Sam Pedisich’s Artistic Lens: A Philosophy of Humanity Through Mixed Media

Mixed Media Sam Pedisich

Natascha: This is Natascha with the Little Lost Forest blog, and I’m thrilled to be here today with abstract mixed media artist Sam Pedisich, who is currently showcasing his work at Gallery Cor in Asheville, North Carolina. Fun fact Gallery Cor takes its name from the Latin root “cor”, meaning heart and courage, which feels like a perfect reflection of Sam’s work and artistic spirit. Sam and I are connecting over Zoom today. He’s at his home in North Asheville, North Carolina. It’s 130 in the afternoon, and I’m here in Eureka, California. And it’s 10:30 in the morning. Sam is not only an incredible artist, but also a former middle school teacher of mine from the Environmental Resources Academy. We call the ERA at Guajome Park Academy. He’s been a close family friend of mine ever since. Hi, Sam. How are you doing today?

Sam: I’m great. Thank you. Natascha.

Natascha: Alright, let’s jump into it. I read in your bio on Gallery Cor’s website that you have an avid history as a motorcycle rider, teacher, having served a jail sentence, a youth boat builder, instructor, and so much more. Can you please touch on some points of your expansive history?

Sam: Wow. I think a common thread is being outside, and it was important to me that that when we were working together at Guajome Park Academy, I think you were in the seventh and eighth grade, that that it was outside and we, we experienced the elements and I’ve always tried to look for that. So, my current job enables me to, to see all of what nature is doing now that I’m working on tugboats for the last 12 years. I think the key point with everything about my career path is that I’ve always tried to be outside and encourage other people to be outside.

Sam Pedisich Mixed Media

Natascha: That’s lovely. I know I’ve enjoyed the hard lessons we endured in middle school, up on the hill in the sun. I don’t remember too many times in the rain, but definitely there might have been a couple of camping trips we’ve done and diverse weather. How old were you when you started seeing yourself as an artist?

Sam: I made a pretty firm commitment when I was probably about eight, that I wanted to do what I saw in the Chrysler Museum in Norfolk, and I was most attracted by, um, highly textured, probably what might have been the 50s abstract expressionist movement that was going on. And I managed to get in that museum about once a month, it seemed, because it was free, and it still is. And not that big, but global, important pieces in there worldwide throughout history. But the modern American stuff really fascinated me. And I noted that acrylic, which I’d never heard of, of course, was what the paintings were made with. And they sold those paints in the museum gift shop. And the more I think about this, the more important I realize my mother was and how she raised her four kids. I asked for some paints, and she bought some acrylic paints from the museum gift shop, which probably was four times more than it could have been. But over the years, the two of us figured out what kind of bulk we should buy. And like, I needed a lot more white and black and that I could mix colors so we didn’t need to buy a 36 color set. But she would respond pretty quickly if I told her I needed a canvas. I was typically painting like, you know, ten by 20 was big to me.

Like, I remember being 13 or 14 when I painted maybe a, a 24 by 30. And I thought that was huge. And I actually just sold that last year. It was a puma that I painted between my eighth and ninth grade in 1977. And that was oils and oil paints expensive. And, um, you know, I would use a tube of, of any given color for one painting. And it’s just remarkable that my mother figured out how to keep me in, in supplies. So, when I think I was in the early fifth grade, beginning of fifth grade, we moved and at that point I told my mother I needed art lessons. And the art at school was- was essentially playtime. And later on in high school, I was fascinated by my fellow students who were in legitimate art classes. But I was very I was interested in electives like band and music and sports. So, I didn’t I didn’t take any academic, public school or even private school, um, art classes or in college either. So that’s why Gallery Core owner, Leslie Rowland, calls me an outside, outsider artist. But that doesn’t mean I’m not. I’m not attuned to the academic traditions. My wife Erin jokes that I’m an outsider artist because when I’m painting something big in the house, she says. Can you take that shit outside? So, I knew when I was eight that I was going to paint.

And when we showed up in North Florida in the boonies, I don’t know how she did it, but my mom found a painter that was just a couple of miles from the house that, had lessons and a small studio that he had. It was a busy little hub for the county for all kinds of artists. And I can remember one named Brita, Brita Hobbs, who was, quite, quite, quite effective in what her vision was. She painted the realistic scenes of the rural South, but also some African animals. And she had she had a predilection for how to present an animal in a way that you wanted to hang it on the wall. And my, my mentor teacher was Jean Barber, and I, I know that he charged $5 every Wednesday, and I was probably there for anywhere between 2 and 3 hours once a week until, let’s see, that would have been fifth, sixth, seventh, eighth, ninth grade and then 10th grade. I went to Catholic school for a couple of years and missed him. Then I went to college in Jacksonville, not far from where Gene Barber Studio was. But he would come out to Jacksonville once in a while because he had some studio friends and some collectors closer to where I was going to college. So maybe once a month I would get on my motorcycle and have a rolled canvas or something, or I’d get one from his, whatever art store he was giving a lesson in, and I would show ad hoc, show up and enjoy his company, and have him coach me with whatever I was working on.

I can remember how he introduced me to palette knives, and I thought that at that point that I was a demigod because I could swing paint around on the canvas. And I like looking back. And I can honestly, truly, totally remember some of those palette strokes that I’ve made when I see some of those works from now. And I actually have a bodily central nervous system memory of those swipes.

So, I don’t I don’t know if you decide that you’re an artist or creator. I just think that, um, this term neurodivergent, I don’t I don’t think that has a whole lot of meaning. I think every single human being is so unique that, um, as an educator, when I figured that out, I was in about my sixth year, and that changed everything. So, when I to answer the question succinctly, when did I decide I was an artist? I mean, I was born to put color on a canvas because that’s all I did. And I, I love doing it. When I was three, I would draw a circle and put some shit in it to make it look like what I thought a face would look like and then two sticks hanging down and you know, my mom would glue that onto a piece of wood, and she probably has it in the attic now, and it’d be hilarious to look at it, because I just love it when- There’s a, there’s a term going around like, um, well, my four year old could do that. I’m like, yes, of course they can. That’s what’s so wonderful about being a person who wants to share, like, yeah, what’s wrong with that? Like, I bet your four-year-old can sing and dance too. And, you know, I just met a man today at physical therapy, and he had to pass some time away doing a certain exercise. And his coach was giving him different ways to account for the time. And I said you could just sing a song. And he goes, I can’t sing. I’m like, I wish somebody would tell me that. So, uh. Yeah. How long have you known you were a singer? Um, I’m not a singer. That doesn’t mean I’m not going to sing. That enough? [funny/sarcastic] I looked at the questions that you’re going to ask me, and some of them I’m going to have, like three words for. So, I’m not going to take four hours doing this interview.

Natascha: I love asking this question, actually. I love hearing the timeline of people’s art history. When they kind of figured that they were an artist and coming into themselves because you see pieces of everything you’ve mentioned in the art you do now, if that’s your passion for history, to using the palette knife, the animals that you saw, it all shows in the artwork that you create now. So, it’s actually, I know it might be a commonsense thing that, “Oh, I’ve always been an artist,” but hearing people explain when and how that evolved for them is a lot of fun for me. So, thank you for explaining thoroughly.

Sam Pedisich

Sam: I’d like to give a couple of milestones that are opportunities for parents and educators to really blow it on this. My family, the older generations owned a wallpaper factory, so we were frequently putting up new wallpaper in our house. And then it occurred to me that that some of the prints were essentially what would look like if you had used a brush. So, there was a commercial for a life saver commercial candy, where there was a monster with a long tongue, and he was catching the Life savers as they fell through the sky. And I was fascinated by that when I was about 11. So, I asked my mom, I just want, I want to paint that on my wall with- and I had a crazy uncle that just died recently- And he was he was very supportive of my art, and he would dabble in everything. He was he was a radio DJ. He gave me a lot of music and he had some Day-Glo stuff in his house. So, I got a bunch of Day-Glo paint which will ruin a wall. You can’t paint over it with latex paint. It will keep bleeding through. But my mother let me paint the lifesaver monster with Day-Glo paint, knowing that no matter what happened, she would just put another coat of wallpaper on it. So, um, so much happened to me from being able to paint my own bedroom walls over and over again. So, I had, you know, a ten foot by eight foot canvas perpetually. And when I got tired of whatever the mural I had, which would sometimes only last a couple of weeks, I’d either put clear coat, clear color wallpaper on it or paint over it and do something different. And in terms of encouragement, it’s just so easy to tell somebody that, “Well, we don’t have time for that” or “that costs money and, or, you know, you can’t paint that wall or we just limit people so much.

And then even with technology. The other issue is you got a ten-year-old, he’s not going- he or she is not going to produce anything of commercial value for years. And this idea, okay, you got talent. That’s meaningless. Nobody has talent. They have practice. It’s the same as walking. Look how long it takes a kid to learn how to walk. Like, I don’t know, a year. But we won’t give them a year to dabble with watercolors. We’ll just find a watercolor set, and then they lose it, and that’s the end of it.

I was never encouraged. I just was never discouraged. And then in middle school, you know, the kids noticed, your classmates noticed that, that you’ve got a tiger painted on the back of your jacket, and they’re like, how’d you do that? I’m like, you know, I’ve been learning how to do this for years. And they go, I want one. I’m like, yeah, you’re going to give me $10. So, I was charging ten bucks and there were several kids walking around in my eighth grade who had various jungle animals on- which was popular back then to have your denim jacket with shit on it, you know? Embroidery and stuff like that. But it takes acrylic paint really well. And the point I’m trying to make is that we act like we respect stuff as a community and as a culture, but we don’t support it in some of the most simplest ways. Make sense?

The Elephant She Knows, Sam Pedisich, Mixed Media

Natascha: Yeah. All right. Have you had any other professional training besides the training that you’ve mentioned? Any other classes?

Sam: I was, I was impoverished and I had a broken leg that wasn’t healing correctly, and I really needed money. And this was in 90 or 89, 89, 90. And I saw an ad for a German club wanted, wanted some murals done. So, they were about an hour away. I managed to get to their clubhouse near Pensacola, and they had these photos They had photographs of people in the club, and they wanted them in, in four foot by four foot, scenes that they could spread around their hall. And I said, okay. It’s going to take me thinking to myself, it’s going to take me a couple of hours to do an impressionistic reasonable cartoon of what they were looking for. And they had about ten of them. So, I charged 35 bucks each for a four foot by four foot, basically portraits of members of the club doing traditional German activities. And they really liked it. And I thought I was rich.

