About

I live, breath, and bleed my art which takes on a life of its own as it flows out from me.

Art fills our eyes when we open them and floods our minds when they are closed.

It is our nourishment and our vice, our spirituality and our demons.

It is our happiness and our sorrow and the beauty that is created from the alchemical blending of these opposite forces within all of us.

I am like you, and I am singularly me.

I am a bird, I am human, I am from here and from someplace else.

-Krisztina Lazar, 2012

 

Krisztina Lazar’s art can only be described as Pop Shamanism, a term she created in 2010, expressed through painting, performance art, video, textiles, drawings, and installations. Illustrating the internal through external spectacle, rituals, created or performed, her work seeks to highlight meaning in the mundane through a Jungian vision of our collective archetypes. Krisztina’s images focus on 80s cartoons, science fiction, memory, childhood, and fantasy, mediated by history and the now of pop culture. Her work is a dialogue between the ritual of imagery, the process of form and texture, and the performance of creation.

 

Originally from Cleveland, OH, she completed her undergraduate Bachelor of Fine Arts at Carnegie Mellon University in 2004 and recently completed her MFA graduate degree in 2011 at the San Francisco Art Institute New Genres department. Her paintings have been exhibited in group and solo shows throughout the United States and Europe, most notably at the H.R. Geiger museum in Gruyere, Switzerland. Krisztina mentored with several of the leading visionary artists of our time, including Martina Hoffman, Robert Venosa, and Brigid Marlin.   She has taught her own style of the mische technique to many students as well as a seminar at Carnegie Mellon University. Her work has been featured in multiple articles, online galleries and book publications. She currently lives and works in Oakland, CA with her husband, parrot and cat who are forever participants in her work.