FRANCESCA
OWENS:
Painter of claws with a cause
By LOIS H. FEINSTEIN
Photography KIMBERLY DAWN
Francesca Owens sits in the solarium
at St. Joseph’s Hospital in
midtown Denver looking unexpectedly
vibrant and healthy in
spite of the multitude of sensors attached
to her body and the IV pole with its tubing
dripping drugs into her system.
The renowned wildlife artist had previously
planned to chat at her Littleton
studio until a little “glitch” came up — a
few mini-strokes she suffered after
scheduling the interview, necessitating
her hospitalization.
However, neither the strokes nor
the heart valve-repair surgery she
underwent two months ago have put
a damper on Owens’ enthusiasm for her current and future work. The tall,
athletically built artist, with searching
grey eyes and a shaggy Fawcett-do,
has turned her hospital stay into a
working opportunity. The staff has
kindly provided a laptop; the nurses
have been fetching her a Starbucks
cappuccino each morning, and
Owens’ portfolio occupies space on
her bed. One of the doctors has even
purchased one of her paintings. This
woman knows how to network.
Her energy and consistently upbeat
outlook have served the Bronx-born
Owens well in her transition from a
17-year career as a stockbroker to her
current niche as an internationally recognized
wildlife artist and environmental
spokeswoman. Her dramatic,
vivid animal paintings reflect Owens’
own larger-than-life personality. A
work called Pensive Zebra transforms
the animal’s standard black and white
stripes into an eye-popping mix of
blues and oranges.
“I love vibrant colors,” Owens
explains. “I use intense raw pigment and
the highest-quality paints. I am not afraid
of dropping chunks of paint onto a still
damp first glaze. I’m not afraid to take
risks with my art.” She also tilts her canvas
while painting so that the colors run
together to create unpredictable and
interesting abstract backgrounds.
A propensity for risk-taking was the
spur that convinced Owens to leave her
work in the financial world in February of
2001 and take up art without having
had any formal training. She enrolled in
art classes and was soon receiving critical
attention as an emerging artist. Spurred
on by her success, she sought out and
studied with artists whom she considered
masters, including Victor Martinez,
Stephen Quiller and Frank Francese.
Owens credits all three with influencing
her colorful, emotional and fluid
approach to painting.
During her studies with Francese,
Owens began to narrow her subject
focus to the animal kingdom. One of
her early works was discovered by Santa
Fe gallery owner Barbara Marigold, who
told the artist, “Francesca, your animals
are wild!” Marigold offered her Canyon
Road gallery to host Owens’ first exhibition,
fittingly titled Animals are Wild,
in 2005.
Owens soon found herself drawn to
tigers as a focal point of her work. Why
tigers? Looking back, the artist sees that
there were many signs along the way,
starting with her being born in the
Chinese Year of the Tiger.
“Also, I have always been drawn to
animal prints. All my clothes and all my home décor were either solid colors or animal patterns," Owens recalls. My friends realized it before I did. They said, 'Francesca, don't you know you've always had animal themes in your clothing and your home?' Until they told me, I guess it had always been subconscious for me." Even in the hospital, Owens wears a leopard print top, and her blonde hair is woven through with subtle orange stripes.
Once she started concentrating on
her tiger portraits, Owens began searching
for venues in which to market her
work. She contacted the Save The Tiger
Fund in Washington, D.C., and learned
that a highly placed executive of
Exxon/Mobil, a major corporate donor to
the Fund, had bought one of her tiger
paintings at the Santa Fe show and
shown it to the foundation staff. Taking
advantage of the opening, Owens presented
her work to Save the Tiger, which
promptly linked her with biologists
around the world working to keep tigers
from becoming extinct.
The information exchange was an eyeopening
experience for Owens. “When I
saw some of the photos of dismembered
tiger parts — tigers chain-sawed in half,
tigers caught in snares — they were
absolutely brutal,” the artist recalls. “At
that time, I felt another calling. I was not
going to paint only beautiful, vibrant
tigers, but I wanted to also convey the
danger these animals faced. That’s when I
conceived my second series, which I call
Did I Die in Vain?”
Feeling that realistic depictions of the
mutilated and trapped tigers would be
off-putting to viewers, Owens chose to
create hand-carved prints that use elements
of the photos in an abstract way. “I took the theme and reinvented it so it
could be displayed and therefore reach a
greater number of people than those
who might only read about it in environmental
journals or the newspapers,”
Owens explains.
The majority of the tiger pieces are rendered
in black and white to emphasize the
brutality and starkness of the subject,
which is supported by their titles, including
In Vain, Smuggled, Poached, and I Am
Being Farmed. Currently the entire series
can be seen at the artist’s Web site,
www.francescaowens.com.
Did I Die in Vain? is in the process of
becoming a traveling exhibition, having
picked up sponsorship support from a
variety of sources, including the Save The
Tiger Fund, Reed Photo-Imaging of
Denver, Colorado Lawyers for the Arts
and the law firm of Faegre & Benson.
Owens wants to double the number of
works in the show and plans to create a second series named
Beauty of the
Beast: Tigers Facing
Extinction. She hopes
to launch the completed
show in late 2007.
As a result of her
wildlife paintings,
Owens is recognized
not only as an emerging
artist but also as a
global tiger advocate.
However, her artistic
scope is not limited
just to animals.
Growing up with her
Italian immigrant
grandparents, she
reaped the benefits of
a close-knit Italian
family, including a
love of Italian art. In
1996 Owens went off
on a pilgrimage to
Italy to find her roots.
She contacted a number
of relatives who
still live there and
developed “amazing”
relationships with
them. She has traveled
to Italy every year
since and spends
between two and four
months there studying
and painting.
This past summer
she had two successful
solo exhibitions in
the town of Cortona
and was hailed by
Italian art critic Edo
Barzagli, who said of
her work, “The artist
stresses colors with a
chromatic and a
remarkable richness.
Francesca has a very
strong and expressive
poetic rendering."
Always open to
artistic inspiration,
Owens is currently
planning to use her
open-heart surgery
experience as a
jumping-off point for
a new cycle of works.
Although she has not decided on a precise
format, she asked for, and
received, some of the tubing used in
her surgery, which she plans to incorporate
into the pieces.
Owens also credits the surgery with
vastly improving her cognitive and color
senses as a result of increased blood flow
to her brain: “On the one hand this (the
surgery) has been a horrific experience;
on the other hand, I feel that I’ve been
given an amazing gift — the ability to
see things more clearly than ever. I can’t
wait to get started and see what this
blessing brings to my work.”