 And then I saw an ad in the paper when they used to do that, and there was a sign company that just said painters needed signs. So, I showed up. And I had no idea how to… I knew how to do layout because my father had had had been a poster maker in college. And he had taught us how to space out letters in order to win um elementary school council elections. Like whoever has the best posters wins. Yeah. I showed up at the sign shop that was hand painting signs back before everything was vinyl and technical. I said I don’t have a lot of lettering experience, but I know how to do layout and, you know, I showed him a couple of pictures of some of the murals I’d been doing, and he hired me, and I think that was because I had rowed in college and he had been a coxswain. And so anybody who rowed in college can do anything. And he knew that, and I got to go out on site climbing up ladders to literally hand paint some of the billboards that needed small changes on them. But basically, we would take the billboards in 11 pieces and hang them up in the warehouse and turn the lights off and shoot a projector. So, it was pretty much paint by number kind of shit. But I got to do some portraits of- I did a portrait of Pancho Villa on a billboard by hand, and that took me a day, and I learned how to paint really fast and especially under circumstances where there’s not going to be any up close scrutiny, but it’s, you know, it’s going to be looked at from 100 yards away on the highway. So, you have to know how to work with where the viewer’s eye is going to be so that early 1990 is when I realized that I was set up to be a commercial artist.

Sam Pedisich, Mixed Media

Natascha: Now, were you using stencils for that, or was that all freeform?

Sam: Um, both. It depended on what the pictorial was. Later on in San Diego I was doing, they would just say, we need a palm tree and they’d have an eight and a half by 11 image that they’d taken. They didn’t really care how I got that onto the four foot by eight foot sign up in the corner. So sometimes I would just freehand it. I’m happy with free forming anything that’s not much bigger than me, but I have to get way back. I’ll graph it out. And I learned how to do that from a high school Renaissance class about how the cathedral painters cut, literally cut their… they graph their stuff out just like anybody would, you know, so that AA1, a one inch by one inch piece of paper in your hand equates to one foot by one foot on the cathedral ceiling. And then at that sign painting, the first sign painting job I had, I learned how to make a pounce pattern, which is when you draw the life size thing on a big roll of paper, and you put cardboard underneath it and you take a sewing wheel that puts little holes in it where, where you’re going to put your thread, but instead of sewing thread, you just put the whole piece of paper up on the billboard and then beat on it with a sock full of chalk. Take the paper off and you can see the dotted lines. So that’s how, that’s how, brick wall mural painters often work. Does that answer your question, or did I stray from that too much?

Natascha: I absolutely love that idea. I like thinking of big murals, and I always wonder sometimes how they do things at that big of a scale. So, I’ve never heard the chalk.

Speaker5: Um, it’s called a pounce pattern.

Sam: I mean, you can go online and find some really cute ones. There in these beautiful cedar boxes with, you know, this real soft thing. And it’s actually a little hole you open up and you pour the chalk in there, and then you take that wooden block, and you beat it on the wall and you go, oh, the chalk is coming out. It’s kind of nice- pounce patterns.

Sam Pedisich, Mixed Media

Natascha: So how has art played a healing role in your life?

Sam: I don’t usually prefer to spend time alone. I’m so insecure and neurotic that I like to surround myself by a lot of stimulation. And one of the I have a terrible, terrible short attention span. So it works in my benefit to be working on a painting, because then I’ll spend three, 4 or 5, eight hours by myself happy. AndI think that’s really good for my brain. And I’ll listen to music, but I’m not listening to podcasts where I have to think. I’ll just listen to one single song for 24 straight hours, and then I’ll end up naming the painting after that. And I mean, there’s no way that that cannot be healing, especially if it’s a good song.

Natascha: I think you sent me one of your songs or some inspiration before.

Sam: And you listen to it. You’re like, I don’t know where it’s got to do with the painting, but, I mean, I have a painting of an elephant, you know, two elephants, an uncle and his nephew. And the title is, uh, “they were red violins playing in my dreams.” And, you know, I actually wrote it around the border in pretty sloppy lettering. It’s like, critical to the painting.

Natascha: I like words on paintings. I think that’s fun.

Speaker6: Yeah. Yeah.

Natascha: What is your relationship with Gallery Cor?

Sam: The owner, I met Leslie in our rowing club back maybe over ten years ago. And I don’t know how she found out that I painted. Somebody must have told her. But she had a studio gallery called the London Studio that was located in- it was well placed in the city of Asheville. And it was like an October or something. She said, Sam, I think your stuff’s pretty good, do you want to you want to do a show? And I was like, hell yeah. And then I go like what? And she told me the wall space, she goes, do you have enough? And I said, I mean, I could gather ten paintings, but I don’t feel right about doing that. If I’m going to do a show, they’re going to be the last ten paintings I’ve done. I’m not dredging. It’s not consistent because it doesn’t fit my growth. And, what? I give a shit about my paintings [enough] to be throwing stuff up from five years ago. It’s kind of funny because my (this will tell you that) daughter at the time was about ten and I consider her an artist ever since she was young. So, I came home from that meeting with Leslie and I said, you know, Leslie, I’m working on a tugboat.I don’t have a lot of time to produce, but I can have a series of ten paintings in the beginning of February, which would mean I’d have to paint, uh, 1 or 2 paintings every piece of the six days that I’m home. Which is a pretty good schedule for me if I’m intense. So, actually, I might have been home a week or two at a time then. And so I said, yeah, I can have ten paintings for you in February. She said, great, I’ll give you the month of February and you can have the whole studio. I was like, oh hell yeah. Previous to that, I’d only shown at the little sidewalk thing, you know, every six months in some small town, and I’d sell 3 or 4 paintings of a monkey hanging from a tree or something. I had a gallery in Jacksonville that I was showing stuff in regularly when I was a teenager, young teenager, that, pretty much whatever I painted, it would sell because I was charging like 30, 35 bucks for, you know, an 18 by 24 that was functional. So, Leslie gave me that show, and I think I might have sold 5 or 6 paintings out of there and paid her rent for the month, and she’s pretty happy about that.

            [We] had a big party there, and I just I just felt incredibly awesome. That was 2016. And, she’s been keeping track of my stuff on Facebook and around town and occasionally she visits my home, and we’re friends, and we rowed a lot together. We spent a whole much more time rowing together in the old fart rowing Club than having anything to do with art. But I, um, a huge, huge, huge turning point happened last spring when the owner of a big antique barn, who I don’t know, she’s a friend of my son. Oh, let me tell you what Marlene said. When I came home and told my family that, “Hey, Leslie’s going to give me a month. She’s going to give me a show in February. I’m going to have-” and this was like, in October- And I said, “yeah, I’ve got an idea for ten paintings that’s going to be on all one theme. And matter of fact, that’s one behind me right there my mom bought. It’s a portrait of her. She wanted it to stay in the family. I said, well, you’re gonna have to buy it.

Natascha: Right on.

Sam: So, I said my wife is not that in tune with how artists think and what their work is like. But when I said, yeah, I’ve got some ideas start to finish. I’ve already got them sort of sketched out to have ten paintings ready by February. And my daughter just was like, “Dad, you have work to do.”

Natascha: Yeah. Go do it.

Sam: My son had a friend in the house, and she saw- She saw a heron and the elephants that I had. And she said,”Oh my gosh, Elan, you gotta, you gotta- Whose paintings are these? Where did you get these? What’s going on with this?” And he goes, “That’s my dad. He’s a painter.” She goes, “We need to talk, man, because I want him to do a show at the Antique Tobacco Barn because we need to diversify there. And we’ve got this whole outdoor area that maybe it would work.” So I linked up with her in the spring of last year and she has so much room that I was painting six foot by eight foot portable pieces that that were boxed that you could hang anywhere you wanted and you could just lean them up on the wall from the floor. So we arranged. I wanted to have, like, a blowout show where my son, who’s a chef, could smoke a hog and we’d get a band to play, and I’d have about 15, 16 paintings up, which I ended up having 16 paintings up, and I sold ten of them. So, I made enough money to pay a reasonable amount to a rock band that I really like called Hello, June that came down from West Virginia. They stayed at the house. It was one of the best parties in the world. And I mean that stimulated me to start taking shit really seriously. And that show had some much more developed confidence. And that was more expressionistic, realistic stuff. And I wasn’t doing too much abstract back then.

Sam Pedisich, Mixed Media

            I’m I’ve only really become confident with straight up abstracts. And in the past year where I’ll start a painting and just go, this is, this is it. It doesn’t need anything else. I’m just going to keep it. What I’m trying to get out is already there and has nothing to do with speed or intention. It’s like you dig a hole and it’s deep enough to lie down in and cover yourself up. Why would you dig it deeper? You know? After that August 2nd show last year, as Lesley was paying attention, and she said she used different words to describe my work that were much more positive. So, I don’t want to sound grandiose, but it was a lot better than “Sam your shits okay.” She’s highly respectful and encouraging and impressed by what I’m up to now. She’s Gallery Cor.

She goes, you’re going to do well in Gallery Cor and we’re going to price these things what you should be charging rather than the ridiculously insane, pathologically low prices that you’re charging right now. And she just rolls her eyes and goes, I can’t believe you sold that for that, because I could have got you, like, a way different number. And I’m like, I’m not doing this for the money because I make a good living. But she’s like, you got to be part of the artist community and you have to, you know you don’t have to but it’s really good for the artist community to keep the price points in a location in a spectrum that can allow artists to survive if they’re good.

Natascha: Well, I like what you said earlier about when you were younger, and you priced everything at $35 and it fly off the shelves. You know, I think there’s a good balance and it’s nice to see the progression and the respect. Your art’s amazing. It definitely deserves recognition.

Sam: Thank you.

Natascha: Yeah. Of course. So you do use mixed media and we’ve talked a little bit in the past about where you source your media. Do you mind telling us what media you use and where you source it from?

