Art with a French twist
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Alicia Robinson
Bicyclists wave to shopkeepers as they navigate the slow-moving
traffic on a street packed with tiny, gaily decorated stores. The
scene could be an avenue in a French town, but it’s also what artist
Holly Wojahn sees when she looks out the window of her Balboa Island
shop.
Wojahn opened Melange, an art gallery and gift shop, last month in
a cozy space on Balboa Island’s Marine Avenue. She sells her original
paintings as well as reproductions of them on greeting cards. She
also offers items she’s decorated such as trays and watering cans,
and gift items she imports from France.
“I liked the idea of having sort of a fine art gallery but that
didn’t feel so serious and so uptight,” Wojahn said.
It’s hard to feel uptight in Melange, with its lemon-colored
walls, blue-painted doorframes and the rainbow of merchandise
arranged to attract the eye.
Wojahn’s bright, cheery store is a perfect example of the unique
shops on the island that are a far cry from the same old stores found
in a mall, said Caryn Kallal, a clerk in Shirley’s Heart, a home and
garden accessories retailer next door to Melange.
“Obviously we care a lot what goes next door,” she said.
“[Melange] actually fits in really well with what we’ve got going
here.”
A self-taught painter who grew up in Huntington Beach, Wojahn knew
very clearly from a young age that she wanted to make her living as
an artist. She studied art in college and 16 years ago she ran
another shop on Balboa Island, the Secret Room and Tea Garden,
selling items she painted.
When she got divorced 10 years ago she moved with the kids to
Paris and began concentrating on her painting career, inspired by the
colorful street scenes and the city’s Picasso Museum. Later, when her
children came back to Newport Beach, she began commuting. She now
spends about half the year in Paris, where she is represented by
Galerie Breheret, the oldest gallery in Paris, which sits opposite
the Louvre.
Various U.S. galleries also sell her work, which has been
described as colorist and expressionist. She uses vivid hues in her
paintings, which include French street scenes and interiors, such as
a room full of disarrayed chairs and books and a kicked-off shoe,
that have earned her comparisons to Henri Matisse.
“You don’t choose your style,” Wojahn said. “It’s sort of inherent
in you if you’re really honest as an artist.”
But she also makes her art accessible by offering smaller 12-inch
square paintings that bear uplifting sayings of her own invention.
“When life seems colorless, stand in a flowerbed,” is one example.
“Fine art isn’t for everybody,” Wojahn said. “Not everybody’s
going to walk into a gallery and drop $2,500 on a painting, but
[they] would like to own a piece of work by the artist.”
While she still has moments of trepidation about when her next
painting will sell, for now she’s enjoying running the shop, and
customers have shown their approval, she said.
“People are really, really getting it,” she said.
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