“Much of the Art of Hula is an expression of the Hawaiian culture, which is deeply connected to nature. It is my intent to portray this relationship to nature by using the wood as an organic background and applying the color in multiple layers creating a luminous work of art both visually and spiritually.”Joëlle C.
“Much of the Art of Hula is an expression of the Hawaiian culture, which is deeply connected to nature. It is my intent to portray this relationship to nature by using the wood as an organic background and applying the color in multiple layers creating a luminous work of art both visually and spiritually.”Joëlle C.
“When given the opportunity to choose the unfamiliar path, most of us prefer the safety and comfort of the known. In Joelle’s work, we find evidence of one who is willing to find new insights in unfamiliar territory, and it has made all the difference. Her path opened new and unpredictable visual experiences for her, her fellow artists and patrons.”Dick Nelson
All that has changed now. After a two hour interview and a good look through Chicheportiche’s portfolios, I realized her present course and style is indefinable. Labels and categorizations simply slide off her shoulders and land on the ground at her feet – or where her feet once were. She’s already off to her next project.
Chicheportiche has covered an amazing amount of territory, and covered it well. Somewhere along the line an art teacher advised her, “Don’t be in a rush to make a statement,” and she took the advice to heart.
“I’m not in a hurry. I’m happy with what I’m doing and I’m free,” explains the artist. Looking around her studio I was forced to agree. She was free to produce the most expressive, refined statement on marine art I have ever seen, capturing the true essence of the ocean with the delicate touch of a master. This was not the hackneyed, garish, souped-up version of Maui whales, but a quiet, mixed media expression of natural peace and order.
In another piece, she was free to create an extraordinary view of what it might look like underwater, when molten lava plunges into the ocean – a view I’d never contemplated. Again, it was not a Hollywood production of explosiveness, but rather a quiet meeting of primal energies.
Although Chicheportiche herself is an outstanding teacher in several styles of expression and media, she felt totally free to study figure drawing with another local teacher. The resulting piece, a pastel entitled “Red Hair Woman with Blue Ribbon” is breathtaking.
Chicheportiche is perhaps one of the most uninhibited and unencumbered artists I’ve ever
met. She is on a quest, but not a frenzied one. In talking with her one gets a feeling of an unlimited expanse of time and possibilities stretched out before her. The past has unfurled itself with opportune, and occasionally, miraculous precision, and it seems the future will also find her in the right place at the right time.
The artist originally hails from Paris, France. At the age of sixteen she moved to the French Alps, and then to the south to attend the University of Aix-en-Provence. From her earliest childhood, she remembers thinking ” Being an artist was the best you could be.” By the time she reached college age, she had modified her vision. Finding the possibility of the “starving artist” unappealing, she set her sights on becoming an art professor, and went on to earn a degree in fine arts.
A vacation to America changed her life. After a visit in New York, she traveled to Montreal, Canada, where she saw her first full-scale mural. “I looked up and thought ‘This is it – this is what I want to do.'”
Returning to the South of France, she began to research murals. Finding the world’s great muralists were from the Mexican school of painters, she made up her mind to attend Mexico’s University of Guadalajara in the following year. For the next several months Chicheportiche worked as a waitress to earn money for her tuition.
One week before the young artist was to leave her job and head for Mexico, a group of Mexican tourists came into the restaurant where she worked. In talking with the visitors, she found out that one man was engaged to the daughter of the professor with whom she would study in Guadalajara. Another man was a former director of the same school. Delighted with the chance encounter, the gentlemen arranged for Chicheportiche to attend school tuition-free, and be provided with a place to live.
Looking through the artist’s photographs of work from this period reveals a side of Chicheportiche that few here on Maui could imagine. Her diversity, and willingness to leap into new dimensions, colors and forms is awe-inspiring.
At the end of her first year in Guadalajara, she was given the honor of painting a mural at the school where she studied, and was later commissioned by the Mexican government to paint another mural in a newly-constructed experimental school. She had several shows of her work, and in 1975 was awarded first prize at the “International Year of the Woman” in Mexico.
Chicheportiche’s work was warmly received by even the harshest critics. One man described her mural (translated from Spanish): “In one of the most difficult forms of expression, the mural painting, she achieved impressive results in attacking the thorny problem of joining a monumental message, rich in its spiritual content, with an aesthetic formula, valuable, accessible, and easily understandable, without falling into popular demagogic painting so often found in the works of so many mural painters.”
Chicheportiche has now directed her talents to island landscapes and plant life. In her upcoming show at the Lahaina Arts Society, “Maui Land, Light and Colors,” she will express the side of Hawaii that “most touches her heart.” The show will include recent multi-media works utilizing oil, mono-print, and hand-made paper.
It is a pleasure to see an artist move with such consummate skill through so many mediums. A sense of celebration, a recognition of the profound order of the natural world, and a fundamental feeling of peace are somewhere present in each of the artist’s works.
Attracted by the merging of cultures in a place where nature is still in the making, Joëlle has been residing on Maui since 1982, the place she now calls home.
In 1989, Joëlle was one of the founders of Viewpoints Gallery of which she is presently the Art Director. Introducing shows that make art an integrated part of the community and displaying them masterfully has been a big part of her artistic endeavors.
Her efforts and achievements in this field led her to being asked to install the ‘Art Maui’ annual juried exhibit at the Schaefer International Gallery, Maui Arts & Cultural Center since 2009.
