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McKenzie Birnie was born in Los Angeles in 1938. Her grandfather,
Johan Birnie, was from the old school of Dutch painters. He immigrated
to the United States and set up a studio in his house and worked there
daily. (See
a portrait McKenzie painted of her Indonesian grandfather and Dutch
grandmother) As a small child,
McKenzie would spend hour after hour on a stool in the corner of her
grandfather's studio watching him go through the various stages of drawing
and planning a composition, preparing a color palette, skillfully employing
his craftsmanship with requisite patience and endurance, and fastidiously
caring for his brushes and equipment - in short, preparing a reverent
welcome for the magic of his art. Before his granddaughter's
mesmerized eyes, blank canvases and inert tubes of paint were transformed
into vibrant stories of form and color.
This was a powerful process for an impressionable child to witness, and
the young McKenzie went on to apply her grandfather's lessons to her own
media and activities in life.
Another
childhood experience that would have a profound impact on McKenzie's
artistic formation was a move to a remote ranch in northern Nevada.
Under the wide Nevada sky, McKenzie discovered the elements of time and
space while making a strong connection with the natural world. These
elements shaped her life through school and the raising of her three
children, and continue to be reflected in her art today.
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| McKenzie Birnie received a Master's degree
in Fine Arts before launching into a full-time career in art. Using
weaving and mixed media, she created wearable art for Obiko and other
galleries in San Francisco and Northern California. A highlight of her
art career was when she exhibited her "Story Shirts" in the Salon des
Ateliers d'Art in Paris, which featured artists from around the world.
She now lives in Southern California and
recently has turned to telling her stories on large gourds using paint and
mixed media.
Online Gallery, McKenzie
Birnie
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