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Alexis Koome

Art Battle 373


The original article as sent to the newspaper: In October 2014 Art Battle—an event focused around live, competitive painting—made its local debut under the guidance of Angela Hillier, an artist who had just moved to town from Ottawa. After completing her Fine Arts degree, she participated in and began volunteering at Art Battle there, and brought what she learned to Victoria.

“There are three rounds, and 12 artists compete at every event,” she explains. “Six artists are in each of the first two rounds, and the audience then chooses the top four, who move on to the third and final round. So each event’s winner is doing so with two paintings, between their first round and the final one.”

The night’s overall winner gets $100 and advances on to the city finals, which take place in June. The medium used is always acrylic paint, and the finished works go up for silent auction at the end of the night. There’s no theme and no guidelines for the artwork produced, only the time cap of each round being 20 minutes long.

“We don’t want it to be limiting in any way,” says Hillier. “We don’t want an artist who usually does portraits to come here and have to be stuck painting a landscape.”

Art Battle is a fun and different way for visual artists to interact with each other, and it also gives onlookers a peek into the creative process. Watching first-hand as a blank canvas becomes a complete work of art adds sentimental value when a painting is then taken home and mounted on a wall.

“Painting is interesting because usually you do it alone in a studio and you could work on [a piece] for months if you wanted to, and people only see it when it’s finished,” says Hillier. “Here, they see the whole process and the artist can’t second-guess anything because it’s all intuition; there’s no time to step back and reassess.” When she first arrived in Victoria, Hillier noticed a lack of events tailored towards new artists. Having now taken part in both sides of Art Battle, she has more so enjoyed helping the event gain its footing. The reception for being able to witness a painting’s entire development was widely welcomed by the audience. “As an artist I really liked painting in it but as an event organizer I prefer it much more because I’m giving opportunities to artists. I think it’s really important that people dedicate their time to ensure these sort of events continue, to encourage new artists to express that creative outlet.”

After seeing how quickly Art Battle became popular, Hillier branched out to create modified versions of the event to encompass other art forms. Completely separate from the Art Battles happening nationwide, she started another monthly event, Art Cafe, in November.

“Art Cafe is more relaxed, not a competition,” she says. “Artists have their work for sale and there’s live music as well. Also, once a month, they alternate back and forth between large-scale and regular-sized paintings. And a trajectory of that turned into Tattoo Cafe in January; after talking with some tattoo artists we got them involved with live tattooing at the Cafe events.” ~ a link for the edited version printed in Nexus Newspaper: http://www.nexusnewspaper.com/2016/03/16/art-battle-brings-competitive-painting-to-victoria/


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