Check out Gary’s suggestions to the readers of Woman’s Day on how to always have great-looking hair.
http://www.womansday.com/Articles/Beauty/Look-and-Feel-Better-Instantly.html
Check out Gary’s suggestions to the readers of Woman’s Day on how to always have great-looking hair.
http://www.womansday.com/Articles/Beauty/Look-and-Feel-Better-Instantly.html
We’re excited to have you join us Friday, March 12th from 6-8pm for this month’s gallery stroll in Belltown with wine and hand massages!
We are featuring the work of Michael Edward McGovern and his wife Roxanne McGovern.
Artist Statements
The environments and people that have surrounded my life inform the art I create. My work is about constructing autobiographical images that explore the ghosts and spirits of my past. I am interested in how both personal and cultural histories have profoundly affected my visual language.
I compose memorials to the intangible memories of my past. By visually recording impressions of specific times, places, and events in my life I am preserving memories that seem to fade with each passing year.
My work calls upon the repetitive nature of printmaking and photography to create a network of reoccurring images that I can meditate on to help search for a truth. I use a lexicon of images that relate to specific events in my history. Repeated images of bridges, birds, trains, war, masks, urban landscapes, and old family portraits find their way into my work lending themselves to an unfolding narrative. All these images carry a personal biography, but also carry the weight of their own metaphors helping to furnish an ever-growing personal narrative.
Michael Edward McGovern 2010
Two years ago I read a book titled Black Dog of Fate by Peter Balakian. It is a coming of age memoir about growing up as a fourth generation Armenian in America. Balakian did not really know anything about his family history until he became an adult and began to do his own research. Through his research he discovered his families involvement in the Armenian genocide and how and why they immigrated to America. His family never spoke of their past, and Balakian had to piece his own history together.
For years I have been making work about issues surrounding my family, but it was this book that inspired me to go in the direction I am now. I cannot imagine growing up in a family that never shared their history with the younger generations. I grew up in an Armenian family who talked incessantly about our past and our legacy. I have dug deeper into that history and focused on my Babi Jan (grandfather). My recent work is about him and how his survival of war and genocide has helped shape our family, and more specifically, who I have become.
Roxanne McGovern 2010
This Friday is the Belltown Art Walk from 6-8pm. It was great having so many of you turn out last month. We’d love to see you again this month!
Barbara W. Solomon
My work is about escaping and vanishing. I often illustrate these ideas by exploring the relationship of birds and cages. In other works I present birds as outlines, shadows or silhouettes in the sky without the usual features that would identify them to the earthbound viewer. I use monoprint techniques with an emphasis on layering the backgrounds with dyes and modified inks. Daily I am inspired by the crows in my neighbor’s tree, the ducks, geese and gulls flying over my garden and the noisy jays searching for food beneath my bedroom window.

Gwen Kearns
Gwen Kearns is a local printmaker who received a BA in Studio Art from the University of Washington in 2005. She currently prints at the Kirkland Arts Center and has been exhibiting in and around the Seattle area for the past 3.5 years.
“I am inspired by nature, and therefore my imagery depicts growth and movement. I incorporate obscure text, organic shapes and textures into my work using a variety of techniques: lithography, collography, and monotype. My work represents life in many forms, and consists mostly of an earthy color palette. The text that I incorporate is important to be obscure as my intention is not to have it read or become the sole meaning of my piece. It is meant for the viewers to interpret the piece in their own way. While the plants in my work are recognizable, they are not a true reality. I alter the images making them become two dimensional and simple in character, in order to maintain the appeal of abstract art.”
Carol Lelivelt
Carol Lelivelt has been monoprinting at the Kirkland Art Center for 4 years. Layering organic shapes and detailed line work give dimension to her designs. Prior to discovering printmaking, Carol was employed at Eddie Bauer and Nordstrom as a textile artist. She has also designed for Pacific Trail, TaylorMade, and Ralph Lauren Polo.
