The Importance of Arts, Culture & The Creative Process
The Creative Process is an invaluable asset to the public seeking avenues of inspiration in the arts. It offers access to the work process of many marvelous creators in their output and contributions to our shared cultural histories. It might be interesting to shed more light on the challenges of living a creative life in the midst of political upheaval and unrest.

I am interested in creating a rich layering of sources: a poetic language where systems of generation and communication are fused to form new languages, continuing to use the tools of the mixed media formats of painting, photography and installation. I am looking to reveal the fractal mirroring of roots, veins, minerals and bone, incorporating multiple layers to reveal the interplay between various life forms representing the cycles of life, death, and rebirth in both our physical and metaphysical worlds.
The Modern Ancients (2019-ongoing) series explores mythic lore and legends: the human body and the phenomenon of transformation continue to be at the root of my work, exploring gender issues and identity politics, with digital and mixed media painted works printed large scale on illuminated glass, paper, metal and lightboxes.


Aline Mare began her career in the Lower East Side of Manhattan, coming out of a background of theatre, experimental film, and installation art. In the mid-seventies she lived in the Lower East Side of Manhattan, where she worked with influential artists such as Richard Foreman (Pandering to the Masses, 1975) and Robert Frank (Keeping Busy,1975). Meredith Monk and Richard Serra

She was an early member of Collaborative Projects, a collective formed in the late 70s in downtown New York where she participated in blockbuster exhibitions including “The Times Square Show”. She performed in a multi-media partnership, Erotic Psyche, a film and music extravaganza exploring the body and the senses, which toured extensively in Manhattan and Europe throughout the 1980s. 

She completed undergraduate work at SUNY Buffalo’s Center for Media Studies and an MFA from San Francisco Art Institute, where she produced the film Saline’s Solution, a series of installations and performances that dealt with abortion from a feminist point of view, which garnered support and awards internationally, exhibiting at The Cinematheque in SF, The Whitney Museum and the Museum of Modern Art in NYC. 

Since moving to Los Angeles in 2013 she has had more than a dozen private shows and exhibited in several galleries, locally and in Europe. She has received several grants and residencies including Fourwinds in Aureille, France, a 2015 Sino-American art tour in Shanghai, Starry Nights in New Mexico, Headlands Center for the Arts, Kala, Film Arts Foundation, New Langton Arts in SF and a New York State Residency for the Arts. Her work is included in several private collections in the Bay Area, New York City, China, and Los Angeles. She continues to expand her work, concentrating on mixed media and installation, exploring the body and metaphors of nature and its transformative relationship to the human psyche and the state of our planet.

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