Honoring the Artist: Gia Schifano
By Marion Wolberg Weiss
Family homes have a special meaning
for this week's cover artist, Gia Schifano. Perhaps this is one
reason that her pieces often feature private dwellings in landscapes.
The following conversation is indicative of Ms. Schifano's connection
to the idea of family. It's interesting to note that she is also
a thirteenth-generation Long Islander.
Q: Tell us about the house in the
cover painting and your own family home.
A: The cover house is in Southampton
- I painted it during this past February. The style is typical
of what I do, realistic. My family has a home in Southampton,
too - my parents bought it 50 years ago. We would spend the weekends
and the summers there. We still go there, after all these years.
Now, my husband and I take our son and daughter. Once we cross
the canal, we decompress. We leave our problems at home. I thank
God every day that my parents bought that house. It's where my
heart is.
Q: I bet it means a lot to be by
the water when you come to Southampton, especially when you live
up island in East Williston. You're lucky to have such a nice
setting in which to paint. Are there artists in your family?
A: My mother and aunt took art
classes and painted. In fact, it was my mother who encouraged
me to do art and to participate in Guild Hall's Clothesline Sale
each summer. I really like doing that and being able to go back
and see that someone has bought my work.
Q: You must have been interested
in art as a child.
A: Yes, I was. I used to do charcoal
portraits of my friends and their boyfriends in high school.
Q: Although you had no formal training
in art, what kinds of things have you done since high school that
helped you become an artist?
A: I learned by doing. For example,
I worked at a retail art store. I learned a lot there and I loved
talking to the artists who came in. I also worked for a woman
who designed high-end pillows. I would paint floral arrangements
on the pillows for her.
Q: What are you working on currently,
now that you've learned so much?
A: I do commissions, like painting
a popular barn on the North Fork. And people ask me to paint on
different things, especially their mailboxes.
Q: When you're not painting or
taking care of your family, what do you like to do?
A: I like anything that has to
do with the arts. I like to sit on the deck with my family - everyone
plays music.
Q: Obviously, painting is your
favorite thing to do. Why do you think that is?
A: I'm always in awe of the creative
process, more so than the actual result. It's a huge bonus if
people also like my work.