Sam: I use any kind of paint I can find. I don’t give a shit what. I don’t care how much is in the can. I’ll go to the hardware store and go “Let me see your bad mixes and your samples and shit.” I’ll go, “Look, nobody’s buying that. I’ll give you ten bucks for those four sample cans.” And you know, what are you going to do? You’re cabinet of bad mixes is full. Here’s 20 bucks. Let me have those six quarts right there because I use a lot of paint. And I mean, I don’t know if you’ve checked lately, but it’s not hard for me to put a quart of paint on a six by eight, and that’s $22. Like, not that I don’t want to spend money on the paintings, but the shit is not free. So, I’m not buying paint at an art store. And I don’t judge people who do that. They can. They can live their life any way they want. And I’m seriously, truly not judging people who paint with expensive oils because they’re painting. They’re doing something different than what I’m doing. I’m a sign painter. And I’m, you know, I like having the label of being an outside artist because then I can do whatever I want, and I don’t have- I mean, I have clients who like my work who have bought more than two of my paintings. And I know that every several months they’ll have an idea and they want me to produce it for them, and I’ll just knock it out and immediately, even if it’s not the style I’m happy with. And I may buy some kind of outdoor epoxy if I know they’re going to have it outside. But to answer your question, I use whatever I can get a hold of.

Natascha: Yeah. Besides paint, what else do you use? Uh, if you don’t use anything else, it’s fine.

Sam: I use a lot of fabric, and I’ll find out what I want to what the image is going to be after I’ve dug through the bins. I mean, I have one of my favorite paintings I think is the best I’ve done called Little Things. The inspiration for that was this velvety printed, flowery little blue jacket vest that must have belonged to, like a 7 or 8 year old girl that I found on the street downtown during Hurricane Helene recovery. I don’t know that jacket was in the street because of the hurricane, but it just happened to be there, and I said, oh my God, I love that blue. And I love that print on it. So, then I knew that I was going to paint this this row of monkeys, snow monkeys in a pool. And, you know, I wanted a lot of different cool colors and hot colors so that blue really helped. This last painting I did, I had a collection of about five different earthy, warm, soft, gauzy, you know, pinks and oranges and pale tangerine colors. Things that I thought really went well together. And lately I’ve been covering the entire substrate with fabric, up to maybe ten layers. And some of those fabrics are lace or gauze that you can see through. It provides a lot of depth in the painting. So, besides paint, I’ll use fabric. I’m not trying to put like a bunch of collage and crazy shit on a painting, but I did the monkeys that I was speaking of that had the blue jacket. That frame was carefully constructed, intentional, charcoaled, that a wood frame that had been burnt consistently. You had the sense that there had been a fire, but you can also see that it was a very intentional piece that the artist had created that, that that wasn’t just finding firewood, you know.

Sam Pedisich, Mixed Media

Natascha: Is there reoccurring themes and symbols in your art? What would you say is the best example of those?

Sam: Oh gosh, I don’t I don’t even really give a whole lot of attention to what’s reoccurring. I think what usually if there’s a figure they’re looking at the viewer. That might be a recurring theme. Lately there might be a recurring theme of some sort of audacity where the narrative, the thematic narrative is not classic. It’s usually eventful. That’s a tough question. I don’t know. Uh, one of the recurring themes is I’ll have a totally ungrounded figure, like I did a painting of a Fennec fox. Where, I mean, he’s just floating in space. I mean, I’m not really concerned about scenery.

Natascha: In your pieces, I see faces of your community. How do you channel community and individuals in your work?

Sam: I paint people that have changed the way I think about people in general. Like, I choose to paint people who have awakened me in some way. That’s all I can tell you.

Natascha: That’s beautiful. What else inspires your art?

Sam: I went through fabric, um, textures.

Natascha: Maybe events, life events that may influence your art.

Sam: No I don’t. That doesn’t- usually it’s music. The feelings that music gives me. Where I’m feeling something that I want to get out.

Natascha: Does politics governing or even corruption ever play a part in your art?

Sam: I think that we’re experiencing complacency and focusing on minutia. Now, give me an example. Like, you can bring up some really big theme, like human rights where it’s like, let’s discuss what a human right is. A human right means it’s a fucking human right, that there can be no discussion about it, it can’t be parsed. So, it can’t be broken into pieces and turned into some parliamentary procedural thing, because either I have a right or I don’t, and it doesn’t matter if it belongs to the states, the community, the electorate or the executive department. It’s my right. And without getting into any, you know, political discussion about what my human rights are, we don’t need to have a political discussion about what my human rights are, because we know what a human right is. I have control over. Right. So, I don’t want to waste my time with a political discussion. So lately I have been choosing subjects that are audacious or bereft of hope. Like the fox that I painted. He’s on one side of the canvas and he’s not going anywhere. It’s a ten foot long canvas, and from one end of it to the other, it was just an abyss. And there’s nothing on the other side. He’s not looking at it. He’s where he is. All he has is his own self-awareness. And, um, it’s philosophically complicated, but I think you can understand it.

It’s easy to say that we have to be in charge of our own consciousness and our own visions, and I try to paint like that.

Natascha: So yes.

Sam: Yes.

Natascha: Yes, yes, yes.

Sam: I’m not going to paint a pastoral scene because somebody needs/ somebody wants to have a beautiful painting of a wooden barn on their house. I’m so disinterested in that. But I know a painter named Bonnie Mackenzie. She can paint that subject, and it will stir your psychological, philosophical soul. Because she’s that good.

Natascha: Yes.

Sam: And she’s in rifle, Colorado. I’ve been really close with her since 89, I guess. She was a good inspiration for me when I look at what she’s doing today. It just blows my mind. Her command of the medium and her consistency. She’s right up there with Georgia O’Keeffe as far as I’m concerned, even though she paints in a completely different style. This is the last thing that she painted that I saw of her. She’s just full board. I could just see the maelstrom. And we’re looking at scene in the high. You’re not in the mountains, but in rifle, Colorado. It’s not real high mountain. So, you’re not looking at the range of the Rockies or anything. And it’s just it’s you can see the sky swirling and the activity of the wood and the architect of a decaying couple of barns and the way the foliage and the landscape works. It’s just astounding. Now, if I could do that, I would maybe do more of it. I’m not trying not to paint like that. I’m just not attracted to painting, barns and cows. And I remember being at a county fair in Texas, in rural Texas, and being initially very disappointed that all the high school art was paintings of the noses of cows and chickens and people holding eggs and stuff like that.

            And it was like, you know, 10% of the artwork was provocative and challenging and risk taking, you know. And I calmed down a bit and I was like, okay, these are 14, 15, 16 year old kids. They’re painting what they love. I mean, they chose those subjects because that’s what they that’s what they’re immersed in. And they want they’re bonded. So, they’re incredible witnesses. And I matured. This was about five years ago. I matured, and I realized that it’s not my job to tell people what they could paint or not even just tell them, but even judge it personally. It’s got nothing to do with me. They’re struggling and they’re trying to figure out what they want to care about and how they want to honor it, and whether it’s a ritual of technique which is prayerful. They’re paying homage to the life around them. The best way they know how. And that’s what I do. So there you go.

North Dartmouth Smoked Your Travel Team

Natascha: I love it. How does fun and play interact with your art?

Sam: If I’m not having fun, I’m not doing it, man. I’ll go get drunk. I mean, I’m ecstatic when I’m painting. And I’ll be celebratory when I’m done. I’ll be like, “God damn, honey, did you see that? Holy shit. I’m so happy with this.” And she’ll go “Do all artists talk about their work like that?” And I’ll go. “The good ones do.”

Natascha: Yeah. Your processing seems very positive. Mine might not always be that way.

Sam: The next day, I always have to make some repairs and fix some things that I didn’t notice when I was in my frenzy the day before. So yeah, I’ll walk slowly into the work and then I’ll, and then there’s a crescendo and then like I’m getting frenzied and then I kind of just call it quits and I’ll leave an incredible mess out and then get a few hours of sleep and wake up and take a look at it and go, oh my God, that red stripe over there just does not work, you know, or something.

Natascha: So, you work on barge boats, and you spend long periods away from your family and home. You talked about how you find time to paint. By scheduling these very disciplined few days when you’re home that you work hard on your paintings. If that’s the case, then is there any times that you maybe take breaks where you feel like you need to step back from your discipline to recuperate or how else does your scheduling tend to fluctuate?

Sam: I don’t put a premium on my painting time. That’s like one of my fifth priorities. If somebody invites me to go hiking in the woods, I’m going hiking in the woods and- I never, ever have tension or any sort of discipline with the schedule. The actions of my painting are disciplined, even though they might not look like it.

I mean, there’s a way to splash in the water intentionally with control. Just because it’s splashing doesn’t mean its pure chaos. I had a young artist friend tell me that they see me, like exploring the edge of chaos. So, I do not prioritize my painting time. There have been a few times when it’s been like two days before a show, and I had a show that I really wanted six paintings in, and it just didn’t seem right. I had a composition/ I had a layout that I really was looking for and like two days before the show, this was in December of last year. I was like, I’m going to do this portrait of Clara. I have to. I’m just not going to leave it in my back pocket anymore. And that took a push, and it turned out to be a powerful piece that actually sold immediately. And I was astounded. Well, you never know. But to answer your question more directly, I don’t push things aside because I want to paint. Painting is not the priority, and that’s why I always just have fun doing it.

Natascha: I think that’s an important point because we’re told that we must work our whole lives and to push, push, push. There’s something about art where, you know, if it if it’s flowing, it’s flowing, and if it’s not, there’s no reason to push it. So, I’m glad that you you clarified that.

Sam: Yeah. I agree with what you just said. I could have said that. Yes, I agree totally.

Natascha: How long does it take you to paint a painting on average?

