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The artist with one of her digital artworks photo by Ottavio Sosio |
Debra Dolinski
I
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remember a wall, it was morning; I can’t have
been more than 5 or 6. The white surface was scattered with a pattern in cobalt
and purple, reflected shadows from the dogwood in bloom outside my bedroom
window. Walls, walls coming together,
corners of the room. Crying for hours in the corner at nursery school. Out and
in.
Those
were my obsessions then, my themes now. Out: the sky: endless, limitless, freedom. In: shadows, neither dark nor light -
ambiguous; doubts.
When
I was angry as a child I’d paint flowers. When I finally had a room of my own (my
last year at Cornell, summer session) I found light. I’d set objects on a
windowsill and
paint them. The object didn’t matter: an egg crate; an onion, slightly dented
and with the
green sprout pointing, it was the sculpted light, carving things up. In fact,
later a friend would
say your work that year was like a salami, just cutting up slices. I had a show
at Cornell of that work and a painting was bought by a collector - a trustee’s
wife. It seemed like success.
Later,
much later I was already living in Italy - eternal travels. As my daughter was
born I
was always looking at the sky, the abstract of the clouds, the breathtaking
beauty that seemed to mirror the miracle that had occurred in my life. I
started “sky diary”, a daily record
of the sky, marking the compass direction and the time and location. As my
second daughter
was born this became my hedge against not working. I would do a sky each day, as
necessary in those years as a prayer.
In
winter my gaze would turn inward. I would stare at white walls, fixate until
they became color. I would paint the subtle mutations of dark and light, thin
layers of color one over the other like petals. Later still, when stretching
canvases and working 60‘s big no longer seemed my scale, I started photography.
I would record the subtle changes on white walls from one hour to the next, the
same crack, the same corner of existence. Like Robert Smithson wrote “look
closely at a crack in the wall and it might as well be the Grand Canyon”.
(Robert Smithson; The Collected Writings). I’m still there and I’m still
outside: in and out, light and dark with all the mystery.
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Debra Dolinski, born in Boston 1950,
started her artistic studies at the Boston Museum School
when she was still in elementary school. A
summer stage at Columbia University with Steven Greene and Alan Kaprow was
seminal in enrolling in the school of Art and Architecture at Cornell
University where she studied with Steve Poleskie, graduating in 1972. In the same year she moved to Europe,
initially for art related travels (which she has not finished) and continues to
travel from her base in Italy. In her first years abroad she became a member of
the Swiss artistic group “Movimento 22”
joining in many group shows held in prominent Swiss museums. She continued her
education at the Brera Academy, Milan under the guidance of Luigi Veronesi spending several years concentrating on color
theory. Numerous one person shows ranging from New York to Lugano, Como, Monza,
Cantù and Milano. Paul Guidicelli, Franco Passoni, Elena di Raddo, and Stefania
Carrozzini have reviewed her work. Debra lives in Como where she has her studio
and continues creative art laboratories for children both in public schools and
privately.
You can learn more about Debra's digital artworks on her web site: www.debradolinski.it
You can learn more about Debra's digital artworks on her web site: www.debradolinski.it
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