viewing, the subject matter becomes clear. As my kickboxing series
depicts, that out of what looks likes flames, the silhouettes of
fighters in combat emerge. Not only the subject matter and its presentation,
but also the very medium I developed expresses the paradox. In my
abstract series, I combine silkscreening with hand painting, on
fabric or paper, executed with water media. One silkscreen generally
renders one precise image, yet I use each silkscreen as a free hand
paint brush combined with actual paint brushes, to create original,
one of a kind paintings.
(the
big finish): As a self taught artist,
I evolved original styles of painting to express the contradictions
within myself as I aspire to strike a balance between freedom and
structure.
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Jamie
exhibited some of her artwork at the "artist alley" (OK,
it's a hallway), in the Calabasas Tennis and Swim Center in Calabasas
California from November 29, 2004, through January 14, 2005. In
case you missed the exhibit, Below are a few photos from one side
of the exhibit.
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Jamie
and her husband Zach, pro-kickboxing champion, photographed in 2006.
Her painting "Mirage" from her abstract series
showing behind them, 42" x 54" (water media)
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Jamie, a 3rd degree blackbelt, and her daughter Nico, also a blackbelt,
photographed in 2011
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