Marsha TudorFrom earliest
childhood, being fascinated by plant materials and the spatial relationships
they create with themselves, one another and the land around them, Marsha’s
dream world was filled with fairies and elves who danced in moon lit glens.
Childhood books and hours spent outdoors idling time away left an aesthetic
paradigm and process that filters current “finds” through a rigorous
analysis.
Marsha’s earlier work, primarily pastels, watercolor, and Prismacolor pencil
also reflect her interest in organic forms, abstraction, and complex use of
color. It is easy to see the influence of Georgia O’Keefe in her work. Other
strong influences include Tiffany, Monet, de Chirico, Redon, and botanical
illustration. A reviewer’s comment that Marsha’s work is “unabashedly
feminine,” reflects recognition of the importance of work being a process of
personal introspection.
Professionally, Marsha’s work includes floral design, commercial
illustration, landscape design and drafting, Her wide ranging experience
includes illustrating the book “Feasting on an Allergy Diet,” designing a
water conservation perennial garden for Castaic Lake Water Agency, a 3-D
AutoCAD illustration for Quakes Baseball Team, and has shown her work in
galleries in Sacramento, Fresno, Fort Bragg, and Alta Loma.
She became acquainted with computers originally to do AutoCAD for landscape
design. Beyond her bachelor’s degree, her training includes horticulture,
floral design, botany, and photography which lead eventually computer
graphics. Now the digital shift is complete, but the original vision
remains.
Aesthetic concerns have always been about beauty and enigma; the areas in
which they overlap provide an intriguing arena for exploration. A bit of
mystery hovers as images often create an atmospheric quality receding back
into dark shadows. The three dimensional nature of the subject matter is of
utmost importance. Flat items are expressly avoided because they have little
sculptural value.
Another related long-time concern of the artist is the juxtaposition of
organic forms with geometry. Tessellations, arrays and mirrored images tug
at the apparent contradiction of the soft verses hard, curvilinear verse
rigid or irregular verses structured. Patterns play with these dichotomies
and contribute to the use of art as a vehicle for shifting perspectives.
Marsha Tudor can be contacted at:
perianthal@yahoo.com
Her web site :
www.whisperingleafdesigns.com