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People, Places & Things

By Julie Garisto julie@magnoliamediaco.com

Upcycling elevates recycled material into something new with better quality.

The eco-friendly concept has inspired artists internationally and, most recently, Marion Cultural Alliance (MCA) Gallery Director Ashley Justiniano.

Justiniano, who came up with the idea to gather artists and the community to celebrate Earth Day, got the trash ball rolling to premiere MCA’s exhibition and event series, “UpCycled: Turning Waste into Wonder,” at the MCA’s Brick City Center for the Arts from Friday, April 7, to Saturday, April 29. The show kicks off with a members-only reception from 5 to 6 p.m. on Friday, April 7.

Florida Express Environmental has signed on as the exhibit sponsor. The company offers residential and commercial solid waste services throughout a sixcounty region that includes Ocala. Company officials talked with MCA Executive Director Jaye Baillie about inviting an MCA artist member to gather refuse from one of their sites to use to create an original artwork, which the company would potentially buy to hang in its main office.

“We anxiously wait for the April 7 event to see what trash will now become an artistic treasure,” said John Paglia, owner and president of Florida Express Environmental.

MCA recently posted photos of a Florida Express Environmental site visit on social media.

“Jaye and I just tagged along with artist David D’Alessandris to take pics and meet our sponsors,” said Justiniano.

Since moving to Ocala in 2006, D’Alessandris has served as a board member and artist liaison for MCA. He paints and creates threedimensional and mixed media artworks. He earned a bachelor’s in fine arts degree from the Indiana University of Pennsylvania.

The artist’s tactile “Quillage” collection won Best in Show at the College of Central Florida Webber Gallery around 12 years ago. His work has been exhibited at the Brick City Center for the Arts and NOMA Ocala, among other galleries. He was selected to create “Forest King,” a Horse Fever 10th Anniversary statue, in 2011.

Last week, he joined Baillie and Justiniano at the Florida Express Environmental recycling site to scavenge for materials to use in his submission, which will be revealed at the opening reception.

“In all my years as an artist, I must say that this collaboration with Florida Express Environmental is one of the most fun challenges I’ve had the opportunity to create,”

D’Alessandris said. “I am obsessed. I have worked on the piece, and I must say watching it develop is a story in itself.”

Another standout in the show, Laura Nell Britton, is an accomplished illustrator/ mixed media artist with a knack for imaginative imagery. The international traveler and author of the semi-autobiographical “Monkey Mind and the Melting Heart” infuses her works with colorful humor and pathos.

“I get some glue, start sticking stuff to cardboard and enjoy the process,” Britton said. The process, she added, makes her feel like she’s 6-years-old again and she relishes the opportunity to “make merry fun.”

Of her “Upcycled” works, she said, “The flamingo looks upon a path to fantasy mountain” and “the

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