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Q: What was it like having a documentary made about you? (Question from Culture Focus Magazine)
Posted by barbararachkoscoloreddust

With Jennifer Cox at the 2023 Newport Beach Film Festival!
A: I loved the whole experience! Before this happened, I had wanted to make a film for ten years or so, ever since Brainard Carey, an artists’ coach, suggested the idea when I told him about my unusual background. Often I hear from artist friends and others that my life story is truly inspiring. Finally being able to make “Barbara Rachko: True Grit” and now to share it with a wider audience is a dream come true! Jennifer Cox, our director, and Annette Apitz, our co-producer, were ideal collaborators over the fifteen months it took to make the film.
It is truly gratifying to hear so many positive responses from viewers of our film. Surprisingly, the film has even gone on to have a life in film festivals. “Barbara Rachko: True Grit” made it’s World Premier at the prestigious 2023 Newport Beach Film Festival in Orange County, California, where it received both the Audience Award and the Best in category Award for Art, Architecture, and Design. In addition, we earned Honorable Mention at the 2023 International Fine Arts Film Festival Santa Barbara and were recognized as an Award Nominee at the 2023 Montreal Women Film Festival.
To date in 2024 our film has screened at New Plaza Cinema on the Upper West Side of Manhattan, and at Noise Media Art Fair in Vienna, Austria. I think I speak for the filmmakers and myself when I say, “Barbara Rachko: True Grit” has exceeded all of our expectations!
Watch here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JJWLy84kXI0
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Posted in 2024, An Artist's Life
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Pearls from artists* # 557
Posted by barbararachkoscoloreddust

*an ongoing series of quotations – mostly from artists, to artists – that offers wisdom, inspiration, and advice for the sometimes lonely road we are on.
It is true that art, while indebted to tradition, is usually at odds with it; art is about the thrill of mutiny. Young painters and sculptors are particularly unwilling to be hampered by the past, especially if that past is encased in the cement shoes of gender. But familiarity with tradition can be liberating for an artist because it provides a map illustrating the route other people have taken, which is especially valuable at the start of such a perilous journey. Male artists can inspire and instruct, surely. Artistic concerns are gender neutral. But there are social and personal issues a woman artist faces that cannot be found in the stories of men; these are the obstacles confronted and obstacles overcome. The poet Adrienne Rich wrote, “For spiritual values and a creative tradition to continue unbroken we need concrete artifacts, the work of hands, written words to read, images to look at, a dialogue with brave and imaginative women who came before us.” It’s instructive as well as comforting to know how other women have managed and what other women have dared. It’s also gratifying to find in their stories an occasional energizing dose of inspiration.
Mary Gabriel in Ninth Street Women
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Posted in 2023, An Artist's Life, Inspiration, Pearls from Artists, Quotes
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Q: What are your current aspirations?
Posted by barbararachkoscoloreddust