Sam: Oh, the average would probably be 15 to 20 hours from, well, you got to count starting to build the substrate. You know, I boxed the plywood and that takes an hour and a half to two hours. And then I prime it, and then I’ll glue some fabric here and there and get my color forms down. And I’ll it takes a couple hours to get the basic feel for the fields. You know what I mean by fields of color. Like, okay, it’s going to be a huge big piece of velvet blue over here. And then I’m going to have this kind of intricate shit with a bunch of layers. So oftentimes I don’t even start putting the image on there for about 3 or 4 hours. So, it’ll take me a day or a good session to just prepare the substrate, and then I’ll do a 5 or 6 hour session until I run out of energy. And then oftentimes I’ll paint in one session and it’s typically at night, like after dinner, you know, I’ll get going about 8:00 and I might not finish until 4:00 in the morning, and then I’ll be exhausted and then I’ll fix it. I’ll put another couple hours into it. So, I think it’s fair to say somewhere between 15 and 20 hours typically.

Natascha: Cool. And how do you know when the painting is done? Are there any times when you keep adding and keep adding and keep adding.

Sam: You know, I never really had a problem with that.

Natascha: Okay.

Sam: I always, I always kind of knew when it was done. Usually it’s done sooner than I think.

Natascha: Yeah.

Sam: I’m not trying to be cocky about it, but it’s like, okay, that’s what I was feeling, and we’re good.

Natascha: Uh, what motivates your color palette?

Sam: The fabric that I find that I’m stimulated by. So, I don’t usually have a preconceived notion about how that’s going to happen until I see it. I can tell you, I’m certainly not trying to make it look like what you think the natural world looks like. I don’t really care about that at all. Like, I’m not going to paint a tree with purple leaves. I’m not a visionary or a fantasy illustrator. Right. And that’s left over from Gene Barber when I was a kid. When I painted raccoons and ponds and I was hilariously afraid of painting people because, you know, immature, ignorant viewers, all they care about is what you painted looks like, what they think that thing’s supposed to look like, which is ridiculous. So, it took me. It took me until I was in my 20s to give that up. And it turns out it’s not that hard to paint something that looks like what people think that thing looks like. So color. I don’t really try to make it be realistic. And I usually make the colors more prevalent. And I think maybe you’ve seen have you seen that blue lake with the lake swimmers in it?

Lake Jones State Park, Sam Pedisich, Mixed Media

Natascha: No, it doesn’t ring a bell.

Sam: A lot of those colors are natural colors? But that scene wouldn’t have had the vividness of those colors. I’ll send it to you when we’re done. When we’re done?

Natascha: Yeah, I want to see it.

Sam: I’m really happy with those colors.

Natascha: When I think of your art, I think of earthy tones and bright reds. Blacks and whites. Like a big, major grayscale. I would like to see the lake one with the vibrant colors.

Sam: Have you seen these two sisters called Sisters? They’re armed guerrilla rebel fighters from Eritrea. That’s very, very abstract. Expressionistic. And it’s all black and white, except for the green and red of their uniforms and the wedding dress that I cut up with these yellow flowers on it that I painted yellow. Um, so it’s basically a black painting with overly vivid- what’s the word when there’s a whole… saturation, saturated colors.

Natascha: That’s amazing.

Sam: I’ll send you that.

Natascha: Yeah, I’ll definitely post it in the interview. That sounds great.

Sam: Cool. Yeah, that’s a good example.

Natascha: I know you said that there’s not many events [ that influensed you] and this questions on traveling. Has travel influenced your art? Have you learned new skill sets when you traveled or has travel at all influenced, if anything the theme of your art? Or the way you paint?

Sam: No, traveling just allows me to see more art, and that’s inspiring. I would say reading and understanding different cultures through my avid reading. Like, I learned a lot about composition from reading Joseph Campbell describing the difference between an eastern painter and a Western painter. And then I was fascinated by this book, Orhan Pamuk about the Muslim and the Renaissance painters who were figuring out that you could paint an actual likeness of somebody and maybe not go to hell. Because the Islamic, the Islam art history is, is that it’s um, it’s just not appropriate when in their religious beliefs. At least in what very importantly, in the 1400s, that it was inappropriate to paint someone’s likeness. And it was done surreptitiously because they were imitating the Venetian artists who were doing these gloriously beautiful portraits with oils and stuff. And Joseph, I had a painting that I stole the image from a magazine. The Christian Science Monitor had a photo of two kids, and I think they were in China and they’re squatting down- their asses are almost sitting on the road- and they’ve got this bowl of water between the two of them, and each of them has a wash rag up to their face and they’re facing each other.

            So it’s just totally balanced, totally mathematically set up. I was inspired to recreate that because it’s such an eastern motif where it’s a very balanced pattern of equilibrium on both sides. And I think that that is a challenging composition in contemporary art, to have something that’s both sides of the camera are exactly the focus point is in the middle, and you know that each figure is a mirror of itself. And so, I was you know, I may be an outside outsider artist, but that doesn’t mean I haven’t read 75ft on shelves worth of art history and theory and things like that. I know what happens to the eye when it looks at it. When it looks at something. Inspiration has not been traveled. It’s just been learning.

Natascha: I love that, thank you. Thanks for sharing. Is there a few of your favorite artists maybe that you haven’t mentioned yet that you would like to share with us?

Sam: I was heavily influenced by Picasso for 20 years, and one of my favorite paintings is Three Musicians. It’s different. He came up with a new language and he almost be like discovering a new instrument. And I, I have carried those images around, from that painting, forever. And I’m only like in the past decade or so, kind of released the film that’s always going on, the “Imax theater” inside my skull, has that image of that painting gone away. I have recently been very attuned with Soutine. He’s a Jewish French post-war painter who, Leslie of Gallery Cor, turned me on to a few years ago, and it was very complimentary that she said, I think you would like this guy because it reminds me of how you paint. I was like, Jesus Christ, this guy’s amazing. And I like Chagall a lot because he puts stuff untethered. And his stuff is not aloof. It’s not. You don’t have to work your ass off to find out what he’s trying to tell you. I like the fact that it’s memory and it’s fantasy going on, but he doesn’t really care whether or not everything is anatomically perfect other than Scheille. Scheille is one of my favorites because of his audacity and his confidence. He just does not fuss around. He fascinates me because there’s no telling what would happen to him. He died at 27 of the Spanish flu in the same room that his girlfriend had died.

            Was a terrible judge of that. So he interests me. And he was the darling of Klimt. Klimt I like, even though his shit is so prevalent. Um. But then. Then there’s. I forget their names. Forgive me this, but the crass Krasner, I think. Or Krasinski. Uh, I’m feeling like an asshole right now, but, um. Um. Oh, shit. Who’s the guy who was slinging paint that everybody was like, uh, you’re painting? Who’s that? God damn it. I can’t think of his name. Oh, but his wife was better than him because you could tell that that she had, um…

Natascha: Jackson Pollock.

Sam: Yeah. Pollock’s wife (Lee Krasner). He’s a super pain in the ass dude. He was a terrible, terrible person to live with. And it’s amazing that she was even able to survive and put up with him. He’s just a total drunk. Like, way worse than Hemingway. And she’s good. You would look at her stuff and you go, he was doing her poorly. I mean, he was a shitty rendition of what she could come up with. And there’s also another male famous 50s American abstract expressionist. And I think his last name begins with an R (Willem de Kooning), but I’m old. I forget all kinds of shit. His wife (Elaine de Kooning) was badass, and, uh, I think I meant to have it written down in front of me because I knew you would ask me this, but, um, it’s interesting to go back to the 50s because there’s so many women who were badass painters that nobody gave a shit about because it was so patriarchal.

Natascha: Yeah.

Sam: And there’s a lot, a lot of good discoveries still to be made.

Natascha: Yeah.

Sam: What else you got?

Natascha: How does your art align with Gallery Cor mission to make the world a better place?

Sam: They are trying to get people to see- to give more opportunity to get out of, to get out of the boundaries of what you think needs to go up on your living room wall. The clients at Gallery Cor are acquisitive in a positive way. They are wanting to get a hold of something that has value in the realm of the humanities. So, they’re really very respectful of the creative process that helps us understand our senses and our sociology and for example, just beautiful sculptures that make beautiful noise. There’s a sculptor there. His first name is John. I forget his last name, but he takes cast-off metal pieces and makes these gorgeous Japanese style looking things. They’re highly balanced and sort of like a good flower arrangement where it’s just not -everything’s not in perfect arrangement. But yet, if you strike this bell with one of the pieces of metal that are appropriated into the sculpture, it’s just beautiful. So, you know, John the sculptor is asking you to participate in the creation. This is not a new idea in museums of contemporary art to have had interactive exhibits, since probably the 60s.

Natascha: Yeah.

Sam: I’ve been to some very interesting ones that still resonate with me. So Gallery Cor is trying to- It sounds preposterous or like excessive- but I hate to use the word, but I can’t think of a better word. They’re trying to redefine the relationship between the viewer and the painting. A lot of the artwork in there, it’s clear what the engagement of the body of the artist was. You can visualize the process. That brush was drug from the top to the bottom. And over there it was drug from the bottom to the top. And it’s evident. And so, to make the world a better place, they’re choosing subjects that that are not necessarily that popular in the fine art museums.

Natascha: Nice.

Sam: If you look at their website, it’s pretty evident.

Natascha: That’s cool. It’s radical. Were you living in North Carolina during Hurricane Helena, and how did it affect your community and your daily life?

Sam:

It inspired me to do. I painted every night during the recovery, and it was, it was blood and guts. I’ve done a lot of difficult things, and I’ve, I’ve been traumatized in various different ways. I can tell you that Helene fucked this city up, and we’re fucked up, and we’re not- We’re not good to go. We’re damaged. Heart, body, soul. Terrain. The Asheville, the city of Asheville is fucked up.

And it affected everybody. I did a portrait towards the end of the- We didn’t have drinking water for 53 days. Think about it. We’re not a town. We have apartment buildings that are socially subsidized, that have residents on the 11th floor who are not ambulatory. They can’t go up and down stairs. We didn’t have electricity for weeks, so people had to carry five-gallon buckets upstairs, me, to flush toilets for people who hadn’t had their toilet flushed for over a week. So that’s just one concrete image that you can multiply by 100 to figure out what we were going through. So how are you going to eat when there’s no ATM and there’s no grocery store open because, HELLO, there is no electricity?

