MARLIESE SCHELLER
530 West 25th Street, New York, NY
Marliese Scheller is a Franco-Canadian multidisciplinary artist. The style of her paintings is figurative while her ink drawings are influenced by graphic art.
Scheller has shown her works in group exhibitions in France, Montreal, and New York and solo exhibitions in Lebanon; her work has been featured in digital publications in Spotlight, Art Ideal magazine, and Circle Foundation for the Arts.
When asked what is the impact of contemporary art on society, Scheller is of the opinion that art should touch the heart and enlighten the soul. But before this can happen, she has to master the chosen genre and technique. She has an idea that arises in her mind that needs to be expressed in light, shadow and color. Once the visual concept has become a physical reality, her task is complete. The viewer then stands in front of the work of art, which she hopes will engage them.
MARLIESE SCHELLER ONBeing asked what my art represents, why I paint a certain subject, or draw a certain way are questions to which I don’t have a readily made answer. Inspiration is something that arises from within. It not only touches the inner soul but evolves with time, a type of ‘work in progress’ that is influenced by the seasons, travel, and literature. At the start of my career, I was fortunate to have met Henri H. Gowa, a pigment specialist, and Frans Masereel, one of the greatest woodcut artists of the twentieth century. Gowa taught me the technique of colors, the hues and the combinations as they were used by the painters of the Middle Ages. In my oil paintings I have followed his teaching. The resulting luminosity stems from the choice of colors applied with a palette knife on a traditionally prepared support (gesso on Masonite). Graphic art is also present in my work. In my black and white period, I experimented and adapted the techniques of woodcutting to ink drawing, which allows me to use larger surfaces, render space and volume through crisp lines and bold areas of inked or bare paper. Each medium is a vehicle through which I express a spontaneity that combines traditionalism and realism. Independent of the subject matter or medium, the mastering of a technique is at the heart of my work.