THE SAN PEDRO SUN NEWSPAPER Volume 16, # 35, August 31st, 2006

Cover Story!
Proshka in San Pedro

On Saturday, art and book enthusiasts in San Pedro Town got the opportunity to meet and interact with Angela Gegg, artist extraordinaire. Referred to as the Juggernaut of Belize by the Belize Times, Angela delves into the world of painting, poetry and cooking. Art has been a huge part of her life and with the release of her book “The Light, The Dark, And Everything In Between,” plus the opening of her exhibit titled “Hott Chicks Can Paint Too” Angela is certainly a shooting star in the artistic world. A book signing and a mini-art exhibit was held this past weekend at Belizean Arts. It undoubtedly had aficionados gathered to enjoy Angela’s work. On hand to greet her fans, the beautiful blonde shook hands, mingled and gladly took pictures with all. Her book has been highly acclaimed by both critics and literary enthusiasts. With a witty tongue and no holds barred attitude, Angela’s work will certainly grab your attention. Unable to put the book down, you will dive into a world full of mystique, intelligence, and taboo. Angela’s artwork is very colorful, maintaining a familiar but yet clever and uninhibited edge. It looks familiar but unique at the same time, reminiscent of Andy Warhol’s form of painting, definitely great addition to any home or business wall. This juggernaut was the famous and popular icon/celebrity of the Cooking with the Smoky Mermaid show on Love TV. Angela has certainly made her mark in the cooking industry and without any doubt will make her mark in the world’s artistic field. Copies of her book can be found at Belizean Arts located at Fido’s Courtyard.

Angela Gegg, AKA Proshka the Artist, was at Belizean Arts for a book signing and also to present her artwork to the San Pedro public.

THE BELIZE TIMES The Juggernaut Beguiles Belize Review by Andrew Steinhauer

“Juggernaut: a massive inexorable force, campaign, movement, or object that crushes whatever is in its path”- Merriam-Webster Dictionary
“Chutzpah: gall, brazen nerve, effrontery, incredible ‘guts,’ presumption plus arrogance”- Leo Rosten’s The Joys of Yiddish.

Fasten your seat belts, the Juggernaut di cum! The Belizean Juggernaut is part painter, part poet, part essayist, part TV icon, part outspoken feminist, part photographer, part book publisher and part sex-pot. The Belizean Juggernaut is… the one… the only… the inimitable Angela Gegg.

