A lot of times in my paintings
you might see a shape that looks like a vagina,
but upon closer inspection, it might also be
a penis with balls.
You know, I don't know how much of
this you're going to want to put in.
My work is an expression of my core sensuality.
I'm a body experiencing desire,
experiencing pleasure.
It is sensual and needy
and dirty and expressive.
I'm a body that is pregnant,
but isn't necessarily
the woman or the pregnant body
that society may put onto me.
I'm experiencing pleasure and
pain that anyone can experience,
and that's what I'm putting into the work.
["Loie Hollowell's Transcendent Bodies"]
It's nine months later.
I've had my baby at home, Juniper.
She's now six months old.
I gave birth in the pandemic.
And I'm back in the studio.
And some things have changed in the world.
I think around the age of seven or eight
my dad gave me my own studio.
It was a closet.
He set me all up in there with a little easel
and a fresh canvas.
I can remember the space so clearly.
To have my own room next to my dad's
and next to my mom's was pretty transformative.
I've always centered myself
back into painting and drawing
because of him giving me that space so early on.
Color and light are central
characters in my painting practice.
When I look at my work over the years,
there's just this real
strong sense of chiaroscuro--
light to dark forming space.
I grew up in California surrounded
by Light and Space artists.
Robert Irwin and his beautiful discs,
with this line in between.
Experiencing pure light,
pure space,
pure emotion.
There's always that hunting,
that searching for a light-filled experience,
even if it's a dark subject matter,
or an undescribable subject matter.
Around my late twenties, I got pregnant
and I did not want to keep the baby.
I had an abortion.
Planned Parenthood was amazing and wonderful.
The emotional experience
and the fallout of the relationship
was pretty emotionally intense.
I wanted to figure out how
to make paintings about it.
I started making, basically,
portraits of my vagina and ovaries,
trying to depict the experience
of having the abortion.
I realized the abstraction can hold within it
that sensation or that emotion
by its color, its composition,
its texture.
When I started diving deep into
creating three-dimensional spaces on my paintings,
I was now having to deal with
illusory space and real space--
constructed shadow and constructed light
versus real light and real shadow.
--Issues we've had with this milling
before is they haven't had enough layers on
--and you've seen the mill lines come through.
--So recently, Alicia has
been putting more layers on.
--That's what I'm feeling right now,
--when you close your eyes
and you feel that consistent,
--smooth texture.
--That's it!
--Yup, this one is good!
What I've found that I love
about having a painting
that in reality is a sculpture
is that it changes within each context,
within each space that it's hung.
A transition really happened for me when
the governor put the stay-at-home order in place.
I was about to give birth also,
so I brought a bunch of
pastels and pastel paper home
and just started drawing at home.
I was trying to visualize my second birth,
of my daughter,
and move into that space somehow
to start accepting the pain.
Like, the insane place that your brain goes.
So I was making drawings of my brain space
and my belly space
and the opening of my cervix.
Those drawings are leading me into this new path.
I'm beginning to actually take casts
that I made of myself when I was pregnant,
and friends of mine when they've been pregnant,
and putting them onto the surface of the painting.
When I start feeling really stuck in one place,
I need to change,
and that's where I'm seeing
and demanding the shift
of geometric, simple shapes
into the reality of my body.
After my mom had given birth to my second sister,
we were at a gas station
and I was in the back seat of the car.
I remember watching her fill up the gas tank.
Her shirt started being covered with water.
I was like, "What is going on?"
And she was leaking--
she was letting-down--
because my sister was crying next to me.
Her shirt was being covered in milk.
There's these little things that we
can buy to prevent that from happening.
But that was such a beautiful experience
and it's something that I want to make art about.
Really having the space to question
what it is I'm making and why
has really put all of these things
I felt that I had language for
into question.
"Why bright colors?"
"Why high contrast?"
"Why geometric forms?"
I think these are all questions,
as artists, we have to continue to ask ourselves.
"Why are we doing what we're doing?"
"What is beauty?"
"And why is it beautiful?"
"And what makes beauty?"