San Diego Visual Arts Network / December 2010
Article about the Solo Exhibition: “Lucy, Darwin and Me” at Art Produce Gallery, San Diego, CA.
Click on the image below –
San Diego CA
“Lucy, Darwin and Me” at Art Produce Gallery
December 12, 2009 – January 24, 2010
On the occasion of the 200th anniversary of Charles Darwin’s birth and the 150th anniversary of the publishing of On the Origin of Species, Michele Guieu puts together a show, “Lucy, Darwin and Me,” that celebrates our origins and biodiversity, and evokes the years she spent in Africa, including the trips she took to the Sahara desert with her geologist father and her biologist mother. Michele’s time in Africa coincided with the discovery of the skeleton known as Lucy, the oldest hominid found at the time and named for the Beatles’ song “Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds.”
In this show, constructed like a natural history museum exhibition, Guieu is at the same time the designer, the curator and the artist. And through it, she recalls her formative adolescent years spent in the Sahara with her father and with her family, finding fossils and sleeping under the stars.
The show is a two-room installation, comprised of a series of drawings scattered within a mural and a large cloud of text, period photos from the Sahara, family artifacts, and selected short videos.
Michele Guieu is a San Diego Art Prize 2009 nominee. The show was made possible by collaboration between Patricia Frischer from the San Diego Visual Art Networks (SDVAN), and Lynn Susholtz, director of the Art Produce Gallery. In 2009, Art Produce Gallery has been honored with an Orchid award in the category of Public Art by the San Diego Architectural Foundation.
Michele describes “Lucy, Darwin and Me” as very autobiographical. She says, “I was raised in a family where I always heard about evolution, species and continental drift. It is a natural part of my life. I find it interesting that the country where I live today is profoundly divided about the notion of evolution.
“I started to really consider working specifically for a space with the mural for the San Diego Art Prize show at Noel Baza Fine Art last February. I continued on the same path at the SDAI with my solo show “C’est la Vie”, in June 2009.
“For this show I worked with the specifics of both rooms in the gallery. I use the long wall in the first room for the mural. In the second room, smaller and more intimate, I show the photos of my father and family in Africa circa 1975 and a series of artifacts found in the desert or belonging to my father.”
About the opening festivities, Michele Guieu says: “I believe in bringing energies together, and for that reason, I was very interested in including the music I was listening to and the tales and stories I read when I was a teenager, living in Senegal. I want to share some of this very rich culture by inviting other artists to participate in the event.
“I am thrilled that Leslie Ryan and Deborah Forster accepted the proposition to organize a panel discussion on the occasion of the show. It brings a scientific perspective on evolution to the show and offers the occasion to reflect together on a subject which touches our everyday life.
The gallery events happening around this show are the result of a desire to make the community participate and to open the dialogue. Art Produce is definitely community oriented and this important goal suits very well what I am looking for with my work.
Michele adds: “I am interested in making ephemeral elements, like murals in a gallery. It makes the work less sacred. In this show I wanted to mix different techniques (photo, video, drawing, painting), to create a museum-like ambiance. The first room is inviting from the outside; the second room is more intimate.”
Art Produce Gallery
3139 University Avenue
San Diego, CA 92104
(619) 584 4448
The Top Three Art Not-To-Be-Missed Art Encounters this Month” by Ashley Lee
944 Magazine / December 2009
An article about the solo exhibition “Lucy, Darwin and Me“, at Art Produce Gallery, San Diego CA.
“War Days” at the Cygnet Theatre Company / Rolando Theatre
September 18 – October 26, 2008
In Conjunction with “Dying City” directed by Francis Gercke, a series of Michele Guieu’s paintings inspired by the war in Iraq is exhibited at the Rolando Theatre.
“The war in Iraq has been an important recent source of inspiration for many of my paintings and digital pieces. Through my process of simplifying images, I try to provide a view of the essence of the event, moment, or place to connect ordinary people to extraordinary situations. Showing this series of work in conjunction with the play “Dying City” at the Rolando Theatre is an exciting experience for me.”
Michele Guieu, San Diego, September 2008
Cygnet Theatre Company / Rolando Theatre
6663 El Cajon Blvd, Suite N
San Diego, CA 92115
“C’est La Vie” by Sandra Shrader
Under The Sun Magazine / June 2009
On the Occasion of the Solo Exhibition “C’est La Vie” at the San Diego Art Institute.
San Diego CITYBEAT cover
San Diego CITYBEAT / June 2009
On the occasion of the solo Exhibition “C’est La Vie” at the San Diego Art Institute.
“Lust For Life” by Katherine Sweetman
San Diego CITYBEAT / June 2009
On the occasion of the Solo Exhibition “C’est La Vie” at the San Diego Art Institute.
San Diego Art Prize 2009 – New Contemporaries II
“Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness”
San Diego Art Prize 2009 – New Contemporaries II
Group exhibition: 13 artists nominated
Noel-Baza Fine Art Gallery, San Diego, CA
Feb 18 to March 21, 2009
“Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness”,
Ensemble of six paintings, mixed media on canvas
Artists: David Adey, Tania Alcala, Michele Guieu, Keikichi Honna, Omar Pimienta, Daniel Ruanova, Marisol Rendon, Tara Smith, Matt Stallings, K.V. Tomney, Jen Trute, Gustabo Velasquez, Yuransky.
Presented by the San Diego Visual Arts Network
and Noel-Baza Fine Art
“Here it’s Peace” at the San Diego Art Institute
Here it’s Peace / San Diego Art Institute, San Diego, CA.
June 5 – July 13, 2008
Here it’s Peace presents a series of recent paintings and digital prints: people (portraits and silhouettes) in quasi-abstract landscapes. Here is where I live, where, for me, it is peaceful. But I hear and read about people in the news. We are not necessarily different, but where they live, it may be war. My work reflects my vision of what is happening very close to me, interpolated with what is going on in the larger world.
I work all my images on my computer, starting with photos I take almost every day, of my family, my friends, of landscapes and plants from the desert. I work in layers, a technique I used a lot while working on series of monotypes. I play with the layers, their transparency, their colors, the way there are framed. The possibilities are endless. For some of the images I decide to stop and to print them, for some of the images I decide to paint them on canvas. There is a real pleasure playing with the computer and then continuing with them on another medium. I have a background in photography and graphic design and I am interested in mixing those techniques with painting. For me they are playfully inclusive.
When I was a teenager I lived in Africa for several years, and that experience changed me and my perspective on the world. It was at the same time a cultural shock and an amazing encounter with nature. I am very interested in desert landscapes which I am always eager to discover and very interested in placing my characters into these empty landscapes, metaphors for the human condition.
Michele Guieu, San Diego 2008















