Date: Fri 31-Jul-1998
Date: Fri 31-Jul-1998
Publication: Bee
Author: SHANNO
Quick Words:
Evans-Pawlikowski-Players
Full Text:
Living A Creative Life, Laura Evans Follows Many Paths
(with photos)
By June April
Laura Evans' life could be likened to a triptych. There are basically three
parts, or panels, to her life, yet it is still one picture. Whether wearing
the hat of artist, landscape designer or singer, this attractive woman
acknowledges that she gets a kick out of mastering whatever she attempts.
A Connecticut native, Laura was born in Bridgeport Hospital almost 40 years
ago. Her family lived in Trumbull until moving to Easton while Laura was in
the third grade. The youngest child of the family, Laura laughs when she says
its something she has in common with one of her favorite painters, Rembrandt.
"I always felt different from the other members of my family," Laura mused
recently, "though my father, who was an attorney, had a creative bent but
little time to act on it." Laura and her husband, who live in Newtown, now
share their "creative bent" occasionally as a team in productions at Newtown's
Little Theatre. Laura's life also follows a number of other paths.
It was during high school that Laura found the direction her life would take.
Art teacher Florence Nevelson became Laura's mentor and friend, underscoring
once again the influence fine teachers can have on one's life.
Flo encouraged the budding artist to take summer classes at Staples High
School in Westport with Jim Wheeler. Nevelson and Wheeler had both studied
under the sculptor Michael Skop, who would later prove to be a great influence
on Laura.
Upon graduation from Joel Barlow High School in Redding, Laura attended the
University of Connecticut's main campus, in Storrs. What she found there did
not suit her, so she decided to transfer to Northern Kentucky University. On
the faculty at NKU was one Michael Skop.
After graduating from Northern Kentucky with a bachelors degree in fine arts,
Laura began working closely with the then-retired Skop. Laura worked as Mr
Skop's studio assistant and taught plaster casting.
"It was a very intense and pivotal time for me," she acknowledged. "Michael
Skop was like one of the old maestros. He mostly talked about philosophy,
aesthetics and phenomenology... he never showed you how to do things or what
materials to use."
Influencing, but not imprinting his style onto his students, was essential to
Mr Skop's teaching philosophy, Laura learned. Yet the rapport between student
and teacher did not ensure that sculpting was Laura's particular artistic
niche. In fact, it was during one of Mr Skop's drawing classes that Laura
first started using pastels, and gradually focused primarily on that medium.
A series of odd jobs sustained her after graduation. "I did color separation
in lithography, worked in a frame shop, and to bring in some extra money, I
accepted an offer to clean up the garden of one of my mother's friends," she
said, adding with a laugh, "That's how I got started with landscape work.
"I also get great satisfaction from landscaping," she said. With word-of-mouth
her best advertisement, Laura's business has continued to expand. Spring
through fall, Laura is now constantly busy digging and designing.
To enhance her knowledge and gardening skills, Laura commuted to New York for
a number of years in order to take classes at the New York Botanical Garden.
She eventually earned a landscape design certificate. She also holds a master
gardener certificate from the Co-operative Extension Service, located in
Bethel.
When the gardens are bedded down for the winter, Laura claims special time for
herself, to hibernate and re-energize. When she feels balanced and
re-motivated, her artistic talents largely claim her time.
Shift now to the third panel of Laura's life: singing. Laughing at the irony
of it all, Laura attests to the fact that she loves silence.
"I've always sung in choirs, and in college I did take voice lessons," she
recalled, "but the teacher wasn't very good. When we moved to Newtown, I
joined the Newtown Choral Society to get socially involved in our community."
Laura has been singing with NCS for eight years now.
Music has brought more to her life, she says. It was thanks to performing at
an open mike while at college that Laura became intrigued by the master of
ceremonies at a local club. She and that gentleman are now husband and wife.
"Two years ago I started taking lessons again," she said. "I wanted to
improve, and Lucybelle Anderson has become more than my teacher. I like
talking to her and being with her each week." Is she a good student? Well, Ms
Anderson recommended her student to a church in Danbury, which now pays Laura
to sing on Sunday mornings. Her eyes widening, Laura says, "I'm thrilled to do
it."
Singing also helps Laura and her husband, Rob, to spend time together. Both
were involved in Newtown Town Players' production of Shakespeare's As You Like
It two years ago. The sweetness of her voice was a delight, making quite an
impression on audiences and critics alike.
Though not vocally involved in the current production at the Players' Little
Theatre, Laura designed and painted the sets for The Rivals . A recent
presentation of the show provided a memorable evening. (Husband Rob
Pawlikowski is a raucous, ribald character in the delightful production).
The couple's charming house has, of course, a lovely garden and numerous
potted plants on the deck. The vegetation is quite healthy, growing larger
than most others seem to manage in the area. A sign out front would read, "A
woman with a very, very green thumb resides herein."
When asked how she is able to do all that she does and still be so balanced
and (appearing) relaxed, Laura erupts with a huge laugh and two words: "I
compartmentalize." This seems to be working well for her.
Winter affords the time to go to a special place for the refueling of Laura's
creative juices. A small center, rather like Thoreau's cabin in the Walden
Woods of Massachusetts, exists in Indiana. It is to this locale, The Mary
Anderson Center for the Arts, that Laura migrates to paint, regardless of the
weather.
Her work has been in 17 exhibitions. It was most recently the focus of a
one-man show in the gallery space at McLaughlin Vineyards in Sandy Hook. Found
within the main building of the vineyard's lovely rustic setting were pastels
of Laura and Rob's cats, some still lifes and wonderful landscapes. There was
one image of the property at Ms Anderson's home that was particularly
peaceful. Viewers could almost smell the woods, and feel the air of the scene.
"I seek to draw the viewer into an atmosphere, both sensuous and spiritual,"
explained the artist in one of her artist's statements accompanying the
McLaughlin show.
A number of her pastel works were sold last month, and another solo exhibit is
already scheduled at McLaughlin Vineyards for June of 1999.
Laura has also done illustrations for Orion Magazine , and drew the botanical
specimens that illustrate a fascinating book entitled Rainforest Remedies .
Laura's intent is to transfer her full experience -- including sight, sound,
tactile and emotional qualities -- into her art. This sharing of the senses is
carried through in her landscape designs, theatre sets and even in her
singing.
She has known pain in her life, with the death of her father when she was 14
years old, and later the death of her older brother. But she has the love and
belief of family and friends, and equally as important, the belief in herself.
She has consciously embraced a philosophy she heard expressed many years ago
from Florence Nevelson: Live a creative life, and live it creatively.
Laura Evans continues to be open to exploring life, and the opportunities that
come her way. Hard work does not put her off. On the contrary, she seems to
savor challenges and the pleasure of growing.