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Karen was born with a form of Muscular Dystrophy known as
Spinal Muscular Atrophy, and she has been drawing since the age of five. Her
favorite subjects were trees and female faces. Most of her early works were in
watercolor, but she began working with oil paints when she was one of seven
students chosen from a handicapped school to be mainstreamed into regular high
school. An instructor there encouraged her to keep up her artwork and suggested
that she try taking art in college. Karen followed his advice even though she
found new challenges besides her disability. At the handicapped school no
student was forced to study, and many there, including Karen, were not at the
grade level according to their age. In college she not only competed with all
able-bodied students in the art department, but she also had to work extra hard
to catch up to her required grade level. During her junior college years Karen
also struggled with several art instructors who felt she could not complete the
work offered in their classes. She worked around these instructors, though, and
transferred to California State University, Fullerton, where an instructor not
only kept her from quitting school but convinced her that her artwork was as
good as any other students' in the art department. She received a Masters degree
in art in 1981 with a 4.0 grade point average.
In 1981, only 3% of all women in the United States who received Masters
degrees were disabled, and that's not even counting her excellent grade point
average.
Karen found the challenge of watercolor much more intriguing at the
university. Her emphasis in graduate study was illustration, and she developed
her own unique style of painting by using a very small brush and very little
pigment, creating a dry-brush effect resembling the work of a pencil. Part of
her technique is something she likes to call "layering" in which she totally
completes a small section of a painting at a time by adding layer after layer of
pigment in very thin dot-like strokes. For example, if she is working on the
beak of a bird, she may add layers of green, orange, pink, blue and yellow
besides the typical golden colors. Karen believes this technique not only
creates a sense of volume but also adds a luminous effect to all other aspects
of the completed piece.
Most of her subject matter revolves around animals now, and she tries to
capture their textures and the life in their eyes. She enjoys incorporating her
strange sense of humor in her current works in which an animal that may not even
exist is created because of a play on words, such as "Mousequito". In this case
wings and a stinger were added to a common mouse creating an entirely different
creature. It's pieces like this that bring her the most pleasure and she enjoys
the reactions of others who view her work with a smile or laughter.
Karen hides or places a rose in every painting completed after 1986. It
represents her in her work, and it is one of the most loved and accepted flowers
in societal and visual terms. When she relates the rose to herself and her life,
she also considers the strength and the thorns besides the beauty they possess.
Therefore, when people view Karen's work they not only feel her presence, they
accept her and enjoy her work for the beauty and pleasure it brings.
Each painting takes Karen approximately 80 to 150 hours to complete. She
begins usually with a title that interests her and then she envisions the
painting completed in her head. She then acquires visual references from her
massive library of animal photo resources. First she takes every picture that
may only have a small piece of useful information. Once all resources have been
collected, she cancels-out pieces that do not match the vision she has
formulated in her mind. The resources that are left will be used for color,
composition, placement of subject, and details until the entire painting is
finished. The completed image is usually very close, if not better, than her
original mental picture.
Karen was the only disabled artist on the Board of Directors of Very Special
Arts California, a non-profit organization dedicated to integrating mentally and
physically challenged adults and children into society via the arts, from 1985
to 1992. She not only coordinated and participated in major state-wide exhibits
and programs but also held the position of Vice President for 1 ½ terms. She is
still on the Honorary Board. Karen was selected Disabled Professional Woman of
the Year by the Pilot Club of Southeast Los Angeles in 1990.
Karen now resides in Henderson, Nevada and is currently the only surviving
professional artist in Southern Nevada with a neuromuscular disease. She has
work in five galleries and her greeting cards are being sold in 15 different
locations throughout the West Coast. She has collectors who live all over the
world, a list of which includes Julian Lennon, Phil Collins, Shadoe Stevens,
Justin Hayward, Joan Rivers, and Steven Seagal. Other organizations Karen likes
to involve herself with are the Nevada Watercolor Society, the Vegas Artists
Guild and the local Muscular Dystrophy Association. She has taught beginning
watercolor and given private lessons, and she is always busy painting and
working on numerous art projects.
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