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Meredith Miller, Visionary Art

 

Meredith painted in the Impasto style of painting; a thick layering-on technique that piles on paint giving her art a striking 3-D substantiality.  Not only does her art leap from the canvas; it spreads beyond the borders of frame and paint, extending to infinity.  It cannot, and will not, be contained by the false premise of self-imposed spatial limits.

 

“Ulices haunts antique stores for me, finding these wonderful old frames.  I paint to the end of the canvas, all the way to the frame.  Then I paint over the frame.  Then I paint beyond.  My paintings don’t end.  They spill.” 

 

Meredith loves to incorporate objects into her paintings.  “One of my favorites was a commission from a lady who rode naked and bareback on her beloved blind horse.  When the horse passed, I was asked to immortalize the precious memory.  I worked the horse’s mane hair into the painting, using it to represent the woman’s own hair blowing in the wind as she rode.”

 

 “Whenever possible, I work in the materials that are important to the person commissioning a painting.  There was a man on a vision quest on Maui.  A heavy piece of lava fell from the roof of the cave where he sat in ritual.  I worked it into the painting as a spiritual talisman for him.”

 

Then there is the wealthy manufacturer who’d have her paint the things his company made, as well as the places they wound up, for example, a Valve in Hoover Dam.  And the woman whose “family portrait” consisted of her animals.  “Once, a fellow right here in Vilcabamba found some Incan carvings on his land.  We realized later they might’ve been staged fakes someone had buried on his land.  They were beautiful anyway, so he had me incorporate them into the painting.  I made them levitate.”

 

“And so it goes,” says Meredith.  “Really, I wouldn’t have it any other way.  I love having just enough input from my patrons to inspire me.  Then I let my imagination run wild.  Thankfully, they do, too.”

Guests at MonteSueños Retreat Center and BnB are so fortunate to be surrounded by these works of art!

More about Meredith

Growing up on Oregon’s wild Rogue River, Meredith Miller, credits her mother for setting her on the path of the artist.

 

“Forty acres of primary forest stretching from Crater Lake to the Pacific Ocean, that was my playground.  My mom gave me the gift of wonderment in that enchanted place.  I had an idyllic childhood,” Meredith muses.  “Living ‘off the grid,’ we made our own entertainment.  Mom would secretly set up fairy rings for me to find in our daily wanderings, made of feathers and stones and all sorts of magic stuff.  I even had a pet deer,” she recalls with a smile.

 

When her parents divorced, Meredith and her mother moved to suburban LA, to live with an aunt and uncle, both artists.  “Everything happens for a reason,” says Meredith.  “We came from living on National Forest land to a bare dirt yard.  I’d brought one lone jade plant with me.  But, had we not left, I’d probably still be there, married to a Rogue Indian raising a tribe of little hellions of my own,” she laughs.

 

Her uncle was in charge of murals at Disney Studios; from him she learned watercolors.  Her aunt painted, and would take her to workshops in downtown artists’ lofts where she learned to draw live models.  “So many artists, many of them already famous and successful, offered me encouragement,” she recalls. 

 

Mom had a beau who left her a small inheritance when he passed, but with one stipulation.  The money was to be used for her to go to art school.  Meredith was sixteen when she enrolled at the Art Center College of Design.  She went for four years, studying to be a magazine illustrator, but just before graduation, she ran off to Florida with a wild and crazy boy.  “Pirate Jim” promised Meredith a life of romance and adventure sailing around the world.  Instead, he got in trouble and went to jail leaving Meredith broke and alone, stranded in a strange place with no one to turn to.  “I couldn’t go back to CA for the shame of it all.  I had no money, just my portfolio.  There was a famous art show in Coconut Grove, Miami, one that drew international talent.  I didn’t have the fifteen bucks to enter it so I hung my paintings with clothespins in the parking lot, and by the end of the day I’d sold everything.  Now I had $500.  I thought that was pretty cool, so I got busy and painted some more, and entered the next show.  They gave me the last space in the last row, but I sold out again, and won Best-of-Show.  And now I had a thousand bucks!  Ten years later I was successful.  I had a beautiful home in Coconut Grove.  I had a following and a famous salon, and was married to a great guy.  I had fifteen wonderful years in Florida before moving on.”

 

“I guess I’ve always followed my nose wherever it leads me,” Meredith affirms.  “With luck and pluck, and good angels and loving friends I’ve always landed on my feet.  Somehow Brian and I found each other in the midst of all the chaos, and together we found this place.  And it just keeps on happening.”

 

Meredith’s art is an integral part of Montesueños Retreat Center BnB's form and fibre.  Her eye and aesthetic informs every corner and inch of it.  Her world is a living studio, her art attractively priced and offered for sale on-site.  “My work hangs around the world, in galleries and private collection.  Much of it commissioned.”  With the aid of many artisans working in multiple disciplines, from fabulous mosaic tile work to otherworldly landscaping, this magical place continues to evolve.  “I get an idea, and somehow the right person appears to help me realize it,” she says.  “People invariably make mention of the ‘Gaudi-esque’ nature of Montesueños’ structures.  The funny thing is, I had no idea who Gaudi was.  It wasn’t until years later that Brian and I made a trip to Barcelona that I discovered our uncanny shared vision.  Gaudi is the brother I never met.”

March 23, 1946 - July 2, 2021
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