Benny Alba
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Benny Alba | |
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Born | Columbus, Ohio | May 7, 1949
Nationality | American |
Known for | Painting, printmaking |
Website | bennyalba.com |
Benny Alba (born May 7, 1949) in Columbus, Ohio, is an artist who lives in Oakland, California.
Early life and career
Alba's great grandmother was an oil painter and her grandmother trained as a concert pianist. Alba's mother, Marjorie, held a Master of Fine Arts degree in ceramics from Ohio State University, teaching at Ohio State University Academy.[1] Alba's father, an engineer, was an inventor and CEO of Oasis (also known as Ebco), a Fortune 500 company. Art was an important topic in her childhood home.
During high school, Alba artist attended classes at Columbus Cultural Arts Center,[2] part of the Columbus Parks and Recreation Department. Alba also studied at Penland School of Arts and Crafts summer program attending lithography and silk screening classes.
After high school, Alba traveled a summer with her Mother to Europe, where they visited museums and architectural sites in Germany and Italy. Alba then began her studies at Kent State University, with a focus on English literature. While there she witnessed the shootings at Kent State, and soon after left the University and her studies to live in Berkeley, California.
Six years later Alba enrolled in University of Michigan, earning a Bachelor of Psychology. During this period she began working in studio on a daily basis, starting as an abstract painter. Alba regularly organized artist groups for figure drawing sessions for years, along with a consciousness raising feminist group. She organized group exhibitions and began entering juried shows.
In 1984 Alba moved back to the San Francisco Bay Area to immerse herself in the rich mixture of cultures.
Major painting series
Alba's earliest interest was in printmaking – linocuts,[3] lithography, and etching. Painting as her primary focus started while attending University of Michigan as a Psychology major. Exploring abstraction and color fields her work then moved to symbolism; a trend that continued for decades. Later on, Alba shifted to landscapes, with increasing focus on the sky as subject.[4] Her work over these four decades can be categorized into several major bodies of work:
- Old and New World (1980s) – A series of paintings and prints that speaks to the intermingling – rather than homogenization – of US cultures, including an awareness of Native American rights, and the importance of Native American thoughts and beliefs regarding North America as well as feminism[5]
- Alaska Journey (2000s) – Landscapes sourced from a drive trip through Canada to Alaska. This series marks the artist's shift from symbolism to landscape as an exclusive topic. The series includes paintings and prints.[6][7]
- Beauty, Thy Name is Night (installation, 2007 – 2010) – Oil paintings depicting night often exhibited in near total darkness. Quotes by notable authors and philosophers describing night above and below were written in white chalk on flat black painted drops installed on walls. Imagery included tree silhouettes and the moon in various stages of its monthly cycle. Viewers were supplied with flashlights to seek out the quotes.[8][9]
- American Storms (2010 – current) – These are oil paintings of extreme winter storm weather experienced by the artist while delivering solo shows cross-country. Painted on canvas or paper, a few are large format of 10 to 14 feet wide.[10]
Later career
Upon her move to California, Alba joined Apprentice Alliance, as Master teacher/artist in the San Francisco-based organization training apprentices for more than three decades. Alba frequently donated workshops on photographing artworks for art groups. Alba has sponsored poetry readings and musical events at her art exhibitions in museum and gallery solo shows. A decades-long collaboration between poetess Cynthia Harris and Alba included presentations together at Cody's Books in Berkeley, Jack London Square's Barnes & Noble Bookstore in Oakland, CA, as well as Alba's museum solo in Minnesota's North County Museum of Arts. For over 20 years, she hosted over two dozen guest artists as part of PRO ARTS East Bay Open Studios, an annual citywide public art event.
Alba has presented as a lecturer, served as guest speaker, and juried multiple exhibits throughout her career. She also serves on the boards of several art-related organizations. Following her move to California, she joined the local branch of the Women's Caucus for the Arts. After being juried into The California Society of Printmakers,[11] Alba rose from artist member to board member and finally served as President 2003 - 2006.
In 2010, the Oakland City Crafts and Cultural Arts Gallery held a retrospective of Alba's works.[12] This made visible many of the artistic influences over Alba's career – including works influenced by abstraction, symbolism, psychology, anthropology, archaeology, surrealism, and feminism.[13]
Alba remains active, with solo exhibitions, teaching apprentices, public speaking, jurying exhibitions and judging awards, as well as serving as guest speaker.
Exhibitions
Alba's first group show was in Ohio at the Columbus Cultural Arts Center in 1980.[14] Her first solo exhibition was the following year in the Loft Gallery at the same venue. Her first solo in California was in the Canessa Gallery in San Francisco. She has had over 100 solo exhibitions throughout the Commonwealth Club of California since then and participated in over 300 group shows in the US. Selected solo exhibitions include:
Hoyt Institute of Fine Art, New York[15]
Las Vegas Art Museum, Las Vegas, Nevada [16]
Maturango Museum, Ridgecrest, California[17]
Oakland City Crafts and Cultural Arts Gallery, Oakland, California[12]
Sedona Art Center, Sedona, Arizona[18]
University of Mary, Welder Library, Bismarck, North Dakota[19]
Valley Art Center, Clarkson, Washington[3]
Western Wyoming Community College, Rock Springs, Wyoming[20]
Alba's paintings and prints are held in public art collections, beginning with the acquisition of “Lost Blood: Ghost Dance” by the National Museum of Women in the Arts. Other collections include those of the Birmingham Museum of Art, Birmingham, Alabama; Greenpeace, San Francisco, California; Portland Art Museum, Gordon Gilkey Collection, Portland, Oregon; and Tyler Museum of Art, Tyler, Texas. “Far Away,” Alba's oil painting acquired by the Art in Embassies collection, Tashkent, Uzbekistan,[21] is one of the rare Art in Embassies permanent purchases.
