Painter and Caretaker of the Land

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KAMI MENDLIK Painter and Caretaker of the Land Minnesota oil painter Kami Mendlik may achieve harmony in her landscapes because she feels in harmony with the land. By Bob Bahr Through Beauty s Layers 2016, oil, 20 x 30 in. Studio I get the philosophy of Mother Earth. I understand it. Kami Mendlik tries to explain her relationship with the woods, wetlands, and water in her part of Minnesota, approaching it in conversation from several angles in an attempt to share why she is so moved by the place where she paints. She has a painterly technique, but the key component in her art is not her brushstrokes, but her frame of mind. It is in how she thinks about the land. Mendlik is happy to paint on her property but she s uncomfortable with the concept of property. She is happy, but it isn t necessarily a matter of the artist following her bliss as much as her finding it, all around her. One of her prime sources of inspiration is the St. Croix River and the surrounding wetlands, and a few years ago Mendlik bought 15 acres just a couple of miles away from the river in the Stillwater, Minnesota, area. This is familiar terrain for Mendlik; she grew up on a 400-acre farm a few miles north of her property. But Mendlik is not a land owner in the sense in which many people use the term. I somehow technically own this property, but I don t necessarily think about it in that way, she says. I just sort of take care of it. I can t imagine a landscape painter thinking that they own the land. I came from a family of farmers and land owners, and land ownership was considered a great thing in my family, but I never understood that. I love the property that I m on, and I feel a connection to the area, but I don t feel like it s mine. We are here for a short time, and it s a privilege to be here and take care of it during that time. Mendlik s views were not perfectly aligned with the banks she approached for a loan to buy the place. They didn t want to give me a loan ARTIST DATA Fall s Glory 2015, oil, 11 x 14 in. Private collection NAME: Kami Mendlik BIRTH YEAR: 1973 LOCATION: Stillwater, MN INFLUENCES: Monet and the French Impressionists, Isaac Levitan, Cecilia Beaux, the Soviet Impressionists, George Inness, William Merritt Chase, Charles Webster Hawthorne, Sorolla, Twatchman, Frits Thaulow, and Nature. WEBSITE: kamimendlik.com www.pleinairmagazine.com / June-July 2016 41 PA_pxx-xx_Profile_Mendlik_JunJul16.indd 41

Evening Through the Back Channels 2016, oil, 16 x 20 in. Studio for the mortgage at first, she says. Half of it is wetlands, and people just could not get it into their heads that it would be of value to me, just to paint it not to farm it or build on it or use it for timber. It s not good land for any of that. It s basically a bird sanctuary. Likeminded folks see what Mendlik sees in the property. She founded and runs an art school, the St. Croix River School of Painting, on the grounds, and students who are serious about painting are allowed to return and paint on the property after their classes end. On some Monday nights in the summer, poets, writers, musicians, and other artists gather at the crumbling foundation of a grain silo on the Colors of Music 2016, oil, 6 x 8 in. Collection of Cynthia Kath 42 June-July 2016 / www.pleinairmagazine.com PA_pxx-xx_Profile_Mendlik_JunJul16.indd 42

Vizenor s Place 2016, oil, 6 x 8 in. Private collection Sweet Marsh 2016, oil, 8 x 10 in. grounds for camaraderie. This spot is a source of inspiration for a lot of artists who live within three hours distance, Mendlik says. They are kindred spirits, and I want to share it with them. It s part of living every day as an artist. It s about living in harmony with nature, not fighting against it. I can t imagine being healthy without being a part of nature s rhythm. The spring peepers have great value to me, but it s not monetary value. One might suspect that Mendlik puts her focus on the process rather than the product, and one would be right. She is a stickler for good drawing skills, but beyond that, she preaches the importance of being present and paying attention. The painting is really not that important to me, she says. A painting is like a recording or a journal. It s neat that I have them, and I love art and looking at it. I believe in the foundation, in the fundamentals, and all the experience that you have to have to paint well, but it s the process that matters when you re painting. As they say, it s not the destination, it s the journey. As I get wiser, I find myself asking, Why are we judging ourselves by the finished product? The worst is judging your painting while you re still painting. You can t do that. That s not being engaged in the process. That is not studying the color. That s the trick. Do that study the color and you get truth, honesty, and integrity in the painting. Other artists often say to me, Wow, you really pulled that around. They see my painting in progress and can t tell where it s going. But my ego is not in front of me. I don t worry about how it looks in the beginning. Be present. Don t try to make pretty pictures. Just put the colors accurately down next to each other. It is the easiest and the hardest thing to do. Mendlik s dedication to making art has resulted in some entertaining stories. In an aside, she recalled how she presented a large commissioned painting to a collector, and the couple wanted her to remove the telephone poles she had painted in the piece. She explained the importance of the vertical lines to her composition, but www.pleinairmagazine.com / June-July 2016 43 PA_pxx-xx_Profile_Mendlik_JunJul16.indd 43