1975 International Year of the Woman in Mexico, First Price
1985 “World Festival of the Underwater Image”, Nice, France
1987 Lahaina Arts Society – Statewide juried show, Acquisition Award by Hawai’i State Foundation on Culture and the Arts
1988 Hawaii Craftsmen, Following Sea Award Collaboration piece ‘Fiber and Paint’ with Theo Morrisson
1989 Hui No’eau Annual Juried Show, Best in Show, Collaboration piece ‘Fiber and Paint’ with Theo Morrisson
1990 Art Maui – Pledge Purchase
1989 / 1990 / 2001 / 2002 / 2003 / 2008 / 2010 Art Maui – Juried Exhibit
1992 / 1993 / 1995 / 1997 / 1999 / 2000 / 2002 / 2004 Solo Shows at Viewpoints Gallery
1997 Hokule’a Show, Maui Arts & Cultural Center
2001 Solo Show at Axis Gallery, Tokyo, Japan
2003 – 2011 ‘Back Room Artists’ shows at Hali’imaile General Store
2003 / 2007 Schaefer Portrait Challenge Juried Show, Maui Arts & Cultural Center
2010 Art Maui selection for 2011 publicity image
2013 “Hawaiian Art & Artifacts, Sullivan Collection” @NBMAA, Hartford, CT
2019 Studio Tours event in Lahaina
2002 “Shining Through”
2003 “New Works”
2005 “The Color of Light and a Flight”
2007 “Testimony of Harmony”
2009 “Earth and Water”
2010 “Four Artists”
2012 Grand Opening of new Joelle C Gallery
2015 New works by Joëlle C., Mary Ann Leigh and Karuna Santoro
“Aloha Expressionism” book presentation and signing
2018 “Memories of Water”
2002 Hawai’i Watercolor Society – Juried Show
2006 Invitational ‘Luminosity: Color exploration with Vanishing Boundaries’
2008 Invitational ‘East-West’
2012 Invitational ‘Color, Light and Space’
2014 Invitational ‘Relationships and Collaborations’
2016 / 2017 / 2018 Invitational ‘Reaching Out’
2004 – 2016 ‘Malama Wao Akua Annual Juried Show’
2006 – present ‘Celebration of Hawai’i’ Annual Invitational
2016 Invitational ‘Hawai’i Contemporary’
1989 Founding member & President of Viewpoints Gallery
2004 – present Vice President, Art Director and Installations, Viewpoints Gallery
2009 – present ‘Art Maui’ Annual Juried Exhibit – Installation at the International Schaefer Gallery, MACC
1987 – present Member of the Maui Aikido-Ki Society; Achieved the rank of Yondan (4th dan) black belt
2016 Juror and exhibit installation of Art Kauai
2019 Juror and Exhibit designer for the 2019 Mālama Wao Akua Exhibition at the Hui No’eau
Attracted by the merging of cultures in a place where nature is still in the making, Joëlle has been residing on Maui since 1982, the place she now calls home.
In 1989, Joëlle was one of the founders of Viewpoints Gallery of which she is presently the Art Director. Introducing shows that make art an integrated part of the community and displaying them masterfully has been a big part of her artistic endeavors.
Her efforts and achievements in this field led her to being asked to install the ‘Art Maui’ annual juried exhibit at the Schaefer International Gallery, Maui Arts & Cultural Center since 2009.
1975 International Year of the Woman in Mexico, First Price
1985 “World Festival of the Underwater Image”, Nice, France
1987 Lahaina Arts Society – State wide juried show, Acquisition Award by Hawai’i State Foundation on Culture and the Arts
1988 Hawaii Craftsmen, Following Sea Award Collaboration piece ‘Fiber and Paint’ with Theo Morrisson
1989 Hui No’eau Annual Juried Show, Best in Show, Collaboration piece ‘Fiber and Paint’ with Theo Morrisson
1990 Art Maui – Pledge Purchase
1989 / 1990 / 2001 / 2002 / 2003 / 2008 / 2010 Art Maui – Juried Exhibit
1992 / 1993 / 1995 / 1997 / 1999 / 2000 / 2002 / 2004 Solo Shows at Viewpoints Gallery
1997 Hokule’a Show, Maui Arts & Cultural Center
2001 Solo Show atAxis Gallery,Tokyo, Japan
2003 – 2011 ‘Back Room Artists’ shows at Hali’imaile General Store
2002 – present Solo Shows at Joëlle C. Gallery, Lahaina
2003 / 2007 Schaefer Portrait Challenge Juried Show, Maui Arts & Cultural Center
2002 Hawai’i Watercolor Society – Juried Show
2006 Invitational ‘Luminosity: Color exploration with Vanishing Boundaries’
2008 Invitational ‘East-West’
2012 Invitational ‘Color, Light and Space’
2014 Invitational ‘Relationships and Collaborations’
2016 / 2017 / 2018 Invitational ‘Reaching Out’
2004 – 2016 ‘Malama Wao Akua Annual Juried Show’
2006 – present ‘Celebration of Hawai’i’ Annual Invitational
2016 Invitational ‘Hawai’i Contemporary’
1989 Founding member & President of Viewpoints Gallery
2004 – present Vice President, Art Director and Installations, Viewpoints Gallery
2009 – present ‘Art Maui’ Annual Juried Exhibit – Installation at the International Schaefer Gallery, MACC
1987 – present Member of the Maui Aikido-Ki Society; Achieved the rank of Yondan (4th dan) black belt
2016 Juror and exhibit installation of Art Kauai
2019 Juror and Exhibit designer for the 2019 Mālama Wao Akua Exhibition at the Hui No’eau