Selected bibliography
2016 "California artist Benny Alba's series American Storms on display at Heritage Center", Devils Lake Journal, Chuck Wickenhofer, Devil's Lake, North Dakota.
2015 "Benny Alba 1969 - 2013" ISBN 978-0-578-15709-2, Publisher AlbaStudios, Oakland, California.
2014 Benny Alba, Alana Clearlake and Sarah Gordon Interviews. Hot Silica on Metal: The Art of Enameling. Maturango Museum, Ridgecrest, California[22]
2010 “Alba Looks Back”, Contra Costa Times edition, San Jose Mercury News, Volume 99, #116, San Jose, California.
2009 “Painters with Fearless Brushes at Library Gallery”, The Orinda News, Elana O’Loskey, Orinda, California.
2004 “Limitless Possibilities”, Glass on Metal, volume 23, #4, Benny Alba, Bellevue, Kentucky.[23] “Tools are Made but Born are Hands”, Glass on Metal, volume 23, #1, Benny Alba, Bellevue, Kentucky.[24]
2002 “Full of Light, Full of Potential”, Inksmith, Benny Alba, spring edition Daniel Smith, Publisher, Seattle, Washington.[25] “The Benefits of Archival Matting and Framing”, Inksmith, Daniel Smith Inks, Seattle, Washington.[26]
2000 “Travels with Benny Alba”, The Arts Center Newsletter, January 2000, issue #22, Jamestown, North Dakota. “Two Artists Live in a House of Discards”, Red Rock News, Nancy Robb Dunst, Sedona, New Mexico.
1999 “Alba’s ‘Visions’ Now a Reality at EMU”, Oregon Daily Emerald, Sarah Lieberth, Eugene, Oregon.
1997 “Artist Creates Escape for Ordinary Folks”, Merced Times, Gateway, Diane Booth, Merced, California.
1994 “Artist Likes Colors Bright, Bizarre”, Las Vegas Sun, Las Vegas, Nevada.
1993 “And Benny Jumped Over the Moon”, Columbus Alive!, Columbus, Ohio. “Symbolism at Center of Alba’s Works”, Columbus Dispatch, Leslie Constable, Columbus, Ohio.
1990 “Alba’s Oils at Canessa Gallery”, San Francisco Arts Monthly, San Francisco, California. “Alba’s Show Blends Art and Poetry”, San Francisco Chronicle, San Francisco, California.
References
- ^ Hollander, Harry B. (1972). Plastics for Artists and Craftsmen. New York: Watson-Guptill. p. 23. ISBN 0273318012.
- ^ von Endt, Laurie (November 23, 1993). "An Instinct for Painting". Visual ARts.
- ^ a b "Prints go on Display at Valley Art Center". Lewiston Morning Tribune. March 3, 2000.
- ^ Booth, Diane (May 21–27, 1997). "Artist creates escape for ordinary folks". Merced Times.
- ^ Shah, Mona (April 2010). "The Wild Wild West". Tri-City Voice.
- ^ Kennelly, Martha (September 16, 1998). "Women Artists Take Different Approaches". Arts & Entertainment.
- ^ "Painter exhibits at arts center through May 21". Red Rock News. May 3, 2000.
- ^ O'Loskey, Elana (July 2009). "Painters With Fearless Brushes at Library Gallery". The Orinda News.
- ^ "Beauty, Thy Name is Night". Tri-City Voice. May 25–31, 2010.
- ^ "Athenaeum displays artist's depiction of fierce storms". Westfield/Southwick. February 8–14, 2013.
- ^ "The Journal of the California Society of Printmakers" (PDF). California Society of Printmakers.
{{cite web}}
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(help) - ^ a b Voynovskaya, Nastia (September 30, 2010). "Crafts & Cultural Arts Gallery Hosts Retrospective of Nearly Three Decades of Work by Oakland Painter and Enamellist Benny Alba". The Daily Californian.
- ^ Downey, Jennifer (October 13, 2010). "Benny Alba Art Retrospective on October 21". Piedmont Post.
- ^ Constable, Leslie (November 21, 1993). "Symbolism at Center of Alba's Works". The Columbus Dispatch.
- ^ "Pair of ARtists Shares Exhibits with Hoyt". At Leisure. August 1998.
- ^ "Artist Likes Colors Bright, Bizarre". Weeken. December 2, 1994.
- ^ Brokke, Harris. "Executive Director" (PDF). Maturango News.
- ^ "Painter of the Cool". ARTimes. May 2000.
- ^ "A Newsletter for Employees and Friends of Minot State University - "In the Galleries" section".
- ^ "WWCC Art Gallery Opens Show". Rocket Miner. January 18, 1994.
- ^ "Artists Directory".
- ^ "Hot Silica on Metal: The Art of Enameling". Maturango Museum. Archived from the original on 2016-07-21. Retrieved 2017-01-23.
- ^ "Limitless Possibilities".
- ^ ""Tools are Made but Born are Hands" - Wm. Blake Three works by an Ohio Artist".
- ^ Alba, Benny. "Full of Light, Full of Potential" (PDF). Daniel Smith Catalogue.
- ^ "The Benefits of Archival Matting and Framing". Daniel Smith website.