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PDX Profile: Christine Claringbold, of Eye Pop Art
We're chatting with Christine Claringbold this week. She makes wonderful, colorful things from recycled materials -- most especially, old vinyl records. Her business is called Eye Pop Art. You can see more of her work at her website, and get to know her better at her new blog. ------------------------------------------------- How did you get started creating art from recycled materials? Out of necessity! Back in 1994, my boyfriend Chuck (who has been my husband for the last eleven years) went out and bought himself a canvas and three tubes of acrylic paint in red, yellow, and blue. He made one painting and that was it. So one day I just decided to start experimenting myself, and I began mixing the colors and creating a wild, psychedelic painting on the first thing I could find, which was an old hardshell suitcase that I had been traveling around with. After that I just started painting everything - Chuck's guitar, the interior of our 1970 Galaxie 500, the pop machine at the local record shop (we were living in a town in Montana at the time), furniture, everything. When we moved back home to Portland with our one-month old baby girl, Tangereen, I continued to paint stuff just to brighten up our home - chairs, the baby's crib, the stereo cabinet, etc. We have a good friend, Billy Brahm (now the drummer in Chuck's band Dartgun), who also loved to paint on everything. He did some really wild furniture that was a big inspiration to me. One time he traded me a painted telvevision set for a painting that I did on his acoustic guitar. Billy also painted records - and still does. I kind of stole the record idea from him, but as he says, "You didn't copy me, you just got really busy!" What happened was, a friend of Chuck's gave him a box of crappy old records which we didn't know what to do with. We didn't even have a record player at the time. So Chuck said, "You should paint them, like Billy does!" And so it began. My style is really quite different from Billy's. He paints lots of dots and swirls and amoeba-like shapes. I paint mandalas. And it was with records that I really discovered my ability to make mandalas, which have become the core of my work.
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