Upcoming Art exhibition

“Biophilic Harmonies”

A Solo Fine Art Exhibition 

by Artist Rachel Berkowitz



San Diego’s Pacific Beach/Taylor Branch Library Gallery has selected international artist Rachel Berkowitz’s large-scale mixed-media paintings for a 2 month show, beginning February 1st, 2023 until May 31st, 2023. There will be an opening reception on February 4th with musical performances at the gallery from 3pm-5.30pm. The gallery will be open daily Monday- Saturday, with hours as Monday - Tuesday: 11:30am - 8:00pm and Wednesday - Saturday: 9:30am - 6:00pm. 

The Biophilic Harmonies series explores how human interactions with the natural world are expressed as desires and emotional constructs. The artwork serves as an escape from an anxious reality, allowing the viewer to get lost into a contemplative mindset, similar to that found in natural environments.  Through painting and mixed media installations, the work combines abstract organic forms with physical natural elements to represent the human affinity for nature - or biophilia. The interplay between the conceptual and the formal elements in each piece creates a visual garden. Light as an energy source plays a strong role in the aesthetic and spiritual nature of the work, as the contrasting techniques lead into meditations for the viewer. Berkowitz’s recent travels across US National Parks have been a strong source of inspiration, placing a need on the heightened concern for conservation and preservation. Emotional experiences are the premise of the work, and the mark-making process serves to deepen mental awareness of one’s place in the natural world.



In response to lengthy spells of indoor isolation, societal anxiety and loss during the pandemic, Berkowitz began to incorporate plants and natural elements into her artwork to recreate a fusion between human spiritual experience and nature. The artwork engages the viewer through textured techniques and intricate abstract painting methods, using various materials such as wax, copper oxides, glass particulates and real plants themselves. By using a mix of both dried and alive plant matter, the work itself is alive and will change as time progresses. The cyclical nature of the work highlights the idea of rebirth and renewal, reminding the viewer to breathe and slow down. Heightened desires to be released from enclosures are expressed through the structural compositions. There are references to man-made architectural structures hidden within the paintings, depicting the space that the work has been made in and to time-stamp the art-making process. 



Pacific Beach/ Taylor Library - 4275 Cass St., San Diego, CA 92109 https://www.sandiego.gov/public-library/locations/pacific-beach-taylor-library

About the Artist: Rachel Berkowitz

Rachel Berkowitz lives and works in Los Angeles, (b. Ohio, USA 1993), grew up in London, England and received a BA from UCLA’s School of Art and Architecture, graduating in 2016. Rachel has previously exhibited her paintings and photography at solo and group shows across the US and internationally including the UK, Italy, France and Japan. Rachel’s art practice has developed through artist residencies and community experiences, including the La Napoule Artist Foundation in France (2020) and the Slade School of Art London Summer Intensive in England (2019). Rachel has been awarded first place in various International Fine Art competitions, and is constantly working on public and private commissions from staging paintings for Palm Springs Modernism Week, to painting a mural for Bill Nye, The Science Guy’s new videos at The Planetary Society in Pasadena. Rachel is also engaged in community arts programming where she teaches art to children in schools that cannot afford arts education, and at children’s hospitals and neighborhood LA events. For competitions sponsored by the City of Los Angeles, she has painted many public murals incorporating natural forms and flora. 

www.rachelberkowitzart.com /www.instagram.com/rachelberkowitzart

Looking Back in 2020


Year in Review 2020
 

Greetings to a hopeful new year of 2021! 

Looking back at 2020, I wanted to take this time to thank all of you for your endless support and love throughout the pandemic. It was a rough year for all creatives across the globe, and the situation seems endless as all artist opportunities are backlogged by years. 

Despite the lockdowns and cancellations of opportunities, I continued to produce and exhibit new work - both painting and fine art photography.

