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"Elements to Light Your Way"

 

Sandra Wasko Flood

A versatile and prolific artist since 1970, Sandra Wasko-Flood's prints and photos, sculpture and large interactive installations, use expressionistic figures to focus on psycho-spiritual themes. Her symbols of goddesses and totems; wheels, spirals and labyrinths -- celebrate life's cycles --the stillness and the dance, the darkness and the light.

Having begun her career with studies at the University of California, Los Angeles, she studied at the Museo do Arte Moderno in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, and did graduate work in printmaking at the University of Wisconsin, Madison. She cites as major influences her three years sojourn in the exotic city of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil; numerous trips to the American Southwest, especially Chaco Canyon, New Mexico; and the stimulus of life in the nation's Capitol.

One of the first to give classes in monotype, she also teaches photo etching, and safe etching to children and adults. Her prints are in such local collections as the Library of Congress, the Corcoran Gallery of Art, and the National Museum of Women in the Arts; and internationally in the Modern Art Museum in Buenos Aires, and the Pushkin Museum in Moscow.

In 1994, she exhibited her first interactive installation, "Dance of the Labyrinth" at Gallery 10 in Washington D.C., and received an Individual Artists Fellowship of $5,000 from the Virginia Commission in the Arts to continue work on it. This participatory art, technological and spiritual, brings the archetype of the labyrinth into the 21st century with computer programmed lights, and photo transparencies under glass designed to be walked. Presently installed at her DC studio, and open to the public by appointment, her goal is to establish "Dance of the Labyrinth" as a permanent center for meditation and creativity, research and education.

Feeling now compelled to make labyrinths part of her life's mission, she receives public and private commissions to design and build them. She recently designed a labyrinth meditation wheel for the Potomac Hospital in Woodbridge, Virginia and is painting canvas and playground labyrinths with children in the DC schools through a grant from the DC Commission on the Arts and Humanities. As a founding member of the Labyrinth Society, she directed its inaugural traveling show, "Labyrinths for Peace: 2000" first exhibited in the Cannon Rotunda of the House of Representatives, Washington DC. Concurrently, she organized a "demonstration for inner peace" with opportunities to walk canvas and flag labyrinths on the east lawn of the U.S. Capitol.

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