So, it didn’t look like dystopia, it was dystopian and it didn’t look like a movie. It was real. And so, you had to just walk down the street to figure out where you were going to eat, and there’d be somebody with a fire cooking food. And that was going on for weeks. It was unbelievable. [Deep Breath] So back to that. I painted a portrait of a young woman who I identified in my own heart as like, the hardest working person in recovery. Everywhere I went, I saw her doing something. She was hooking a trailer up or unloading/ hauling water or organize and or telling people what was still left to be done at a certain site that had been had been cleared out. She was amazing. The painting is called Clara, and the woman who bought that painting didn’t even know why, why that portrait was done at all. And when she found out, she was even more, more pleased, than understood why she was attracted to it. Because I think it comes across in the painting.

Natascha: Was she able to see the painting?

Sam: Oh, yeah. Yeah, she was appreciative of it. She was endeared to it.

Natascha: Well, I’m so sorry you guys had to go through that. That’s tragic. And I hope that the recovery is continuing and that you guys are getting some support.

Sam: We’re improving. We’re improving. Nobody gave up. Nobody’s in despair.

Natascha: Yeah. What work of art is your favorite? And can you tell us some details about the processing of that painting?

Sam: You mean my own personal work?

Natascha: Yeah.

Sam: I think this fennec fox that I spoke about. This fox is aligned with the writings of Antoine de Saint Exupéry, who wrote The Little Prince. There’s a fox in that story. And it turns out Antoine de Saint-Exupéry was a pilot for decades. And he was a shitty pilot because he crashed a lot, and he was flying his airplane in the 20s across Africa and shit. And he’d end up in the desert. And he had like three near-death experiences and so did I, and not three, but a couple. It’s hard to, it’s hard to really tell when, what, they are, you know? But I definitely had 1 in 2020 where I was in the abyss and there were no lights and nobody was wearing robes and nobody was assigning me a harp. I didn’t know how I could speak about that, and I, I actually figured out how to paint it. And it’s the ten foot long by three feet wide of a fox coming out of/ from behind some burlap that looks like it could be either a building or a tree or something. So, the fabric is suggestive of damaged trees. And this I painted at the end of the first week in recovery. And it took me a good 20 or 30 hours, of a couple hours every night, several hours every night.

Because when it got dark, it was hard to do any more recovery work. And we were moving trees out of people’s driveways or figuring out how to keep a roof from leaking. Thank God it didn’t rain after that. But people’s roofs were caved in all over the place, from trees falling and wind ripping the roofs off. So, there was a huge scramble to try to get as much as we could get done as quickly as possible. And so, I was exhausted.

These paintings that I did, I did six of them and hung them at a gallery on December 7th. And that hurricane hit the last weekend of September. So those eight weeks were still recovery. I took a break for about a week and a half. I rode my motorcycle down to Jacksonville and took a breather. I just could not believe how affected I was by that hurricane. But this painting that I spoke about before with this fennec fox, Antoine de Saint-Exupéry, was fascinated by how little, little they need. They survive on no water, no food. And they’re just really compact. And they’re cute as fuck. They have these big old long ears. And everybody loves them. And it was interesting because this thing was hanging up across the alley outside of the gallery, because it was too big to fit with the rest of my other five paintings in there. And across the alley was a Christmas, crafts warehouse pop-up gallery with maybe 200 vendors. And I felt like my painting was the perfected antithesis of the Christian myth. And one of my Christian friends says, “Well, I see some hope in this painting.” I said, “Identify because I’m going to tell you, there’s no hope in this painting. The fox doesn’t even have any eyes. He’s just his eyes are black. There’s nothing for him to see, and his body’s position where he’s not moving anymore. He’s stopped and he’s just floating. It’s he is noticing. That’s all he’s doing.” I actually named it after a friend of mine named Byron, and I asked him ahead of time if I could do this, and he said, “Yes, that’d be. I want you to name a painting after me if you feel like you want to.” And it’s called Byron Notices Joy. The joy is that he knows. He’s noticing he’s got nothing, nothing, nothing but his ability to be aware. And that’s the best painting and the most important painting I’ve ever done.

Natascha: I love that. Thank you for sharing. Um, okay, so we had if you had a message you wanted to share with emerging artists, what would it be?

Sam: It’s it’s going to be hard to get critique because everybody loves you and they want you to create. So, you have to listen to what they like and you can ask them questions instead of saying, hey, would you like to hang this on your wall? You say, what part of this do you find compelling? Or they’ll go, oh, I just love the way you did the grass. And hold that. Hold what they say. They mean your loved ones because it’s your family that’s going to tolerate you first and then. So, my advice is to listen and stop thinking that you’re doing some sort of personal expression. None of this shit that I just told you about this fox has anything to do with me. It’s not my self-expression. It’s Antoine de Saint-Exupéry. It’s the fox. It’s the abyss. It’s. It’s like people who go to go find themselves. There’s no self to find. You already are yourself. You’re sitting with yourself, so there’s no looking you can learn. Instead of going, oh, I want to go find myself. What you might mean is I want to pour some more shit into my brain. In my heart. But you’re still going to be yourself. You’re still going to be that fox with nowhere to go. That’s not really advice. That’s just philosophy.

I don’t know what to tell somebody who wants to paint if just paint or create or you know, and it doesn’t, it does. Nothing matters if it’s- you’re going to die anyway. Nobody gives a shit about your art. You just do what you want to do, you know? And don’t take advice either. My dad gave me the best advice in the world. He said, the reason you shouldn’t take advice from anybody, they’re not you. How’s that?

Natascha: I think you’re going to create emerging artist rebels. A coming explosion. But I love that. What upcoming pieces or exhibits can we look forward to of yours in the future at Gallery Cor or elsewhere?

Sam: I’m loyal to Gallery Cor. I’m thinking that when I get back from Alaska I’ll speak with Gallery Cor about approving or encouraging me to do a series that would show up maybe in early March of 2026. Where Hello, June would play again. It would be more of a multi- what’s it called? You know, like a festival. You’d have music and you’d have some art and there’s a farm not far from downtown Asheville called Rare Bird. And it’s a good venue for something like that because they have a big giant cabin, they can put a band up. They have beautiful, lush grass, and they have a wonderful, wonderful barn performance space where it’s just idyllic. So, I’m going to be in Alaska for seven months. I’m going to take a break from art. I might do some charcoal or some pencil portrait work or to try to hone my skills about some stuff like that. But I’m going to be busy in Alaska. I’m certainly not going to be painting large canvases and stuff until November of this year when I get back, so it remains to be seen. But I do dream of having another festival that I might bring another couple of artists into, but that’s about a year from now.

Natascha: What would you name your festival?

Sam: Oh God. That’s interesting. Oh, I don’t even know yet. I’m going to think of something. That’s a good idea.

Natascha: Um, would you live to paint at your festival?

Sam: I’m starting to see that that would be a good idea, because the owner of the tobacco barn that gave me that show in August of last year. She is keen on having some live painting going on. I saw a live artist at a New Orleans style, jazz horn and saxophone band that we all love in Asheville. And, a dude was doing a wonderful, wonderful piece off to the side. It was inspiring. That seems like something that people are interested in. Anybody who I talk to, I mean, dozens of people I brought that up with have always been enthusiastic about the concept. I’m totally happy with somebody seeing how I start to finish the painting.

Natascha: Yeah. If you have the canvas or the wood block made already, I can imagine you almost finishing or, you know, getting a good, a good start on it.

Sam: Yeah. If I start, if I had everything primed and all my fabric in a pile, I mean, I could have something feasible that three feet by five feet in the course of 3 or 4 hours.

Natascha: Well, that’s really exciting. That is something to look forward to.

Sam: Right on.

Natascha: Well, thank you so much, Sam, for your time today.

Sam: It’s been a wonderful break from acting like I’ve got important shit to do.

FIN

You May Inquire about purchases on Gallery Cor’s website: https://www.gallerycor.com/sampedisich

or Follow Sam on Facebook here: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61558344543312

Interview with Interdimensional Artist Synchro Mystic

Find the full interview on YouTube Here.

Natascha: I’m here at Azila’ Cauldron in Eureka with Roman, a visionary artist and OG creative force of Humboldt County. My name is Natascha, and I want to thank you for tuning into the Little Lost Forest blog. I’m beyond excited to dive into the art, theory, history, and creative journey of Roman a.k.a Synchro Mystic. How are you doing?

Roman: Doing pretty good. Thank you.

Natascha: Awesome. Roman, where are you from?

Roman: Mind, body or spirit?

Natascha: All. All of the above.

Roman: I typically say that that way because my body is from Mexico. My spirit is universal, and my mind is global. My mind knows and exists and is part of a global reality that we’re perceiving together. And that definitely is who I am. But also, my physical body is a certain part of who I am, and my spirit is definitely on this mission. That is who I am as well. And those three are distinctly different things in a certain way, and my job is to try and align those together, that’s why.

Natascha: Your universal consciousness has landed you here.

Roman: Yes, but so many dimensions we can talk about that from. And that’s why I like to do art.

Natascha: Wonderful. Well during these interviews, feel free to dive into rabbit holes. We’re all really interested to see what inspires this beautiful art you make.

Roman: Thank you.

Natascha: How old were you when you first started drawing and creating?

Roman: I called myself, and this is, like, one of the most profound and silly, experiences in my life. I called myself an artist at three years old, and I specifically remember this experience that did that. And one of my older sisters came home from school with this big pad of paper, and it looked huge. But then again, I was a little kid, so it might have been a normal sized pad of paper. [Natascha’s Laughter] But then she puts it down, and then she shows me her drawings and I’m like before this moment, I considered myself a magician. And I was like, always pretending to make things disappear out of handkerchiefs and silly things that I saw. And I thought, I’m a magician. So, there’s first, there’s that. And I think that’s very symbolic because I think art is very magical. But anyway, I saw this sketchbook that my sister had, and one there was a crocodile she drew, and I could see a crocodile on this paper with lines drawn on a two-dimensional flat piece of paper, and I could see the three-dimensional crocodile that it was. And I was like, wow, that’s cool. And then the next one was a girl in a bikini. And I was like, that’s a girl in a bikini. I know exactly what it is. And it’s just a few simple lines on a flat piece of paper. And I was like, that’s magical. [Natascha: Mhm.] So, from that moment onward, I instantly call myself an artist, even though I didn’t know how to draw or whatever, because, uh, because at first, I was a magician. So, what did you have to learn?

