By Mia Merlin

The Importance of Arts, Culture & The Creative Process.
The Arts have been a lifeline for me for as long as I can remember. Making art, creative writing, and playing instruments were the only things that engaged me at school. They provided immense comfort when I was coming of age, feeding my soul when nothing else did. Music was my first really close friend.
A painting is a piece of magic, a relic of history, stamped at a certain time and place, and also fully of this moment as we look at it. Art is for everybody and weaves us all together when we can't see how we belong or fit. Its a road map when it seems like the all pieces can't be put back the way they were. It is a unique way of knowing and being that get to the very essence of what matters, and shows us the best of humanity and possibility. I would feel flat and empty without it illuminating my inner landscapes.

What was the inspiration for your creative work?
Watching my daughter climb this majestic live oak, unfettered and unafraid, the visual metaphor was abundantly clear. Who could resist the lure of that tangle of branches that travel so high to a magical perch with the owls? Of course, I want her to feel this pull and feel her strength to climb to the top. But from the ground, I see the treacherousness of all of it, all that I can't control or protect her from, and all of the letting go that lies ahead. As a painter, I wanted to capture how the gesture of her body was in unison with the tree--I could see the specific and the infinite at the same time--and the rhythm of the shapes, negative and positive, that seemed to tell the story for me.


Mia Merlin is an Atlanta resident and native whose art practice is driven by the joy of making marks. Every mark contains the connection between seeing, the hand and imagination. There is a longing to take part in the river of creativity, that includes great artists past and present, who help us feel and know our lives. Being a woman, mother and daughter are central to her values as an artist. Career highlights include being a university professor for over 20 years, the creation of the 49 portraits project, upcoming work at the Smithsonian Museum of Natural History, and exhibiting work internationally through the Art in Embassies program and at museums like the Phillips collection in Washington, DC.

The Creative Process is created with kind support from the Jan Michalski Foundation.