By MariaTeresa Ortiz-Naretto

Title: Women Goddesses Series

Text
Bisun

The Importance of Arts, Culture & The Creative Process
The arts are important because we express the beauty of being human within it. That capability of creating out of ideas and materials is precious. And I believe that this is what constitutes us, or better, what defines us. Maybe some people do this job in somehow more expressive and outstanding manner. Still, the creative process begins its motion every time that we look at the sky, we pay attention to a human expression, or we care about Nature. It is precisely there when the magic begins.

One way this project could expand is by focusing on understanding history and its facts. I believe that there is a crisis in the differentiation of what is real and what comes out of imagination. I would like to see that adults and children acquire a more conscious mind about this issue.

What stands out most to me about this project is the wide range of topics and creators. I believe that we all contribute to Arts with our expertise in a unique way. For that reason, I am deeply impressed in seeing creators from diverse areas have been featured in the podcasts and the literary journal.

What was the inspiration for your creative work?
Women are looking at women to represent, recreate, and regain their place not just only as part of history, but also as lead actors of the world. With that spirit, I have created my Goddesses Series, a survey of women actresses who were leading roles since the 1910s and has marked my own history as visual artist. The portraits of women actresses show a vision of their psyches with a tight balance between sensuality and sensibility. In short, I intend to demystify the sole objectivization of women, and then to depict the variety of our feminine complexities.


Ortiz-Naretto, a New Jersey based artist, was born in Rancagua, Chile, and soon after raised in two countries, Argentina and Chile. Conserving the last names of her parents, Ortiz-Naretto praises her intriguing multicultural background that led the artist to immerse in drawing and painting, art history, and philosophy studies. These perspectives determine her paintings with profuse impasto, flat surfaces, and vivid colors, a style that, far from being eclectic, results in unique images of nature, myths, human figures, and portraits.

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