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ABOUT MONICA STEWART
From the age of 4, Monica Stewart’s
parents encouraged her artistic pursuits. While growing up in Oakland,
California, this early parental patronage, as well as support throughout
her school years, helped nurture her talent enough to get a four year
scholarship to the San Francisco Art Academy. She later transferred to
California State University at Hayward, where she majored in Art. One of
the artists she studied under was Raymond Saunders, a very influential
figure in her education.
Instead of getting her degree, she cut her studies short to become a
flight attendant, and eventually raise a son. This left no time for
painting, so her talent remained dormant. Some fifteen years later in
1990, with some time off from work, she had the freedom to get back into
painting. Her renewed interest in art coincided with meeting a new
friend and neighbor, best-selling novelist Terry McMillan. As Stewart
recalls, “She’d come by and we’d talk about what’s going on with her.
We’re around the same age, and I saw how she was taking what was a
natural gift for her and making it work. She was the first one to see my
pieces and say, ‘I’ll buy that!’”
Stewart’s preferred medium is pastels, as she explains, “I love the
brilliance of the colors and the way you can manipulate them.” Of her
work, and the predominance of women in her paintings, she says, “I have
a good understanding of myself as a woman, so I do tend to paint a lot
of women. I have a lot of girlfriends, and we talk a lot. So in my work
you’ll see a lot of women interchanging, talking, doing whatever.”
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