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Oddaja Profil_Tjasa Rener, 23.9.2020, RTV Slovenia (broadcast)

V oddaji Profil se bo voditelj Boštjan Jurečič pogovarjal s slovensko slikarko Tjašo Rener. Renerjeva ima za seboj zanimivo zgodbo, saj se je že pred leti preselila v Gano. V Gani si je ustvarila življenje in tudi umetniško kariero.

Profil je pogovorna oddaja z veliko obrazi, ki jo zaznamujejo različni profili - različni voditelji in različni gostje. Skupno vsem je aktualno dogajanje na področju kulture, umetnosti, kulturne politike in družbe. Teme so vezane predvsem na aktualne dogodke, s katerimi odkrivamo profil gostov.

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BLACK LIVES MATTER!!!

Although my art works are well accepted and my art practice appreciated, I still feel i would like to explain myself- why I mainly paint portraits of black people and why as a white woman I paint black portraits?

If you are looking at an artist’s practice, it is good to look at their entire practice. I was always a figurative artist. Human body was always main subject i paint. A motivation. An Inspiration. 

Moving to Ghana years ago was very new to me. I spend most of my adult life here and I call this place home. Placing myself in a very remote village helped me to better understand the local people, their traditions, culture and the meaning of tradition in their lives. A natural step for me was to start to portray the people i lived with and people who surrounds me daily. I paint by live model few times a week- a quick, 45 minute sketch of a neighbours:  fishermen, young mothers, the chief of the village, his family and others. 

Moving to Accra I started to become fascinated by how people in this city are making their living. I started to portray people in their daily habitats. I turned my sketches into large paintings, combined with a lot of materials and added symbolism. 

While working on my large canvases, I continue to sketch random people once a week. My models here in Accra are usually unemployed or panhandlers or simply the people who want to be painted. 

I feel, in that way, we help each other- while I am playing with paint, observing their faces and body so precisely, they rest and enjoy looking at my work evolving in front of their eyes and slowly turning to something.  I usually end up with some good, but also some very bad sketches, while they walk home with a fair daily payment. We learn from each other and we inspire one another.  

I prefer to paint a woman’s body. It inspires me- the curves, the power,… I found many Ghanaian women to be fearless, strong, proud and therefore beautiful.  

I’m not looking for models that fit the traditional standard of beauty. I want my models to be themselves. It is very much about the woman and the power behind the woman. 

 In this way I started to dig back in my brain and noticed that every person who influenced, encouraged and supported me to pursue my artistic career was female- my mother, my high school art teacher, my university mentor. I connect them with  some other women who shaped me into who I am today (by the music I listen to, books I read) and in one way they helped me to better understand myself and also a life here in Africa. In their honor I started to work on small portraits called MUSES. 

2020 has started and I know it is a significant year for me. It will be my first year after university that I decided to fully pursue my art career. I’m going over a lot of changes and in this moment I look to these powerful women as motivation. Motivation to keep on going and not give up. At the same time this is reflected on my larger canvases, too. I have started to see my models as my muses. And that’s exactly who they are- a personified force who is the source of inspiration for a creative artist. I place them on my large canvases, right in the center. They become attention and I let them be seen. 

BLACK LIVES DOES MATTER!!!

Tjasa Rener

 

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Jackson's Painting Prize

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Painting ‘In the Garden’ was shortlisted for the Jackson’s Painting Prize. Also shortlisted under category People’s Choice Award- YOU CAN VOTE HERE

Joseph Oduro-Frimpong about Tjaša Rener New Works “Muses”

Tjaša Rener: New Works

“Muses”

 

 

Have you ever been so inspired by a particular set of seemingly mundane interactions with another person(s) that it grounded your confidence and eventually stimulated your creative energies to produce something novel? Or has any event in your life ever caused you to fall into a spell of serious thoughtfulness?

 

In Ms. Rener’s new body of work, the definite ‘yes’ to the above questions are not mutually exclusive. And it is from these answers that we grasp the two varying senses of “Muses” - the theme for these new works. The muses for these pieces that we engage with here date way back to certain important women who inspired, presided over, supported and encouraged Rener’s artistic interest, education and eventual career. The first set includes her mother, her aunty, her high school teacher, and her university mentor (University of Fine Art, Ljubljana and Zagreb). The second set includes powerful women like Nina Simone and Maya Angelou. These women, in their own respective ways, helped Ms. Rener to understand and accept herself as an artist. Within the context of the current paintings, the muses are ostensibly ordinary Ghanaian women as well as portraits of empowering females. For Rener, those who posed for this current body of work as well as the portraits of such personalities such as Michelle Obama and Chimamanda Adichie embody fearlessness, strength, pride and beauty. And it is the cumulative energy in these traits that animates  the current pieces on display. 

 

If the powerful goddesses referred to above (and in whose honor Rener dedicates this work) instigate the creation of these pieces, then the finished products also act as muses for the artist in another sense. In delving into this second understanding of ‘Muses’, we are interested in how the works (and perhaps all the artistic choices involved in producing them) act as moments of pause for her to reflect on the subjects she visualizes for us. Here, the specific concern Rener ponders gestures towards how some audiences might question her audacious decision to paint a portrait of black people. For her, such a concern is not an issue, as one can trace this choice simultaneously to some of the influences underpinning her work and the roots of her artistic practice. Here, we learn that the focus of Ms. Rener’s work, notwithstanding her location, is not only the everyday people that she encounters in her daily life but also influential female personalities. As well, we also become aware that her visual practice revolves around spotlighting dignified human figures as an essential theme. And it is this entangled perspective of mediating dignified (ordinary Ghanaian) females via painting and printing that we encounter in these masterfully crafted colorful artworks.

 

It is my hope that through this exhibition, your daily interactions enable you to solidify your confidence to create something new (or even acquire a new artwork!) as well as trigger serious consideration on your daily actions.

 

 

Joseph Oduro-Frimpong

Centre for African Popular Culture

Ashesi University

 

MUSES art book

AVAILABLE SOON!!!

Art book with a title Muses will be published on February 2020. Book contain collection of 15 high quality digital prints of Tjaša’s latest collages. They portray powerful women whose work and actions inspire an artist. Book is designed in a way that each digital print can be removed and used as an individual artwork.

Catch a glimpse here !!!

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