our
stories
Maryo | Miki Klocke | Allison
Leete
Allison
Leete
Since the early 1990s, Allison
Leete has been integrating her love of art, science
and nature to develop a body of work which portrays
the inner life of animals. Allison's subjects are
drawn from her personal experiences of raising and
caring for animals, and range in breadth from California
condors to Disaster Search dogs. Allison's medium
of preference is pastel, yet she enjoys exploring
the ability of watercolor, oil painting and photography
to communicate her celebration of life in a vibrant
spectrum of color.
Originally interested in veterinary
science, wildlife health and animal behavior, Allison
discovered the burgeoning field of Conservation
Biology. She embraced the opportunity to be involved
in the recovery of a highly endangered species -
the California condor. Her observation and data
collection of breeding California condors in captivity
and the experimental release of captive-reared condors
acquainted her with not only the condor, but with
world-renowned scientists and philosophers who would
subsequently guide Allison to discover her own strength
in artistic expression.
Miki Klocke
Photographer and craftswoman Miki
Klocke was born and raised in the intense beauty
of the Ojai Valley, a haven for artists of all kinds.
Surrounded by talented and imaginative individuals,
Miki felt both inspired and encouraged by the dazzling
creative energy enveloping her.
Upon graduation from high school,
Miki's adventurous spirit took her from sunny southern
California to the high mountain peaks of Colorado
where she finally got to experience all four seasons.
Pursuing her study of photography, Miki found herself
in the heart of snowboard country. She spent the
next 11 years torn between her passion for photography
and playing in the snow. While managing to maintain
both these loves, she also developed an affinity
for woodcraft.
Knowing she needed to be with
her family brought Miki back to Ojai. While she
greatly missed the snow, Miki soon discovered a
powerful connection to the canine world. Everything
she does now is about dogs, work and play are one
and the same.
Miki pursues her love of all things
canine through the mediums of photography and woodcraft
and is exploring ways to combine the two. Her companion
and constant source of inspiration is Moose, a 5
year old Chocolate Labrador. Moose not only keeps
Miki company in the woodshop, but is also a very
willing model for the camera.
Maryo
I was born
into the languid heat of a steamy Florida afternoon
on March 1, 1965 in the tiny red brick hospital
of a sleepy little beach town on the gulf of Mexico.
As a small
child, the stark and brilliant sugar white sand
and turquoise water of the gulf around the Florida
panhandle nurtured and delighted me - and I vividly
remember dolphins swimming playfully around my sister
and me in the bath water warm gulf.
My parents
soon found out I had been born with an eye condition,
inherited from my Father, that left me partially
blind. I was unable to focus, and because I was
so young and my eyes were changing so rapidly, they
were unable to fit me with glasses. I spent the
first six years of my life in a soft, yellowish,
confusing blur - unable to understand what people
were talking about when they described the world
and all the things in it I could not see - like
birds, and clocks, and shoelaces.
Knowing
I was different from other people, but not really
understanding how or why, I developed into a shy,
withdrawn and anxious child with a deep burning
need to do something with all these harsh, unsettling
feelings. So I began to draw. It didn't seem to
matter that I could only vaguely see the crayon
in my hand - the simple act of moving it around
on the paper, of creating and leaving a mark of
some kind, calmed me and exhilarated me all at the
same time.
Since I
could not see clearly, I learned to draw my impressions
of things - I drew the energy around them and what
they meant to me, and the connection I felt to whatever
my subject might be. I stubbornly refused to listen
to comments or allow anyone to change my pictures
in any way. They were the only things that portrayed
my own world view - the only things that were wholly
mine.
In first
grade I was fitted with my first pair of glasses
and the world changed completely and so abruptly
I was almost literally thrown off balance. I was
not familiar with these crisp and intimidating lines
and angles rushing up at me. People didn't look
the way they were supposed to - and there was so
much information to process I was completely overwhelmed.
I withdrew even further - creating elaborate dreamscapes
inside my whirling, tumbling, shifting thoughts
and pouring them onto whatever surface I could get
a hold of. My later pictures may have more structure,
but they are still built out of paint, pencil or
computer with the same passionate intensity and
need to give voice to my mind, heart and soul.
My parents,
while they loved me, were logical and analytical
people - brilliant and reasonable. They sometimes
treated me bewilderment - they did not understand
my need to create and so for the most part they
ignored it. I went off to art school - secure in
the knowledge I was already an artist - but unable
to explain to them what that really meant. This
frustration, however, only served to fuel my need
to find my voice through color, shape and line.
Art school
turned out to be exactly the opposite of what I
thought it should be. I found the opportunity to
draw and paint from the model for hours at a time
very useful - but I found the academic culture stifling.
Instead of being encouraged to experiment - to find
our own paths while feeling safe enough to fail
along the way - the students were met with rigidity
and unrelenting pressure to conform. My artistic
vision was strong and I quickly ascertained that
art school was not the place to foster it. I left
after two years. I will say, however, that the training
I received there in classical drawing and painting
skills was invaluable.
In 1995
the genetic defect that affected my eyes caused
my lenses to completely detach. Surgery on my left
eye to remove the lens and implant an artificial
one was successful but a string of complications
left me blind in the right eye. I was distraught.
The medical establishment felt brutal and insensitive
to my loss - and I was deathly afraid I would never
paint again.
Painting
and drawing were much more difficult for me after
the surgeries - the loss of depth perception and
ability to see fine detail affected my work greatly.
Yet all was not lost. About a year before I became
partially sighted, I had begun experimenting with
a new medium - the computer. With this miraculous
tool I could zoom in on a picture as close as I
needed to without even leaving my chair. I was saved.
Over the next several years, with much trial and
error, I painstakingly retrained myself to paint
in the digital medium. My traditional skills were
very important - giving me the solid foundation
and structure to created balanced and harmonious
compositions - while still allowing my artistic
vision to burst through in color, shape and line.
The computer
cannot "generate" art any more than brush
and canvas can - only a passionate heart can endow
a picture with enough human intensity to truly create
a work of art. |