A: During the pandemic I was fortunate to have added three international galleries – in London, New Delhi, and Sweden – to the growing list of galleries that represent my work. (This is in addition to a gallery in Naples, FL that I have been working with for several years). It is extremely gratifying to discover that finally, after 36 years as a devoted and hard-working professional artist, galleries are seeking me out, instead of the other way around. Next I’d like to find a local home gallery in New York with whom to work. This will be the final piece of my business plan… at least for now!
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Posted in 2022, An Artist's Life, Art Business, Bolivianos
Tags: added, addition, around, artist, business plan, devoted, discover, extremely, finally, fortunate, galleries, gratifying, hard-working, impresario, instead, international, London, Naples FL, New Delhi, New York, other, pandemic, professional, seeking, several, Sweden, working
Q: What do you enjoy most about being an artist?
Posted by barbararachkoscoloreddust
A: This is a question I like to revisit every so often because life as an artist does not get easier; just the opposite, in fact. Visual artists tend to be “one man bands.” We do it all notwithstanding the fact that everything gets more difficult as we get older. It’s good to be reminded about what makes all the sacrifice and hard work worthwhile.
Even after thirty-four years as an artist, there are so many things to enjoy! I make my own schedule, set my own tasks, and follow new interests wherever they may lead. I am curious about everything and am rarely bored. I continually push my pastel technique as I strive to become a better artist. There is still so much to learn!
My relationship with collectors is another perk. I love to see pastel paintings hanging on collectors’ walls, especially when the work is newly installed and the owners are excited to take possession. This means that the piece has found a good home, that years of hard work have come full circle! And it’s often the start of a long friendship. After living with my pastel paintings for years, collectors tell me they see new details never noticed before and they appreciate the work more than ever. It’s extremely gratifying to have built a network of supportive art-loving friends around the country. I’m sure most artists would say the same!
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Posted in 2020, An Artist's Life, Art Business, Pastel Painting, Studio
Tags: another, appreciate, around, art-loving, artist, ”one man bands”, become, before, changing, continually, country, curious, details, easier, especially, everything, excited, extremely, follow, friendship, full circle, good home, gratifying, hard work, harder, installed, interests, living, netwwork, noticed, notwithstanding, older, owners, pastel, pastel paintings, possession, question, relationship.collectors, reminded, revisit, sacrifice, schedule, Studio, supportive, technique, visual, wherever, worthwhile
Q: What has been your biggest challenge so far?
Posted by barbararachkoscoloreddust
A: On September 11, 2001, my husband Bryan, a high-ranking federal government employee, a brilliant economist (with an IQ of 180 he is the smartest man I have ever known) and a budget analyst at the Pentagon, was en route to Monterrey, CA to give his monthly guest lecture for an economics class at the Naval Postgraduate College. He had the horrible misfortune of flying out of Dulles Airport and boarding the plane that was high-jacked and crashed into the Pentagon, killing 189 people. Losing Bryan was the biggest shock of my life and devastating in every possible way.
The following summer I was ready to – I HAD to – get back to work. Learning about photography and pastel painting became avenues to my well-being. I use reference photos for my paintings, so my first challenge was to learn how to use Bryan’s 4 x 5 view camera (Bryan always took these reference photos for me).
In July 2002 I enrolled in a one-week view camera workshop at the International Center of Photography in New York. Much to my surprise, I had already acquired substantial technical knowledge from watching Bryan. Still, after the initial workshop, I threw myself into this new medium and continued studying photography at ICP for several years. I began with Photography I and enrolled in many more classes until I gradually learned how to use Bryan’s extensive camera collection, to properly light my setups, and to print large chromogenic photographs in a darkroom.
In October 2009 it was very gratifying to have my first solo photography exhibition with HP Garcia in New York. Please see http://barbararachko.art/images/PDFS/ BarbaraRachko-HPGargia.pdf. I vividly remember tearing up at the opening as I imagined Bryan looking down at me with his beautiful smile, beaming as he surely would have, so proud of me for having become a respected photographer.
Continuing to make art had seemed an impossibility after Bryan’s death. However, the first large pastel painting that I created using a self-made reference photograph proved my life’s work could continue. The title of that painting, “She Embraced It and Grew Stronger,” is certainly autobiographical. “She” is me, and “it” means continuing on without Bryan and living life for both of us.
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Posted in 2020, An Artist's Life, Creative Process, Gods and Monsters, Inspiration, Pastel Painting, Photography, Working methods
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Tags: "She Embraced it and Grew Stronger", "Us and Them", 4 x 5 view camera, 9/11, acquired, already, autobiographical, avenues, beautiful, biggest, brilliant, Bryan, budget analyst, camera collection, certainly, challenge, continued, created, darkroom, devastating, Dulles Airport, economist, employee, en route, enrolled, extensive, federal government, following, gradually, gratifying, guest lecture, high-jacked, high-ranking, horrible, HP Garcia, husband, imagined, initial, International Center of Photography, killing, knowledge, learned, life's work, living life, looking, losing, make art, medium, misfortune, Monterrey, monthly, Naval Postgraduate College, New York, opening, pastel painting, Pentagon, photographer, photography, properly, proved, reference photos, remember, respected, rolled, self-made, setups, smartest, solo photography exhibition, studying, substantial, summer, surprise, tearing up, technical, using, vividly, watching, well being, workshop
Q: What do you enjoy most about being an artist?
Posted by barbararachkoscoloreddust
A: This is a question I enjoy revisiting every so often because life as an artist does not get easier; just the opposite, in fact. Visual artists tend to be “one man bands.” We do it all notwithstanding the fact that everything gets harder as we get older. So it’s good to be reminded about what makes all the sacrifice and hard work worthwhile.
There are so many things to enjoy! I make my own schedule, set my own tasks, and follow new interests wherever they may lead. I am curious about everything and am rarely bored. I continually push my pastel technique and strive to become a better artist. There is still so much to learn!
My relationship with collectors is another perk. I love to see pastel paintings hanging on collectors’ walls, especially when they’re newly installed and the owners are excited to take possession. This means that the piece has found a good home, that years of hard work have come full circle! And it’s often the start of a long friendship. After living with my pastel paintings for years, collectors tell me they see new details never noticed before and they appreciate the work more than ever. It’s extremely gratifying to have built a network of supportive art-loving friends around the country. I’m sure most artists would say the same!
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Posted in 2020, An Artist's Life, Creative Process, Pastel Painting, Studio
Comments Off on Q: What do you enjoy most about being an artist?
Tags: a good home, appreciate, art-loving, artist, “Majordomo”, ”one man bands”, collectors, country, curious, details, extremely, friends, friendship, gratifying, installed, interests, living, network, noticed, owners, pastel paintings, pastel technique, possession, relationships, schedulel, soft pastel on sandpaper, supportive, visual artists


