S' aw 3 ^£-53^ as H rS'S -5.< I mo I sro g.s 565- 5bC5 cover story The Arts Council’s Local Color Gal lery, 310 University Dr. in College Sta tion, will display Hillier’s work on friday from noon to 1 p.m. The exhibit will last through Feb. 28. For more infor mation call 268-2787. Karen Hillier’s artwork is unique in its form and in its meaning. She’s mas tered the art of computer-generated artwork with much of her inspiration stemming from her personal experi ences. The 43-year-old artist and professor at Texas A&M had her first child two and a half years ago. “Much of my artwork grew out of the experience of having a child, both the gestation period and the birthing experience,’’ Hilliersays. “Pregnancy is a very emotional ex perience for a woman," she says. "It’s much more intense than falling or be ing in love with someone.” Her son, Sam, was born on July 4, 1988. After several miscarriages, she and her husband agree that Sam was “very hard to come by.” Experiencing all the enthusiasm and excitement of having a child and her new fascination with computers, Hillier directed her energies to pursu ing a different kind of artwork. She plans to exhibit her art in a show titled “Cardinal Points” Jan. 18 - Feb. 28 at the Arts Council’s Local Color Gallery. This exhibit isn’t the traditional art show. You won’t find any canvas paintings or sculptures, but you will find images she has created on the computer. Hillier explains the process. It be gins with taking any number of items, such as photographs from books or snapshots and everyday objects. These images, along with images cre ated exclusivley in the computer, are manipulated by the computer. “The computer acts as a central point of collection for the digitized images,” Hilliersays. “Once inside the computing environment, it is possible to work with the pictures in any num ber of ways." The computing tools in a computer are equiv alent to those tradition ally found in an artist’s studio: paint, scissors, glue, patterns and fonts for text. “When an image file is completed it is output to 4 inch by 5 inch film via a camera located in the computing system,” Hillier says. “Lastly, the negatives are printed as transparencies which closely resemble what the artist sees, or as conventional photographic prints." “Cardinal Points” debut will be the first solo show for the lo cal gallery. And, the first time for Hillier to utilize only black and white. “In the past, I used a lot of color with my photography and paintings,” says Hillier, who graduated from the University of Texas with a bachelor’s degree in fine arts in painting and then pursued her master’s degree at the Univeristy of Illinois. But this time, the artist says she had a different motivation to work solely with black and white artwork. She describes an unusual, eerie and mysterious place she often visited in her dreams, while pregnant with her son. “In my dream, I would go to an underground place. It often reminded me of a place where the tree roots grow. It was a mysterious, dim-lighted and swampy atmosphere. Somehow, I knew that was where life was made.” Hillier felt this dream place was strongly connected with her pregnancy. “When you're pregnant, your dreams are unlike anything you’ve ever experienced before,” she says. “You go to bed knowing you’re going to have these vivid and active dreams every night. “I’d talk to other women, who were pregnant, and they’d ask me ‘What about the dreams?’ I knew exactly what they were talking about.” Sometimes frightening but more mysterious, these dreams strongly affected her work. As a result, Hillier says that tends to make her artwork kind of “spooky.” page 6 the BIRTH of her ART By Yvonne Salce Photos By Phelan M. Ebenhack Top: Karen Hillier examines some of her artwork on a light table. Above: Karen’s husband, Tom Woodfin, displays the sheep sheers used in one of her pieces of art. When you’re preg nant, you’re in between worlds - one world of life and the other of death, she says. “There's a strong sense of being con nected with the child prior to birth, and at the same time it’s a weird experience carrying this creature inside of you that you can’t see.” It isn't difficult to see the relationship of birth in Hillier’s artwork. In fact, two of her pieces do just that. One of Hilliers’ pieces uses a pair of scissors on a black background. Beneath the scissors re- ads the question, “Would you like to cut the cord ?” One's first thought is that of a new born's umbilical cord be ing cut from the mother; which makes perfect sense because that's exactly where Hillier was inspired. “Would you like to cut the cord ?” says Hillier, "were the exact words