I
lived in Detroit, Michigan with my mother and father and three
sisters for twenty-five years. When I left there, I was a
working artist in what is known as the Cass Corridor, where
artists made art and did not talk about art. I then
lived in Chicago, Illinois and worked as an assistant printer
from 1973 to 1975 at Landfall Press, It was there I
learned about color- it was there where I was finally sure that
I would be a painter, not a teacher or printer.
Tired
of the large, dirty, crowded cities of my life, I moved to
Portland, Oregon, where I found that I could not escape the art
inside of me. Throughout my career as an artist, I have
concentrated on the Face of Women-moving slowly toward the
figure with special attention to the hands, never thinking I
would ever sell these pictures-I just kept making them.
Growing up in an emotional world, I use this emotion of my life
in the life of my painting.