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Barbara Rachko

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Nationality
  
American

Website
  
Barbara Rachko


Name
  
Barbara Rachko

Alma mater
  
University of Vermont

Residence
  
Alexandria, Virginia, New York City

Occupation
  
Visual artist, blogger, author

Barbara Rachko - Artist Spotlight (Traditional) - October 2018


Barbara Rachko is an American artist and writer best known for her Mexico-inspired large artistic works that utilize soft pastel-on-sandpaper.

Contents

Career

In 1986 while working at the Pentagon, she began to study figure drawing and medical anatomy, and began developing her craft. Rachko subsequently resigned from active duty (but remained in the Navy Reserve and retired as a Naval Commander in 2003) to devote herself to making art.

Rachko is drawn to Mexican and Guatemalan cultural objects like masks, carved wooden animals, papier-mâché figures, and toys for reasons similar to those of Man Ray and the modernists, who in their case were drawn to African art. On trips to southern Mexico and Guatemala she frequents local mask shops, markets, and bazaars searching for the figures that will later populate her pastel paintings and photographs. She takes very old objects with a unique Mexican or Guatemalan past (most have been used in religious festivals) and gives them a second life.

Rachko won a 2008–09 Joyce Dutka Arts Foundation award and multiple grants from the Templar Trust in Lichtenstein.

Works

Both of her pastel-on-sandpaper series "Domestic Threats" and "Black Paintings" use cultural objects as surrogates for human beings acting in mysterious, highly charged narratives.

Rachko also has created a series of photographs entitled "Gods and Monsters". In these chromogenic prints, she is "painting with a camera," creating variations that free the camera from being a mechanical recording device of what lies before it. She prints all of these images by hand.

The earlier "Domestic Threats" pastel-on-sandpaper paintings used her West Village apartment or her 1932 Sears house in Virginia as a backdrop. The "Black Paintings" series grew directly from "Domestic Threats". In the "Black Paintings" the figures (actors) take central stage. All background details, furniture, rugs, etc. have been eliminated and replaced by intense dark black pastel. Each painting takes months to complete as she slowly builds up as many as 30 layers of soft pastel.

She has also written an e-book, From Pilot to Painter and writes a regular blog, Barbara Rachko's Colored Dust. Rachko has been featured in media including blogs, radio, magazines, and was a featured artist on La Maison du Pastel.

Background

Rachko was born in Paterson, New Jersey and grew up in Clifton, a New York City suburb. She graduated from the University of Vermont with a degree in psychology. At the age of 25 Rachko learned to fly and became a private pilot, earning an instrument rating, commercial pilot's license, multi-engine rating, and flight Boeing 727 engineer's certificate over the next two years. She studied art at Art League School in Alexandria, Virginia and International Center of Photography in New York.

On 9/11 her life was drastically affected when her husband, Dr. Bryan C. Jack, was killed on the plane that hit the Pentagon.

References

Barbara Rachko Wikipedia


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