the doctor asked my husband in the delivery room.” Picking up the pair of rough and rusty scis sors she used in her art work, Hillier demon strates how tough it was to actually cut the cord. Somewhat amused and surprised she says her husband was amazed how much he had to work to cut the cord. Karen met her husband, Thomas Woodfin, at Texas A&M, where he presently works as an assistant professor in land scape architecture. Hillier also works in the architecture de partment, where she teaches video and photography. Until re cently, a masters of science in visualization science didn’t exist at Texas A&M. Hillier worked in getting the degree approved by the state. Married for six years, Hillier says her husband has always been very encouraging and supportive of her artwork. “In fact,” she says, “he is quite creative himself.” Both Hill ier and her husband share a common interest in the southwes tern and Indian culture of New Mexico and Arizona. In another piece of computer-drawn artwork, Hillier depicts the shadow of a human body. In the abdomen is the image of a rope tied in a knot. “The image of the rope came from a book that was lent to me by a friend,” Hillier says. “For me, any kind of object, includ ing the computer is fairgame.” Hillier, first became interested in computers during her pre gnancy. She admits that her first attempts with the computer were awkward. “As a painter, I could easliy identify with the process of mixing the paint and manipulating the strokes with a brush," she says. “With the computer, your hand never touches the art work. You don’t even look at the mouse as it creates an image on the screeen.” Once passed the initial awkwardness, Hillier became a master with the tools of computer art. "I found that a computer, with all its advantages, is very much like a well-equipped artist’s studio,” she says. With the computer, you can try an endless number of things, Hilliersays. “Unlike painting, you don’t have to risk changing a color or shape, in fear that you’ll have to start over. The com puter allows you to save, re-do or throw away an image. It makes bring ing in text much easier and allows you to make marks that can’t be dupli cated in the studio.” Hillier’s open-mindedness and en- thusiasn to use the computer, exhibits her willigness to try different things with artwork. ■ “I have a wide interest in all differ ent types of media,” she says. “Any thing you pick up can be a tool." Although, she realizes the skepti cism some tradtional artists may have with creating artwork on the com puter. “Some see it as a cold medium and others just aren’t familiar with its meth- odolgy,” she says. She says with today's society be coming so dependent on computers, it’s no surprise that computer gener ated images are all around us. Hillier says her early pieces of art dealt with Sam, but also couldn’t help being influenced by cultural values. Her interest in the people and cultures of New Mexico, Arizona and The Four Corners inspired her to create the work “Day Pieces.” “ ‘Day Pieces’ deals with people and how they extend outward to oth ers, but at the same time have to main tain their own identity,” explains Hill ier. “We all want to be strongly seen as individuals. And, we all want to stay in tune and identify with our culture. But, we also have to get along, knowing when to come together and when to stay away.” She sees this type of dependent relationship happening with the peo ple in these states. “I feel like I have close ties there (New Mex., Ariz.) and feel very much at home,” says Hillier. “You have three seperate entities, American Indians, Anglos and Hispanics all having to get along.” The image in 'Day Pieces’ resem bles a backwards swastika, the Nazi symbol, and originated from the Hopi Indians. When Hillier first saw the sign, she says she felt an enormous attraction to it. “I kept wondering why I had this magnetism to that symbol,” says Hill ier, “Finally, I decided to use it and it means a great deal to me." The image is used a lot in Hillier’s 24-piece exhibit. ‘Cardinal Points’ will also include some of Hilliers’ photog raphy. When time and money permit, she does travel with her artwork. Through the 1989 SIEGGRAPH Traveling Art Show, her art has been shown in Aus tralia, Spain, Western Europe, Boston and is presently in Moscow. Hillier hopes her artwork will speak to other people and give them insight. She says “All I can do is put my own experiences out there, being very specific and honest, with the hopes that it’ll tap into something into some one else. “What richness they gain is up to them, f can’t dictate or manipulate their experience. I just hope they have one.” page?