Natascha: Would you say at a young age you related magic to art.

Roman: Instantly at three years old.

Natascha: That’s wonderful. I think you kind of answered this question, but what initially inspired you? Maybe outside of your sister’s drawing, what were some of the inspirations that have ended up fueling your creativity now?

Roman: Oh, man, I could have countless and countless stories, but I guess one fundamental, um, experience was, uh, being in Seattle during a very critical time in history, and I mean that in many different ways. The music scene and then the technological explosion that was coming from Microsoft at that time, an era when the very beginning and I tried LSD and, something I was never really too proud to boast about. But I also think that it’s a very important thing to express, that there’s these moments of that we can utilize as tools to activate something. Because on my psychedelic awakening, I definitely had so many things come together. And it isn’t all based on the psychedelic awakening. The Psychedelic Awakening gave me a view into the things that were already happening in my life. Like, calling myself a artist/ magician at three years old and a lot of mystical experiences that I never really understood growing up. That happened throughout my life. But for some reason, having a reflection like psychedelics or something external outside of us, like aliens or whatever, if you’re blessed enough to see that. But these external reflections allow us to look back at ourselves to witness these things from a third point perspective. And that helps us wake up, you know, like, oh, yeah, I notice these patterns throughout my life, I’ve never really realized how to deal with those experiences. And sometimes when you have like a psychedelic awakening, it gives you an angle to look at those things through.

Natascha: Wonderful. How would you define visionary art?

Roman: Well, visionary art to me means a lot of things. It leads me to the next thing I’m going to talk about. But just to answer your question first is, you know, at first when I got introduced to visionary Art, it was, outsider art. That was because I looked at a visionary art, magazine when I was really young, and I remembered i. It was more from people that I didn’t go to school to do art. For some reason, it was like, they call them outsider art. I thought that was interesting because there’s a visionary art museum with, uh, all these artists in there before the psychedelic visionary art movement. So then when they called the visionary art movement visionary art movement, it kind of like, wasn’t sure about that. And also, to me, vision means of our vision. But I don’t know what other art isn’t from our vision as much. (Natascha: Okay.) But don’t get me wrong, I still use that title to express our movement of artists because it’s something that people recognize right now within our circles of people, which is very powerful.

Natascha: Mhm.

Roman: However, I don’t think that it specifically talks about the movement that I’m a part of which I feel like the people of artists that you recognize yourself liking to are not a part of necessarily only. I created an art movement called the Interdimensional Art movement. (Natascha: Lovely.) And I even told Alex Gray about these things before we named the thing visionary art movement. And this was a long time ago. And he never even heard of that. And he really was vibrating with that idea, too. Which is really cool to always be able to share your ideas with other people and get reflection. And the Interdimensional art movement the acronym is I.M. (Natascha: Nice.) It’s based on the finite of yourself, your personality, your ego or whatever it is you’re that you’re wanting to express. And then the full title, Interdimensional Art movement has no limits. I think that’s more true to the what the visionary art movement that we synchronize with at the moment.

Natascha: Interdimensional Art Movement.Got it. Can you share a bit about your history as a visionary artist?

Roman: To simplify things, psychedelic awakening in Seattle. Recognizing everything at once and wanting to be part of an art movement. Because as an artist, you always look back at art movements and you relate to certain groups like the Surrealists, the Pre-Raphaelites, or like any segment throughout history, which is really inspired in certain ones inspired us more than others. Art Nouveau or whatever. I couldn’t deny that I didn’t want- I wanted to be part of a group like that, but there was no real group to that I could associate myself to at that moment. Plus, I wasn’t that advanced. But these ideas were coming. These desires were coming to me. But then I started paying attention to what kind of art movement would I want to be a part of? And then that’s when a lot of answers started coming, and that’s when I recognized, oh, those art movements. And we’re answering these questions that they ask themselves. And that’s why they became art movements, because they were answering a question of defining who we are as a culture. And that’s what creates a movement. And we attract each other that are representing this, this reality together. And then, um, that harmonizes us as a collective.

Natascha: That’s beautiful. Who are some of your colleagues in the visionary art community?

Roman: To me, I love the way you ask because there’s a seriousness to it. And then that kind of makes me laugh because I’m also a space cadet artist. But my colleagues. I’ve been blessed enough to have colleagues of all different sorts. Like, my Seattle experience was pretty profound because, when I was having this psychedelic awakening, and I was reinterpreting reality. And then I was like, I want to hang out with the Beatles. But the Beatles already happened many years before me. So, like, put the vibration I was getting the LSD vibe or whatever, you know, and I was like, wait a minute, I’m in Seattle. [Natascha laughs.] Just to bring that into perspective and for a few many years I would keep on running into people like Nirvana, Soundgarden, Alice in Chains. And this is my canvas. And I played in this dimension for a few years of running into these people all the time, getting to know these people from different perspectives. Like, I have so many memories to even remember at the moment, but one of them that’s on my mind right now is, uh, Soundgarden when they were recording BadMotorFinger. They had my paintings in the studio while they were recording a little bit of that album and stuff like that.

Roman: I remember going in there and picking up my artwork and them being all, like, polite and kind and gentle, but they’re like, really, they’re all really tall, like over six feet, you know? For me, that’s tall. Just having those memories ingrained in my brain and seeing how influential these people were, it was pretty intense. So there’s colleagues like that, but more precisely, to the art world is like, from Alex Grey. I don’t know. It’s hard to tell because the way that I learned about my colleagues is through a party that we started. That’s why it’s really hard to answer that question, because I have to, like, share the story of why I know these people. Because if I say Alex Grey, who might be the most famous and people recognize him, but there’s. I don’t want to skew the vibe just by that attention when there’s so many other beautiful and amazing artists and they all were attracted from this interdimensional art show we threw up in Seattle. And this was the beginning of before where? Before what we were doing. There was hardly ever, like, a live artist and galleries at events. That’s like something that was, I wouldn’t want to say that we started it, but we definitely made it a ritual.

Roman: And it brought together all these artists that some are now famous visionary artists from Luke Brown, Carrie Thompson. It’s like really challenging to even start naming them because there’s so many that I can’t even name. A lot of them, I’m sure that you would recognize. For instance, like Carrie Thompson came to make the most beautiful stages of electronic events throughout the world. You would recognize them because they’re super beautiful and Alex Gray and Mark Henson. I don’t know if you know Mark Henson, but he’s an amazing artist from not that far from here, from Lake County. And if I showed you his art, you would obviously recognize him.

But the reason why I really enjoy these people is because it was a family calling that brought us together, like these shows that we used to throw up in Seattle. Were exactly that. It really bonded a large group of artists together that never recognized themselves before. Now it’s easy to see. It’s all easily recognizable. But before then, we didn’t have anybody. This was like the beginning of us recognizing each other, which was really amazing.

-Roman

Natascha: Wonderful. At that time, were you part of a community? You say we.

Roman: I would say we because I can’t. I don’t ever want to feel like I’m taking responsibility for it. That’s one aspect which is still egotistical, but I am an ego, [laughter] and it’s very influential to where my idea is coming from. But at the same time, it is a collective thing that I’m just being aware of and I’m wanting to share that with people. So, I say we because, you know, I might have been inspiring certain ideas, but it came to be through a network of different people.

Natascha: Awesome. Okay. So, in your art, you use mixed media in your paintings on canvas, and they’re all very incredible and beautiful. We’ve discussed acrylic paint, pencil and paint pens in the past. Are there other mediums you’d love to work with?

Roman: Did you say airbrush?

Natascha: No.

Roman: That’s probably one of my favorite things, even though my relationship hasn’t been too intense with it yet lately. Definitely airbrush. Cool pencil for sure. Yeah.

Natascha: That leads us to our next question. What role does pencil play in your paintings beyond sketching the initial image?

Roman: Well, lately it’s been like taking a central role and I’ve allowed myself to draw more. Then I keep on realizing why I didn’t allow myself to do that more often. Because it really brings my vision together. Because I really love to draw with a pencil, and it really flows. And it’s a relationship between the lead and the and whatever the paper or canvas or whatever. It allows me to put a lot of detail as soon as I start painting, it becomes an emotional thing and I start relating to the canvas with emotions. And then oftentimes I’m I get lost in the emotions of it. When drawing with a pencil, it’s more mental, more ideas. That helps me like navigate because I’m an idea person. I can constantly be channeling my ideas, but then I bring in the emotions of color, and that’s when it starts to get the feeling. But it’s not as controllable for me.

Natascha: Can we take a second and look at this painting over to your left. Is there a pencil in that painting right there?

Roman: Yeah, this one is one of like I said recently, it’s been taking main stage. This is one of the paintings that I did as a live painting. Mhm. And I just allowed myself to just feel the music and vibe and not care about painting and just draw. So I drew pretty much the whole thing with pencil. And then I loosely started airbrushing and painting on top of it, but without covering the pencil. Of course it’s very raw and very loose. But there’s something I like about it. There’s something metallic about it that I really like.

Natascha: How do you select your color palette? You have a very nice rainbow assortment of colors in a lot of your paintings.

Roman: Yeah, definitely spectral for sure, because that’s the reality that I’ve seen. You know, a lot of my art was inspired by me walking around a lot. So, whatever I could bring with me, because that’s the way I’ve explored my reality. But also, with what I have and what I had for a while was black India ink and with airbrush, and that was it, a big bottle of it. And then I started wanting to paint with color. And then you realize you want the least amount of colors, or that was my experience. And then that led me to like, oh, the spectrum, the southern colors. From here I can do different shades of shades of whatever. That was if I look at it from the physical aspect. Like I said, you asked me who I am or, you know, uh, that’s physical. There’s also the mental and the mental is, it’s more chakra style. I use the rainbow colors because I feel like there are these seven dimensions. Those are perceiving reality. So, to me, when I learned about the chakras, it started making sense.

And being a psychedelic artist, I like to travel to different dimensions, so to speak. And the chakra system seems to be a way to understand that because each of the colors are a vibration and each vibration has a negative and a positive polarity. And if you start understanding how they interact with each other, then you can travel consciousness in that manner.