New work: Developing my ideas about fate and chance

I am so grateful to have started off 2020 at an artist residency at La Napoule in the South of France. I miss my days there painting in a quaint studio overlooking the sea, and my nights sleeping in a princess’s bedroom in a gothic-style French Chateau. I also miss the companionship and mentoring of the other artists in residence. A prolonged period of time stuck in the French Riviera was certainly a blessing for me, yet the pandemic was just starting. 

 

I was deeply inspired by the scenery surrounding the Chateau, as well as readings from the spiritual texts from the Kabbalah, which was the primary influence for the oldest deck of tarot cards.  From this, I have begun to create my own deck of hand-drawn Tarot cards as well as two photography series titled, “Isolation Portraits” and “Self-Reflections”. The photographic series have been exhibited by Gallery 1202 at the Hamptons Art Fair, the Artsy Virtual Solo Online Gallery and will be displayed on metal and acrylic in a physical show called “Looking back in 2020” at Gallery 1202 this coming February. 

See Artwork from La Napoule Here

Two other artist residencies, at Lassen National Park in California and Montezuma National Monument in Arizona were unfortunately postponed because of the pandemic. But the wilderness is never far away in California! After returning to Los Angeles from France, I relocated to Mammoth Lakes to get away from the crowded city. There, I spent my days exploring and hiking, inspired by the beautiful Sierra Nevada mountainscapes. I produced small paintings and drawings that encompassed the spiritual elements of nature, reflecting back to my previous themes of fate, chance and self-reflection. 

 

The time in Mammoth had an unfortunate impact on my painting. After a severe case of High Altitude Sickness mid-Summer left me with unresolved pulmonary hypertension, I had to re-learn how to paint with acrylics, since the fumes from oil paints were now detrimental to my health. My painting style transformed back to abstract techniques from a couple years back, and I found a new passion for this old way of painting. I felt more free, and was able to release expressions and emotions that I was withholding in the previous oil painting style. 

 

Being in isolation has allowed my work to transform, from color palettes to stylistic brush strokes. I have had a number of commissions since September, including paintings for the recently renovated “Edition” hotel. I hope commissions keep coming and I am so thankful to everyone who has reached out in support, whether for a commission or just shared something of mine on the internet.

Additionally, I have been working hard since September on a new photography series called “Modern Mystics: Psychics of Los Angeles”. With this project, I aim to inform and inspire the audience about this spiritual form of therapy, while using interview snippets from the psychics to help describe their specific field of work. Any type of healing during this pandemic should be embraced, and I hope to give these small psychic businesses more clients during this tough time. The photography series is almost complete, and I will be making a book available for purchase through Gallery 1202, ending with a physical show of the work in 2021.

2020 started out well, with my Fairfax Royalty photography series being exhibited at the LA Art Fair with Gallery 1202. I was the artist-in-residence at a luxury streetwear fashion store in Beverly Hills called Zensai, where I displayed paintings and customized fashion pieces with my own artwork. My solo painting show, called “Playing with Fate”, is still hanging at the Whitney Library in Las Vegas. After being closed for a month, it is now back open to the public until January 24th. I received some wonderful press from the show:

https://vegasnews.com/205596/playing-with-fate-a-solo-painting-fine-art-exhibition-by-artist-rachel-berkowitz.html

https://www.ktnv.com/positivelylv/13-things/13-things-to-do-this-week-in-las-vegas-for-nov-13-19-2020

              

I am so thankful to those who have purchased work from this collection. 

 

I also held a number of pop-up shows in West Hollywood to display work that was supposed to be at the cancelled shows and art fairs.

 

In 2020, I was featured in a few artist interviews, with one of my favorites from an International Art Magazine called “Burnt Orange City”. You can see the interview here: https://burntorangecity.com/2020/10/25/rachel-berkowitz-a-spiritual-journey/

What’s next? 

Currently, I am spending my days painting new work as well as commissions, and searching for new psychics to photograph whilst doing fashion photoshoots for various companies. I am looking forward to the artist residencies at Lassen Volcanic National Park and at Montezuma National Monument later this year. I hope to keep you all informed when new opportunities arise this 2021. 

Most importantly, I hope to see you in person in 2021!