California Lutheran University's Student Newspaper Since 1961

The Echo

California Lutheran University's Student Newspaper Since 1961

The Echo

California Lutheran University's Student Newspaper Since 1961

The Echo

    Pearcing Through ‘Secret Paintings’

    From painting Snoop Dog and Master P, to working on theatrical set designs like Frankenstein and Hamlet, and being a published author, Dr. Michael Pearce, an associate professor at California Lutheran University, has had an art career thatโ€™s been nothing but unpredictable.

    Dr. Michael Pearce, the curator for the Kwan Fong taller and associate professor at California Lutheran University, standing in front o this painting entitled "Endless War."
    Dr. Michael Pearce, the curator for the Kwan Fong taller and associate professor at California Lutheran University, standing in front o this painting entitled “Endless War.” Photo courtesy of Dr. Michael Pearce.

    Born in England, Pearce was not the quintessential student, so his parents decided to send him to boarding school. There he discovered his love for art.

    โ€œI was a dreadful, dreadful student. The art room became my sort of refuge,โ€ Pearce said. โ€œArt for me became a wonderful, beautiful place where I could live.โ€

    After he graduated high school, Pearce attended an art school in England to learn, what he thought, was going to make skillfully made drawings and paintings. Instead, he said they taught him how to pile up pieces of foam and shoes. The school told him drawings were bits of string, and old art wasnโ€™t cool.

    โ€œI was strongly criticized for wanting to draw representational art and draw pictures of things as they actually were,โ€ Pearce said. โ€œI was told that it was all dead, and I became very depressed about it. I found myself feeling rather lost because there wasnโ€™t any room in that art world for me.โ€

    Pearce became turned off to institutional art and in 1990 he left England and began working on a Masterโ€™s Degree in theatrical set design at the University of Southern California.

    Pearce continued to paint on the side, but his career became set and lighting design.

    โ€œTheatre really kind of saved me creatively,โ€ Pearce said.

    In 2001, Pearce was a Deacon at the Bethlehem Lutheran Church in Granada Hills. Inside the church he had a painting titled โ€œBaptism of Christโ€ that hung right over the entrance to the main hall. A Cal Lutheran employee took notice of the painting and referred him to Jerry Slattum, the previous chair of the art department. Slattum liked Pearceโ€™s paintings and offered him a show in the Kwan Fong Gallery.

    Shortly after his show in the gallery, Slattum called Pearce and asked if heโ€™d consider teaching a printmaking class.

    โ€œI was in heaven. It was just wonderful to be back in art and especially in an institution which supported what I was doing. It was just great,โ€ Pearce said.

    Pearce left Cal Lutheran to teach at Westmont College for three years and returned in 2005 where he began teaching full-time and was asked to be the curator for the Kwan Fong Gallery.

    โ€œIโ€™ve loved running the Kwan Fong Gallery,โ€ Pearce said. โ€œIโ€™ve met some super interesting people and weโ€™ve showed all kinds of art in there.โ€

    Pearce said one of the most memorable exhibits shown at the gallery was the AIDS Memorial Quilt, an enormous quilt that commemorates the lives to those who have died from the disease.

    โ€œIt was very sad. For me it brought back a lot of memories of my brother-in-law when he died from AIDS,โ€ Pearce said. โ€œI nursed him during the last week he was alive, so that one really sticks in my memory.โ€

    One of Pearceโ€™s favorite shows at the gallery have been the โ€œMan Show,โ€ which Pearce said brought together some really fabulous painters including Jeremy Lipking.

    Aside from teaching and curating the gallery, Pearce has been the chair of The Representational Art Conference that began in 2012. According to TRACโ€™s website, โ€œIt is the academic conference for exploring representational arts place in the 21st century.โ€ TRAC is presented by Cal Lutheranโ€™s arts initiative. The next conference will be in November, and will feature Richard McDonald as a keynote speaker.

    Professor Terry Spehar-Fahey has been teaching in the art department since 2006 and is a big supporter of the TRAC Conference.

    โ€œThe enthusiasm these artists have for what weโ€™re doing and for Cal Lutheran sponsoring it. Itโ€™s pretty unbelievable when you hear famous artists talk about how much they appreciate what youโ€™re doing,โ€ Spehar-Fahey said.

    Spehar-Fahey said Pearce was instrumental in her position at Cal Lutheran.

    โ€œI admire his energy and his commitment to his ideas, and his persistence in the pursuit of excellence in his artwork and in his writing,โ€ Spehar-Fahey said. โ€œHe has done some amazing things while working here.โ€

    Pearce currently has an exhibit in Paso Robles called โ€œIn A New World,โ€ at the Studios on the Park Gallery, where his artwork is featured alongside two Cal Lutheran alumni students.

    Harold Muliadi, one of the alumniโ€™s thatโ€™s in the exhibit, majored in art and had four classes with Pearce.

    โ€œDr. Pearce, repeatedly modeling the techniques and behavior of a painter at work, was a valuable experience for me, and granted me more confidence as I created my own paintings,โ€ Muliadi said. โ€œSeeing my paintings up in the show alongside his was fulfilling.โ€

    Pearce recently published a book titled, โ€œArt in the Age of Emergence,โ€ he is currently in the process of writing another book on the art of kitsch. He also has an art show in Camarillo lined up in October, which he plans on calling โ€œThe Veils,โ€ and another show at the Museum of Ventura County in 2016 that he plans on calling โ€œSecret Paintings.โ€ Over the course of his career he has painted numerous portraits for artists and musicians.

    โ€œIโ€™ve been very, very fortunate. I love doing this, I canโ€™t imagine doing anything else,โ€ Pearce said. โ€œA lot of people have helped me and Iโ€™m really grateful for that because you canโ€™t do this stuff on your own. If youโ€™re full of yourself itโ€™s not going to work. You have to be thankful for the other people that help you along the way. And I think one of the most important things Iโ€™ve learned is to give back as much as you can.โ€

    One of the ways Pearce enjoys giving back is by teaching his students.

    โ€œThey come in here and many of them havenโ€™t ever picked up a paint brush in their lives, and itโ€™s so cool to see that moment of discovery when they realize they can do it and theyโ€™re good at it. Itโ€™s just fantastic. I love it,โ€ Pearce said.

     

    Daniela Abravaya
    Staff Writer
    Published April 29th, 2015