The Floating World
Exhibition featuring works by Gina Stepaniuk and Linda Vallejo
Metro Gallery
Los Angeles, CA
October 6—November 3, 2007
What makes Linda Vallejo’s art so compelling and relevant to contemporary life?
by William Moreno, past Executive Director, Claremont Museum of Art
“For one, her broad command of a variety of mediums: painting, sculpture and site-specific installations are all within her prolific oeuvre. There is nearly something for everyone. Ms. Vallejo’s interests and subject-matter spans are considerable. Themes of beauty, consumption, war, excess, world pollution, iconic references to international indigenous peoples and earth-based installations all reside in her works. Ms. Vallejo, a resident of Topanga Canyon, California, has a natural affinity and bond with the natural world and that connection is reflected in her ethereal works. Her paintings of surreal, electrified and transformed landscapes suggest a more vibrant and alluring reality. Color and energy swirl throughout the canvasses and transport you into her alternative world. Her work is not held hostage by fashion or trend – rather she is a singular voice with apparitions all her own. Such visualizations and the tactile nature of the work resonate in a contemporary and abstracted world – we crave the “here, now and hope” of a less complicated life. No commitments are implied in her work, but rather veiled assurances and alternatives. Such well-composed and thoughtful gestures seem hard to come by in our image and information-saturated lives. Ms. Vallejo’s posture is one of deep concern and commitment. One can’t ask for more than that.”
Linda Vallejo, essay by William Moreno
Linda Vallejo’s Spirited Landscapres, essay by Betty Ann Brown
The Complex Power and Compelling Presence of Linda Vallejo’s Art, essay by Betty Ann Brown
Exhibition catalog Exhibition invitation Press release