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Mo Ryan

Surf Artist

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Mo Ryan

Northern California

Excerpts from article by
Ashley Schwellenbach, New Times SLO…

Mo Ryan is an artist who flows with the go (a favorite phrase of hers). She paints tow trucks to commemorate the many times her vehicle has been hitched up to one, and she almost always features a glimpse of surf in her work. It's the beach that creates a happy vibe in her images, letting the viewer know that everything's going to be okay--even if your car is getting carted away. And if her work must be labeled as "surf art," think of it as conceptual surf art, the thinking man and woman's visions of sand and surf.

Ryan started painting around the same time she started surfing: while obtaining a business degree at Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo. After taking a painting class, Ryan decided to extend her education's lifespan by pursuing an art minor. She eventually moved to Santa Rosa and got a job that made use of her business degree. When her stint as a business professional came to an end, she opted to return to the academic world of art at Sonoma State University where she was a sculpture major. While at Cal Poly, Ryan had learned to paint in acrylics, but at Sonoma she learned a new medium: oil painting. It was there that her skill as an artist was pushed in new directions.

The majority of Ryan's subjects come from life experiences, like her painting of a guy sitting in a golf cart and watching the surf, a longboard strapped to the roof of the cart. She saw him in Hawaii and knew that she had to paint him. Each of her tow truck paintings contains a different perspective. In Apartment B, Ryan created an inside perspective of a van equipped with a folding chair, guitar, and surfboard. A close look through the windshield reveals a limited view of an attached tow truck. Hana Hou, Hawaiian for "one more time," affords a view of someone surfing beneath the Golden Gate bridge. A mirror in the right corner of the painting reveals that the viewer is sitting in the passenger seat of a tow truck. The "one more time" refers both to another wave and yet another tow.

Ryan's playful approach to the fact that her car breaks down--a situation that might prompt most people to curse and demand "Why me?" --may be one of the reasons her paintings are so popular. She estimates that about 50 percent of her work comes from commissions. And a lot of non-surfers end up buying her work because the sunny, colorful subjects evoke ideas of escape and vacation. Original paintings and prints are available at www.MoRyanArt.com. Aloha!

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