Contact info: HYPERLINK “mailto:j.lelivelt@computer.org” / j.lelivelt@computer.org / 425.822.6919
Joan Mamelok
Joan Mamelok teaches Introduction to Monoprint at the Kirkland Arts Center and is a local printmaker who works with encaustic, and most recently has ventured into sculpture. She works intuitively with mostly abstract forms. She tends to understand what a particular work is about after it is finished. Her dyslexia influences her work in that she sees relationships among seemingly disparate ideas. Movement is present in much of her work which comes from a love of dance. Interconnectivity between people is reflective in the abstract forms used. Contact: joanmamelok.net
Mary Mac
Mary Mac is a Printmaking artist who received her professional training at Valdosta State University in Georgia. She continues to take printmaking and other Art Classes the Kirkland Arts center. This month she will also have her work shown at the Artist Trust Auction, C. Art Gallery, Parklane Gallery, Has and the Kirkland Art Center skylight room.
She has created “A day off for Art”, which gives the gift a free afternoon learning printmaking to parents of children with autism and special needs. ”My work starts with time spent creating all the stencils that will go into my piece. I love cutting blades of grass, stems and flowers, legs and shoes and folding up little skirts to prepare for the printing process. I then head to the studio where each stencil gets inked up and then assembled on an inked plate, a larger sheet of damp paper is placed atop if it all and it gets one pass through the press. What most amazes me about the printmaking process is how different the plate is from the finished piece. There is this magic that happens as the paper and the plate go through all that pressure, inks mix, shapes shift, and texture is created.” Contact her at (425) 533-4783 or Marymac13@live.com.
Come join us on the 2nd Friday of each month for Belltown Art Walk from 6-8pm. We’re thrilled to be joining this neighborhood institution after so many years. Hope to see you there!
This month’s artist is Deborah Berg who’s abstract paintings are full of texture and life.
Artist’s Statement:
Art is a journey with no destination. It’s where I can take adventures, lose myself in the voyage, and at the same time, find a way back home to the rain. In this swollen world full of a complex way of life, I strive for simplicity and tranquility to balance it all out. I crave the type of ease that comes from the act of frosting a cake– with nothing between the icing and the knife except texture, color, and pattern. And just like frosting a cake, I layer the paint, creating peaks that stand on their own feet and colors that speak their own language.
This week the new artwork went up at the salon – a whole lot of glam with just a touch of naughty. Mistinguett has had an impressive career in Vegas as a showgirl, choreographer, art & costume designer. These works are the drawings from the costume designs. They can be purchase framed or customized to the size you want.
A longtime friend and guest of Gary’s, we are thrilled to have someone from our “family” presenting at the salon.
Check out her work through November in the salon or online at www.mistinguettshowgirls.com.
Kudos to Connie who graduated from the training program and is now on the floor at Gary Manuel Salon – way to go!!!
Justin has just finished Phase 2 and is now taking guests in Phase 3. Yay!
Both are graduates of the Gary Manuel Aveda Institute.
Congratulations to Alex who is celebrating 15 amazing years at Gary Manuel and to Natalia who has been with us 3 years.
It’s that time of year again – voting for Best Beauty in Seattle.
Citysearch is doing it differently this year. Nominate us in a category:
They take the Top 20 nominees in each category and have you vote again to determine the winner.
Thanks for your support! We appreciate it as it helps us provide you with the best services in Seattle!
Our Fall Career Fair was this week and it was the best one ever! With over 40 salons attending, it was a packed house. Our Career Fairs are held twice a year and allow salons and spas from the area to network, meet our Future Professionals and see their work.
The Fashion Show was amazing! Over 25 teams of Future Professionals created looks for two models using the theme “Head and Shoulders Above the Rest.” Great job everyone – can’t wait to see what you create in the Spring.
After the Career Fair, Gary, Tsofia and Heather from Gary Manuel Salon taught a class for the Cosmetology Future Professionals. The videos from this class will be on YouTube soon. Photos are courtesy of Chris, a stylist at Gary Manuel and Learning Leader at GMAI.