Last week Angela Gegg was ubiquitous. Her flowing golden locks provocatively covering strategic portions of her quasi-nude photos adorned a banner across North Front Street. Her full color posters hung in shop windows and outside restaurants. Her book of poetry, “The Light, The Dark, And Everything In Between” was launched at a mighty media hoopla event which got extensive coverage on the nightly TV and radio news. She made the talk show circuit, chatting up her book on WAVE one morning and KREM (both radio and TV) the next. And Belize’s perky Juggernaut climaxed her hectic week of activities with the opening of her exhibit, sassily titled “Hottt Chicks Can Paint Too” at the newly renovated, classy Image Factory Gallery with none other than the Prime Minister of Belize, Said Musa giving the Opening Remarks along with dramatic readings of a selection of her verse. The girl has energy and pizzazz galore. angela-gegg.jpg Angela Gegg Angela Gegg, art impresario, publishing magnate and juggernaut extraordinaire is a first for Belize. The gal has undiluted chutzpah running through her veins. As a sociological-cultural phenomena Ms. Gegg is a force to reckon with. She defies classification and skewers all the usual references. In art historical terms Ms. Gegg is the reincarnation of Andy Warhol. She shares the same quirky sensibility, the same expansive repertoire of skills and even Warhol’s contradictory outlook: half cynical and half schmaltz. Warhol in his own non-linear logic way would refer to the “Art Business” and the “Business Art”. The emphasis on ‘business’ and not ‘art’. For Warhol business was the most significant kind of art. Within Warhol’s cagey, loopy world the best artist was the best businessman. No more were artists’ non-conformist visionaries lurking in the shadows on the periphery of life, but movers and shakers in the thick of the action. A radical change in perspective: individualism was out; professionalism and business acumen were in. Angela Gegg- the Belizean Juggernaut, in more than a few ways carries on Warhol’s tradition of “art as business”. And by the way Angela is quite a successful businesswomen. Check out how Angela slyly, effortlessly dovetails her art interests into her business interests. Television: Ms. Gegg’s trailblazing TV series “Cooking with the Smoky Mermaid” became a camp classic. “Cooking” was one of fledgling LOVE TV’s first home grown shows. Ms. Gegg and LOVE TV both learned the video ropes, live on air. Fundamental mise-en-scène video traits like editing, lighting, camera movement, focus and precise sound were discovered in a trial and error method that was painfully humorous. Our spunky Juggernaut used non-professional actors in her culinary variety show so at times the star chef was somewhat wooden and decidedly camera shy. To compensate for her staffs’ lack of video presence Ms. Gegg would emote in grand style. The bizarre juxtaposition between shy chef and animated, devil-may-care hostess created an appealing, raw energy and a number of chuckles. LOVE’s video foibles were laid bare. When glittery gay pianist-Vegas entertainer Liberace was asked if it bothered him that he was the brunt of so many jokes, Liberace replied, “I laugh all the way to the bank.” Laughing all the way to the bank is the best revenge. Thanks to Ms. Gegg’s physical attractiveness and vivacious video presence “Cooking” evolved into a cult favorite. Additionally her show gave LOVE TV some sorely needed legitimacy and a degree of professionalism not evident in their other programs. Business is the best art. Unconfirmed rumor has it that media whiz, Jules Vasquez, has enticed Ms. Gegg to join his esteemed Channel 7 crew. Surely a coupling made in heaven. Media Icon: Angela Gegg gives splendid, edgy interview. First off the camera loves her. The long, slightly disheveled blonde hair is a provocative icon in and of itself. Rapunzel, Rapunzel let down your gorgeous hair, baby. Icon locks, Goth make up and neo-vamp attire all add up to a striking visual. A visual that bewitches and beguiles. Then comes the throaty voice with its Fran Drescher (Nanny) nasal intonations. The beauty incongruously talks at times like a longshoreman. The amazing contrast between elegant visual façade and earthy, guttersnipe vocals instills her interviews with a wily, unexpected roots element. In terms of entertainment Ms. Gegg’s interviews are loaded with verbal fireworks. They are spiced with quasi-rude expletives and fearless frankness. Her outspokenness knows no bounds. Her rap has a surreal, stream of consciousness to it. The topics are tied together in some extra-logical plane deep in her psyche. One Mystical Mama full of arcane mumbo jumbo. After her incredible media blitz earlier in the day I noticed her book was selling at a pretty good clip at the art show opening reception Friday night. The Gegg factor: business is the best art. Poetry: Ms. Gegg’s slickly produced opus, “The Light, The Dark, And Everything In Between” is a quick read. The poems are divided into three sections: the first section is “the dark” which traverses some emotional minefields while delving into some taboo topics. Taboo stuff like penis envy, (If I Had a Penis) and pedophilia, (Tortured). The tone of ‘the dark’ is pessimistic, gloomy and angry. The second section, “Everything In Between” still deals with raw emotion, though the intensity is mitigated by a subtle undercurrent of