
Gradiva Couzin
Why are you an artist?
I believe that everyone is born with the capacity to make wonderful art, and
some of us are fortunate, or determined, enough to be able to devote large
portions of our lives to this endeavor. To me, being a capital “A” Artist is
all about the amount of time that you spend on your artwork. I quit my “day
job” as a Civil Engineer almost seven years ago – a 28th birthday present to
myself – and have never worked full time since then. But I never would have had
the guts or confidence to quit if my boyfriend, now husband, hadn’t provided a
foundation of emotional support.
Could you tell us some more about your paintings?
I wish to make art that is beautiful in the most straightforward ways, with
pure and vivid colors, and realistic representations of the human form. Most of
my work over the past seven years has been commissioned portraiture in a
traditional, representational style. One thing that I love about portraiture is
how approachable it is. I find that almost everybody has something to say about
it, and people do not feel intimidated or distanced by portraits the way they
might with more abstract or conceptual artwork.
Is the subject important to you, or do you simply paint to express yourself?
Obviously, as a representational portrait painter, I give utmost importance to
the subject. For me, the process of painting a portrait is all about connecting
with the people in it. Sometimes I am brought into people’s lives at their most
joyous times: the birth of a child, a marriage, an anniversary. Other times I
am commissioned for a painting in times of tragedy: the loss of a brother, a
father, a niece. I know that I have been given a gift of trust by my subjects.
I think of myself as a ghostwriter, translating their stories onto the canvas,
giving them a tool to create a permanent, visual representation of what is
happening in their lives: a woman ponders leaving her husband of 19 years; a
man poses in his native Mexico on an agave field that he dreams someday to own.
I am deeply honored that my artwork has been woven into people’s lives in these
ways.
Could you talk about your latest series of paintings and what you are trying
to achieve with them?
For the last year or so I have been experimenting with small, minimalistic,
semi-abstract works. These are very simple, very subtle paintings in jewel-like
colors, sometimes exploring patterns of brushstrokes, sometimes translating
small pieces of our surroundings such as the flash of dappled sunlight on a
sidewalk.
What am I trying to achieve with them? I want them to be beautiful… I want them
to give over interpretive space to the viewer so that he or she can enjoy them
in his or her own way… and I want them to represent (to me) this time and place
in my life: new motherhood, San Francisco, the Mission, the smell of paint,
rain on concrete. To me they are like painted haikus.
What artists have influenced you, and how?
My mother was and is an artist, first a painter and now an experimental
filmmaker. She taught at an art school so there were always a lot of artistic
types around when I was growing up. But I have also been strongly influenced by
Italian renaissance painters such as Raphael, Titian, Leonardo da Vinci, and
Michelangelo; by Vermeer for the gentleness of his light and space; and more
recently by Impressionists Mary Cassat and Edward Potthast.
I am primarily self-taught, and started my artistic career by painting copies
of old masters. I do think that reproducing a painting is the best way to study
it!
What inspires you to paint and how do you keep motivated when things get
tough in the studio?
When I don’t paint for a while, I start to get a strange feeling in my head and
I miss the physical/mental experience of putting paint on the canvas. I think
it might be the way some people feel if they haven’t exercised or stretched for
a while. So it’s never a problem for me to get motivated to get myself down to
the studio.
Getting through the difficult part of a painting is much easier now that I have
some experience and I know my own typical patterns. I always adore a painting
at the beginning, then about 3/4 of the way through I start to hate it - this
is when I might give up if I didn't have a contract and a commitment to
complete the work! Right when the painting is finished I like it again, but
always with some mixed feelings because I know its flaws so well and I know the
little things that I had to let go. And after a few weeks I adore it again and
decide that it’s the best painting I’ve ever made.
How have you handled the business side of being an artist?
It’s certainly been a learning process. I have always taken myself seriously as
a business and have forced myself to follow certain formalities like contracts,
receipts, a business license, charging sales tax, etc. Since I started out with
portraiture, almost all of my sales so far have been commissions. It’s a very
different process than the gallery-type sale, because everything you paint is
already sold before you paint it. You become very good at saying goodbye to
your work!
Over several years and through several difficult experiences I have found my
own answers to questions like: Do you let the client see works-in-progress? How
do you display the completed work? How do you ship/deliver completed work? What
if someone is unhappy with the completed work? There are a few books I would
recommend - the Graphic Artist's Guild handbook, a book called "Art
Marketing 101", and "The Fine Artist's Career Guide" by Daniel
Grant. I also found the book "Caring for your Art" by Jill Snyder to
be very helpful. Last but not least there is a website called Art Business
(www.artbusiness.com) with numerous helpful articles for artists, written by a
local (San Francisco) art expert.
This year I have been trying to do more work in the non-commissioned business
model, where you paint a painting first, and someone likes it and decides to
buy it. I have only just scratched the surface of this type of art-making
process. So check back in a couple of years and I’ll let you know!
What advice would you give to an artist just starting out?
Put as much time into your artwork as you possibly can.
What do you do for fun (besides painting)?
Hug and kiss my little boy.