Light on Garden Phlox 2015, oil, 11 x 14 in. Collection of Cynthia Kath the patrons were adamant. At a time when she very much needed the money, Mendlik refused to compromise her painting s integrity and drove back home with the piece in her car. She wondered at the time if she had done the right thing, but in hindsight, she thinks of the decision as a pivotal one indicating her personal philosophy. It isn t that Mendlik is hostile to paintings. She removed the ceiling from one large room in her home and installed 32 paintings from her private collection of contemporary artists, with professional lighting for them. Being in the presence of artwork is completely life-enriching for me, Mendlik says. And as for the viewers, it is interesting to me it is almost like validation for me personally, when someone sees and likes my work. And if it weren t for the viewer or collector, we couldn t be exploring all this and making paintings. It s not just a role; it s vital. Minnesota weather particularly Minnesota winter can be challenging. Mendlik s home and studio has a lot of windows, particularly on the side facing north, and she and her class paint the view from indoors when temperatures or precipitation suggest this. Of course, she would prefer to be outside in the middle of it all. It is so musical, how the emotions are stimulated by all the senses, says Mendlik. For painters it s all about what we see, but I also appreciate the movement, harmony, and rhythm of the sounds of the branches and grasses in the wind. As with many locations, each day offers a different take on the same subject for her. I ll study a scene one day, and the next day it s different, she says. I ll make a totally different painting the second time, a different composition. I think it s about challenging myself, and about the curiosity I feel about how the scene has changed. On each painting, something else might drive me. For example, this past winter I was looking out at these skeletal trees that surround the marsh. They looked like soldiers in a perfect line, 44 June-July 2016 / www.pleinairmagazine.com PA_pxx-xx_Profile_Mendlik_JunJul16.indd 44

River Harmony Prevails 2015, oil, 18 x 24 in. Studio piece as if they were protecting the marsh. I painted a horizontal piece about that. The same scene the next day produced a vertical painting with the trees up front to show the value, contrast, and mistiness of the rest of the land there. The next day it was super wet outside, and the trees were super dark, so I didn t even put the trees in. Three different inspirations in three days. Mendlik blocks in the local color to start a painting, then refines the colors as she sees fit. As with much else in her art, the key word is harmony. I don t have to get the colors right at first, she says. I want harmony within the painting. The artist teaches her students to approach the painting of models and still life objects as mere forms in light, and she emphasizes color temperature to indicate shadow and to create depth. Getting the exact color may not let you capture it, Mendlik says. Look around for something in the scene to relate to for your color temperature. Like many instructors, Mendlik has seen it all. She has encountered beginners and veterans, those who eschew rules and others restricted by them. She has taught people with all the technical skill they need, but who are stymied by what she calls emotional stuckness. She says, When they finally break through that, the paintings are amazing. Mendlik has come to the conclusion that two things need to be balanced to be a successful artist: It s not just technique and fundamentals. There s more to it. It s a dance between passion and intellect. You can t be just technically good, or just be passionate and simply want to paint. Neither, alone, works. She considers herself a painter first, and a teacher second, but Mendlik says everything she does is in the pursuit of becoming a better artist. At ease and happy to be doing it, yet pushing herself further. I am falling in love with life, Mendlik says. I m so blessed to make a living making art, but as soon as you reach a certain level of accomplishment, you realize it is so much bigger. BOB BAHR has been writing and editing articles about art instruction for more than 12 years. He lives with his wife and two young sons at the northern tip of Manhattan. See more of Kami Mendlik s paintings in the expanded digital edition of PleinAir. www.pleinairmagazine.com / June-July 2016 45 PA_pxx-xx_Profile_Mendlik_JunJul16.indd 45