-Roman

Roman: And that’s the primary reason I use the rainbow color palette.

Natascha: Oh. That’s lovely. I hear a lot of entombment in your body when you paint and meditation as you’re painting and choosing your color palette is very interesting. Can you tell us more about the reoccurring themes in your work, what those might look like?

Roman: Definitely a lot of meditating beings, and sometimes I question myself on that. But like, I’ve had visions of tapping higher states of consciousness and feeling that. And there’s always people in the meditating pose and really high vibration. Maybe it’s just me, but I’ve heard this from other people, too that these beings come in from other or we tap into a vibration or dimension that they are meditating in. When I experience that, it makes so much sense why I would be so infatuated with painting that because I’m not necessarily Buddhist, but I definitely visit the teachings a lot because very super profound. And it definitely helps as far as, you know, being present with yourself. So, there’s all those things too. I definitely have to admit there’s a lot of goddess imagery. A lot of awakening. A lot of dance parties. The dance parties are the symbol for humanity, I feel.

Natascha: Yeah. Who are the characters that we’re looking at? Do they have names? Personalities?

Roman: I don’t think about it too much, because I think it’s just like who we are on one level. So, I don’t really recognize any separation from just a snapshot of anywhere I would go. There are people dancing or whatever. That’s the main thing. But then the other profound thing is, I don’t know if you’ve heard of Tribe 13, but that was like our production company up in Seattle that through the Interdimensional Art shows. And it still continues to this day. And we have thousands of artists connected to that name. I think that you would consider visionary artists specifically. But essentially Tribe 13 is a traveling gallery at different events and that’s what we’ve been doing since Seattle, but definitely been to that gallery like boom Festival and Envision Festival and a myriad of other ones.

Natascha: You know, he just posted this on your Instagram, but can you tell us more about the meaning of Tribe 13? What where did you guys derive the name from

Roman: It’s really profound vision that happened to me as I was awakening. I told you about me about my psychedelic awakening that led me into really questioning my reality and really, dropping out, so to speak, to just meditate on these things. I started recognizing different patterns and the desire to be myself and to be accepted for myself and accept other people for themselves, which is a freedom, and all based on just the basic fundamentals of this country. So, it kind of unified all these things. But I was recognizing that nobody’s really living up to it. What does that mean? So, then I started questioning who I am. Who? Where do I belong? Or as a part of society or whatever? As I was having these profound questions, I would run into signs of different things.

And Tribe 13 stems from those realizations- as I was awakening up to this way of looking at reality- the symbols are infinite, and I can point them out later. But essentially what makes a Tribe 13 member is to recognize that we create reality, which means the only way to tap into this presence is to be in a state of giving and constant giving.

-Roman

Roman: A lot of people say, oh, yeah, it makes a lot of sense. That way you can receive. I’m like, no, that’s not the point. You can’t, um, you can’t live in a binary perspective. It’s got to be a unified perspective. And it has to come from source. So, to become a Tribe 13 member is to recognize that you are marrying yourself to your true self, which essentially synchronizes, synchronizes that to all the other beings that are doing that themselves. There’s no control mechanism, no one’s better or worse than you from from that perspective, those kind of perspectives can only come from the outer world. But the outer world is not a reality because we have to be in a state of giving. If you’re wanting to receive things, and that is one way of looking at it, but that you’re going to receive an illusion. So, Tribe 13 is the beings that are synchronized by giving from within out. Which art is the symbol of.

Natascha: Wonderful.

Natascha: I you’ve been talking about spirituality a lot, but how does spirituality influence your creative process?

Roman: Well, it helps me recognize who I am. You ask me who I was in the beginning, and I can’t answer that from one perspective. Like mind, body and spirit and spirituality. I feel like it helps guide us into what we’re supposed to be doing or wanting to do. And we don’t have to be deceived by an external belief of spirit or whatever, but to really recognize what you’re really wanting to intend as your person on this earth, which is really basic and not spiritual at all. But I would consider that spirituality because, again, chapter 13 and the vision of having to offer yourself from this source, from this center, is crucial to that. And why I would call it spirit is because it’s beyond what I could perceive. If I’m in a state of offering, I will be in this state of awe of the actual manifestation, if that’s going on.

Natascha: Would you say your art is an extension of that?

Roman: Without a doubt. But what is not. Everything is from that state. But oftentimes comes from like a really, maybe not evolved state or a weird interpretation or even negative. All these things have a way of manifesting.

Natascha: Sure. Yeah. Okay. What draws you to sacred geometry?

Roman: I definitely use sacred geometry as a thing, but I never really stick to it like some of my contemporaries, for sure. Um. Uh, yeah, I have, like, this deep gratitude for it. But I was thinking, like, if, uh, sacred geometry exists, then, uh, we are part of this, uh, sacred geometry. So, whatever I do is a part of the sacred geometry, because I can’t have a choice other than to create through the sacred geometry. So then at that point, I’m like, out the door. Don’t pay attention to it.

Natascha: Don’t even think about it.

Roman: I know exactly.

Natascha: It’s in the flowers, it’s already there.

Roman: Exactly.

Natascha: All right. What about your local community? How does that inspire your art?

Roman: That it confuses me, which inspires my art. I think our community and that’s why I, like I make a big deal with the dance party and social event because it gives us a view into our community. Where we come and show our art, our dance, our vibe, our talk, or this or the way we get drunk and shitfaced. I only say that that way because we need a safe place that people get to experience themselves and then figure out themselves so they can correct themselves. And I feel that these social settings in a loving and open environment have a way to heal. So those kinds of experiences wouldn’t be happening. And I just say that because we have a lot of healing to do, and we really need to, like, allow people to people to process their inspiration by not just accepting a rude behavior, but to recognizing and knowing that being recognized also starts having an alignment of sorts.

Natascha: I really appreciate you saying that. What shifts have you noticed in the festival scene, and why do you keep returning as an artist?

Roman: Well, to me, if there’s going to be any time traveler’s ever to come into existence, they’ll probably come through portals such as psychedelic events throughout the world.

Natascha: Cool.

Roman: I really believe that because when we go to an event like this with the artists, with the musicians, with the styles, with everybody offering their little trips, it really is like an eclectic group of people that are highly open and well, as far as judging against other forms of people in the world. We’re definitely at that point because we’re in this offering state of being or curious state of being, I guess might be better. That it allows a lot of things to come through, and that’s exciting to me.

Natascha: Kind of like they’re creating something new in these communities. There’s some kind of evolution/ evolving going on.

Roman: I definitely think that there is, but that it’s up to us for being open, because the opposite is also true, where people are being dumb and like, not learning or whatever. But I think that’s part of the fun for me because and what keeps me coming back is because I’m coming back now as an older person that has experienced certain things and like sometimes, I’ll get on my, like, flow where, like, I already know every conversation. [Natascha: Oh, no] -in a really amazing way. Not that I know the whole conversation, but what people are experiencing. And I feel like if we can develop our language, we can help bring people through a lot of experiences, a lot faster by just communicating with each other. And that’s one of my favorite things at a festival.

Like when I open myself up, I get attracted to these little circles and we get to share the pipe and then talk, and then all of a sudden, they’re like I had this one vision, blah blah, blah blah. I’m like, I’m like, I would look at the person and say, so what? And then they’re like, got their little spirit shattered. But then they recognize, like, what do you mean? Like, well, what are you going to do about it? And then like start talking to people like that and then like really brings this awareness to the person’s trip, like, oh, somebody’s actually listening to me. And then they go even deeper into their thing. And then you experience those kinds of awakenings so you can express your awakening to those people, and then you can stop and start helping guide this awakening collectively. So yes, there is an evolution of sorts like that.

-Roman

Natascha: Like, cool. So, on a global level, what changes would you like to see and how do you channel that vision into your art?

Roman: Well, there’s only one mission. The mission is to recognize that everything comes from within, out, and start not judging the external world or feeling like the you’re going to get validation from the external world. But to really believe in oneself, to be able to provide the offering that you really want to provide to the external world, not the other way around. If we could all start understanding that that’s how we fit in.

I feel like that’s when the big change happens, because so many people are trying to consume what they need to be or trying to acquire a sense of belonging from an external world to validate themselves. And it really screws up the whole mechanism of our existence. Because the universe is also like a, not an ego. So, it’s like whatever we’re creating is like going to manifest, uh, hugely, you know, because it’s like what we’re focusing on at the moment. So, I feel like once we start offering our true gift from inside then the universe reacts and recognizes that it can only provide abundance.

-Roman

Natascha: Lovely. That goes back to giving, giving, giving, giving. I love that so much. What upcoming events can we expect to see you at?

Roman: I’m excited to show my art across the street at Los Bagels next month in Eureka.

Natascha: Arts alive, right?

Roman: Yeah. Yeah. I still got a piece myself together, so I’m like, oh, yeah. That’s happening.

Natascha: Wonderful. What are some of your bigger goals as an artist?

Roman: I don’t know, I would like to write a book. I guess that’s one of my goals, because then I can solidify what I’ve been talking to with every people and just document it to be able to share that idea to other people, and it’s always been a lifelong dream. As an artist, oh, artist book, that’s an accomplishment. Uh, so there’s that. But that’s the physical. But on the spiritual plane, I’m on the quest to the eternal party at the end of time. Cool.

Natascha: I’ll meet you there.

Roman: Well, that’s the that’s the trick you just mentioned there. But I’m talking about the end of time. So, there are parties right. Right now.

Natascha: That’s happening right now. Yeah, we’re in it.

Roman: It comes back from the state of giving. That’s how you tap into it. So, if you’re in a constant state of giving, you’re at the eternal party.

Natascha: I love that. Awesome. Well, Roman, thank you so much for taking the time to chat with us. We’re here at Azila’s Cauldron. You can find it on Instagram at @azilascauldron. It’s been an absolute pleasure. You can find Roman’s Instagram @Synchromystic and a huge thank you as well to Julian for recording this interview. You can check out his work on Instagram @depixture_media. All right. Thank you everyone.

