Lydia Miszuk
Bio
I have lived in
Arizona since 1956. I have watched the separate cities merge into one huge
metropolis. I am married and have two sons. My husband is an
artist. My sons are artists. I studied Psychology in college, but
decided that my interests were more artistic. Either way I work with
restoring people’s souls. I have a BFA in Fiber Arts.
The women in my fibers
group recently discussed the fact that they were most influenced by their
grandmothers artistically, and most of them are quilters. If that
is the case, it is possible that mine also influenced me, one was a knitter
and crocheted, therefore my tactile influence and the other was a Wyoming
pioneer woman, my love of the outdoors. My mother, however, gave
me the confidence to be true to myself.
My work has always
involved manipulation of materials –if I can’t touch it and move it around,
twist and fondle it, it has no meaning for me. Much of my inspiration
comes from the creative synergy suggested by nature’s offerings.
Gathering of materials therefore, becomes the imaginative base of my work
structure. While the natural materials do not always appear in their
primary state once a work is finished, the fibers are always present.
The gathering and usage of materials that have lived through art is a great
personal satisfaction. The resulting artistic dimensions have consistently
surprised and stretched my creativity.
When I first moved
here as a small child, I was amazed to see the soldiers standing at attention
on the desert. When I found out they were cactus, I was even more impressed.
I had never seen (or imagined) anything so botanically human-like before.
That image of the Saguaro has stuck with me throughout the years.
Later on, whenever I drove through the desert I thought that they wee guarding
the desert. I never responded to it artistically until a friend told
me of an Indian myth that the Saguaro were really our ancestors come back
to watch out for us. (I’ve never found this in any myth books, but the
story appealed to my romantic nature.)
In 1994 a 25-ft Saguaro
that lived in my backyard fell over and died. I wanted to commemorate
its passing by recycling it wood-like skeleton to create an art piece that
showed its ancestral image. The skeleton was pulverized into handmade
paper and cast in the image of a man…. Saguaro man, the ancestor.
Since then I have made handmade saguaro paper into many human-like images.
My sculpted human figures still retain the Saguaro physique and rounded
arms.
When you tell people
that you use certain things in your work, all of a sudden that’s what they
give you as gifts. Since I started working with natural fibers, friends
and neighbors have called me to come get their fallen Saguaros. I
would never go out and kill a wild Saguaro for my work. Who knows
whose ancestor it might be?
Having tried the Saguaro,
I became confident enough to try “branching out” to using other desert
plants for papermaking. Most desert plants make beautiful paper.
The color /palette ranges from a silky gold to reddish brown maroon, the
colors of the desert. Joshua Tree is the lightest paper, almost white.
I now make paper using Prickly pear, Yucca, Tumbleweed, Agave, Palm Leaves,
Palm Bark, Palm Roots, Joshua Tree, Cholla, Ocotillo, Woodpeckers Birdsnest,
Palo Verde and, of course, Saguaro.