MushLove Psytrance Party: Unity Under the Waxing Moon

Saturday 2, 2024; 2 pm-2 am MushLove Crew threw a twelve-hour psytrance party at Ramp Art Skatepark in Arcata, CA. Local DJs came together with some out of town talent on the Day of the Dead, and a crowd, mixed of all ages, danced together under the continuous loop of psychedelic tunes like a space cadet’s first encounter with aliens. Sam Murphy (DJ Melting Vision), the event’s host and production manager, worked alongside Stacia, co-host and stage designer, whose creative vision transformed the space and Kale Oliver (DJ PYMANDER) project manager and CoCreator helped Sam dial in the details and logistics leading up to these events.

“[Kale] He’s our old school, Sam’s our new school, and I bridge the gaps in between! I Thoroughly enjoy Kales classic picks that stimulate a particular vibration and nostalgia while Sams strong drive to provide new music in his sets both live and weekly on Humboldt hot air (every sunday 12-2) typically has a bouncy but deep vibration ” They came together as a team and created the perfect pallet for me and the crew to enhance with Creative and interactive installs.”
-Stacia

The decor was like stepping into a neon Mayan Jungle, with flowers, skulls, and mushrooms. VIP offered a smoke lounge, skate bowl, and bar. The feeling of unity, inspiration, and movement flooded my veins while dancing with my community during the waxing moon.

Music by Minds medicine, Andrus, Luzidtrip and Formless are a few of the DJs who performed. Amazing sound engineering was provided by Paul Westerman. Stacia’s stage design transported us to a neon Mayan Jungle filled with vibrant flowers, skulls, and mushrooms. The decor pulsed with energy, drawing everyone into the atmosphere. The VIP area featured a cozy smoke lounge, skate bowl, and bar, creating spaces to connect and recharge. In the warm glow of the waxing moon, a powerful sense of unity, movement, and inspiration flowed through the crowd as we danced together, embodying the spirit of community and shared joy.

Here are two questions that were asked at the party and recorded later on.

Stacia: Two of the questions you had asked me during the party were two that not only did I like being asked but I also really liked my answer. One of the questions you asked me was where do I get my flowers from? Which is, you know, a lot of them I grow myself and dry. Many of them are foraged in small bits when I’m out adventuring with my dog (such as the bunny tail grasses and yarrow on some of my most recent beach visits!) Some of them are from clients’ properties that have given me access to their gardens or saved from previous events and utilized differently. Then also for the hydrangeas, I had reached out to my community on Craigslist and basically said, I will trade my time for your blooms. I will help you reset your bush so that it can bloom better next year. And I actually had three different families reach out that I went and basically traded resetting their hydrangea bushes in exchange for blooms that will last years. And I was just really appreciative that the community supported my search for foraged materials and also was able to help a couple families who can be expecting more healthy stronger blooms next year!

Stacia: The other question you had asked me was about some of the inspiration, I’m always inspired by what I have access too and that is where the creative visualization begins and all the ideas unfold from there with trial and sometimes error until it all works !!! -And there was that whole wall surrounding the paint play table with portraits that were by a local artist,  who passed away about ten years ago. His mom and I were organizing the garage and it was an emotionally bonding experience as we each took in the different portraits one by one both seeing them for our first time

 -I’m going to ask his mom, who lent me that art, if she would like his name mentioned in the article [Ryan Cox], because that might be a cool way to carry on life throughout death. That art was just so emotionally intense and, and just kind of made your brain think in a way that, for me, felt very much like a searching…[trails off]

Stacia and I were sorting out the garage one day and we found a tightly rolled bundle of canvases. I was thinking ‘this should go but knew that I should look at what I was throwing out. We unravelled the bundle and it was a collection of portraits R [Ryan] had painted. I had never seen them before. They brought me to tears. Stacia felt them with me and [I] was moved [when] asked if she could get them out into the world. I said yes, as I know my son would want his brushstrokes, his expression to continue speaking even after his death. He was dedicated to art, music, and all that helps us see each other and love more. He pushed boundaries and was the kindest person I’ve ever known. I don’t say this because I am his mother, I say this because that’s the legacy he left us. Passion for expression, play, insight, always infused by his kindness, his huge spirit and generosity that infused his life.

-Ryan’s Mum
Adriana Orta infront of Ryan’s paintings.

Sunday, I sat down with Stacia of StaciaFlowerSolutions At Clam Beach. The interview may have started the night before, but this was a quieter, more intimate setting. As my children played with her dog, Neptune, I had a few minutes to ask her questions about her flower arrangements and her goal as an artist. You may be surprised how this artist strives for connection, collaboration, and sustainability to make her dreams of the “Avatar Jungle” come true.

Natascha: Hi, this is Natascha with the Little Lost Forest, a Humboldt County lifestyle blog. I’m here with Stacia after going to a MushLoveCrew event hosted by Sam, Kale, and Stacia. Stacia is a Creative amongst other things and she puts together floral designs and visually satisfying interactive spaces.

 Hi, Stacia. How’s it going?

Stacia: I’m doing great today. How about you?

Natascha: I’m doing really well. Thank you. Last night was the Day of the Dead. How did the Spanish holiday inspire your floral arrangements?

Stacia: Day of the Dead was a great inspiration because it encompasses a lot of what I have been doing for my creations and alter spaces already. You know, there’s life and death, and then there’s us; kind of everything in the middle. And that’s  what Dia De Los Muertos is about. It’s about remembering its ok to feel sad about what you’ve lost or how things have changed. But also remembering to celebrate all the joy and life and energy that was here at one time. It was a great day to know that we could hold space for what we’ve lost, even if it’s not people or animals, but even just our stories and our lives as they change. There’s death, there’s life, there’s everything in between. And together it can be so beautiful and harmonious (especially while sharing space on the dance floor)

Natascha: That’s wonderful. There are dried, dead flowers and then there’s also live flowers in your arrangements. Is that correct?

Stacia: That is correct, yeah. Dried/preserved flowers that will last multiple events and fresh cuts from that day! To be dried later Trying to curate a balance between the two for both visual aesthetic and function of being gifted or repurposed

i especially love utilizing herbs that smell good and keep the dance floor fresh

Natascha: And I noticed that some of them were glowing. Is there another aspect to your design?

Stacia: I am inspired by the Avatar Forest, and I would love to create that atmosphere for other people to enjoy! You know, these installs start out with simple enhancements with the neon, but I dream to collaborate with someone who can actually assist me with their knowledge for engineering wiring and programming and together we would be able to create it, where people can go and interact and touch it and it glows and moves and breathes.

Natascha: It sounds like interactive art. How do you, how does your audience perceive your art? What kind of feelings and emotions are you trying to inspire within them?

Stacia: Interactive is definitely on point. I’ve been getting a lot of great feedback about things that can be moved, things that can be played with. One of my highlights this year being our blacklight body paint table, leaving it out sometimes for people to help themselves, or sometimes being there to kind of start the playful  process. Watching not only the flowers become neon, but the people become neon. And we’re all part of the installation and we’re all moving and playing and, you know, I’m painting, they’re painting, everybody’s painting each other, and it’s so fun to watch it spread through the crowd!

Natascha: That’s great. What are your ideas for the future with the flower arrangements?

Stacia: My ideas with flower arrangements are infinite. I love everything about flowers, whether it’s the metaphors for our lives and the way we are or, you know, the fact that they’re natural materials that we can use and repurpose. The dried flowers used at this event have made it onto multiple altar spaces across multiple genres of music, with so many different energies being absorbed into them. Our earth, our stones, our plants, it’s all absorbing and vibrating everything around us. I love creating custom anything and i’m up to the challenge! I love repurposing and my biggest dreams would be building a tribe of creators and all playing to our strengths to help people’s custom creations ,floral dreams or event ideas come true. Really- whether it’s weddings, events, storefront installs, custom celebrations and everything in between.

Natascha: Wonderful. What’s your position with the MushLove crew?

Stacia:I joined Much Love Crew as they started out this year I had a strong desire to contribute in a big way and i feel lucky to take on the roll of deco coordinator. Im passionate about psy trance and the healing its helped me with so when i met sam and learned of the vision i  wanted to help make that dream come true

 I feel lucky to have had some amazing inspiring people come and collaborate and volunteer their time, their energy and a willingness to be in the present moment and grow from there

 You know, I have a general vision, and a plethora of materials. But the crew is like, we’re all new, we’re all coming together. It’s like, I’m sort of there to lead, but more- I just want to bring people together to make weird art and MushLove is here to bring people together to be weird and just be together.

Natascha: What is your past history with the music scene?

Stacia: Starting on the East coast, I have been involved in the music scene of all different genres for many, many years. (I remember my first event solo vision was a womp wednesday at the wonder bar in allston MA featuring wobble sauce ) after moving from MA to CA i was compelled to work with another flower i’m passionate about and I took a decent hiatus from the music scene while I was working at The Lost Whale Inn found in Trinidad gaining many of my amazing floral skills along with many other skills i utilize to chase my dreams now!. Um, and now that I dream bigger, it’s…. You put part of your heart into your passion and kind of just dream big that you can survive off of what your passionate about

Natascha: Totally. Well, is there anything else you want to add?

Stacia: I just I, I would love it if people- not even just as the MushLove psytrance thing but in general like we’re all here and there’s a lot of people that want to create together. I’m happy to hold space and gather materials and reach out if you feel inspired by anything that I do, or you have an idea that you need an assist with, I’m happy to contribute. Like other people have for me and my visions.

[Added after interview] Stacia: I’m really appreciative of the spaces I’ve been welcomed to with the intent to let my creative form flow. The trust I’ve been given by not only the properties, the teams, the crews, the volunteers and everyone in between. But just like it’s all helping me grow into a better person, too, you know? Making art is a beautiful thing. collaborating on art with other humans is even more beautiful, especially on a creative journey of helping each other grow, change, and inspire

Natascha: If somebody wants to contact you, what would be the easiest way for them to get Ahold of you? Um, probably through Instagram.

Stacia: Has my email there too and then through there. If we need a more direct contact, we can share numbers and all of that.

Natascha: I’ll make sure to tag that below.

Stacia: @StaciaFlowerSolutions Creative Solutions to your *Home* Event & *Life needs!

It kind of encompasses a little bit of everything that I’m doing in my life, right now with Room to Grow.

Natascha: Awesome. Okay. Thank you so much for your time. Thank you.