tolerance if not quite optimism. Again in this section Ms. Gegg confronts taboos head on: in “Fornication” she tackles unwanted pregnancy, masturbation fantasies and separation, while in “My Memoir Of Marsha” she describes a drug addled buddy snorting cocaine. The third section- “The Light”- focuses on slightly more positive, slightly more touchy-feely topics. Still the general tone is more chip-on-shoulder insolent than honey-pie lovey-dovey. The girl’s got attitude. Even when she is ostensibly writing about lighthearted issues, the cynical edge hasn’t been dulled much. The fourth and final section of the anthology deals with Ms. Gegg’s paintings. It’s called “Angela Gegg as Proshka the Artist”. It contains a potpourri of descriptive poems, reproductions of paintings and manipulated photos. The images are bright and brassy; spontaneous and intuitive. Sixteenth century philosopher Rene Descartes divided man into two interrelated natures, a spiritual nature and a temporal nature; crudely put- the mind and the body. Ms. Gegg’s paintings and poetry are spawned primarily from her body, her temporal self. While her business acumen and media wizardry are more a product of her mind, her intellect. Painting: Angela Gegg’s painting is all visceral, emotional responses to her life and dreams. It’s a netherworld of physicality painted with controlled abandon. The Juggernaut’s paintings generally fall into the three different visual styles that were in her exhibition of June 2004 titled “Subconscious Works of Art” at the Mexican Institute. She uses three different iconographic forms, though the overall mood is one of spontaneous angst. One of those styles is reminiscent of the geometric distillation of the figure found in the Synthetic Cubist paintings of Pablo Picasso, Juan Gris and Georges Braque. In Gegg’s cubist-biomorphic surrealist paintings the image and the encompassing space are simplified to their basic, unembellished forms. In her modified cubist style Ms. Gegg juggles the anatomical forms and restructures them in non-logical, capricious ways. One critic called Marcel Duchamp’s cubist piece, “Nude Descending a Staircase” an “explosion in a shingle factory. In a totally non-derogatory manner Ms. Gegg’s cubist works are just plain explosive. They shatter conventional expectations and recreate reality in arbitrary ways. It’s Ms. Gegg’s theory of “body dismorphia” taken literally; the gap between self-image and truth is twisted out of shape. Ms. Gegg’s second style is an aggressive variation on Gestural Abstraction. A style of painting where the canvas is viewed more or less as an arena for physical confrontation between the artist and his/her emotional demons. A confrontation where the soul is exposed in all its anguish. The paintings reflect the turbulent mood swings of the artist. Ms. Gegg’s gestural work carries on the tradition of artists like Jackson Pollack, Willem de Kooning and Franz Kline. Capturing raw emotion is the goal of gestural painting. The third style in Ms. Gegg’s aesthetic repertoire juxtaposes two discrete types of paint handling layered one over the other. The lower layer is violently, aggressively non-figurative. She appears to attack the canvas in a wild, physical manner. Then very delicate, linear nudes are drawn over the residue of the gestural abstractions. The Juggernaut blends the physicality of emotionally overwrought brush strokes and elegant contour lines reminiscent of Hans Arp and Joan Miro at their lyrical best. She is a feminist Julian Schnabel; layering Descartes dualism in her recent work. The dichotomy that underscores Angela Gegg’s works is just how profound it is in terms of business viability. Angela Gegg, the unstoppable force- the Juggernaut- has single handedly ushered in a new era of Belizean art- the art of pushing all the most provocative buttons, stirring up controversy, marketing sexuality and foremost- the art of making money. Business is the best art.

Angela Gegg Opens New Show at the Image Factory

Tonight none other than the Prime Minister of Belize will officially open the second art show of Angela Gegg, the artist also known as Proshka. Earlier today, News Five’s Alyssa Noble got a preview of the latest exhibition to debut on the Belizean entertainment scene.
Angela Gegg, Artist
“Be unique and be creative. Don’t care what people think, do it for you, don’t do it for anybody and that’s me, I do everything for me. And I think that has caused my success thus far, because I’m not going to listen to people and paint the toucans, or paint the palm trees. That’s just not my thing.
Alyssa Noble, Reporting
“The artwork of twenty-six year old Angela Gegg is definitely not typical. In her second exhibition titled “Hott Chicks Can Paint Too”, Gegg unveils some forty paintings and digital drawings”.
Angela Gegg
“The digitally enhanced photography series, this is a collection I’ve been working on for the past two years since my first big show. I take digital computer images and I take them and I utilize color, shapes, forms I throw a lot of stuff into them. I saturate them; I take out hues and pretty much just go from there with the printing process from the ones that I find the best. Painting, I love to paint still yet but I’m just experimenting with new and different things. So this is what is coming out of that and you see a lot throughout the show of these types of works. Both my writing and my art are very therapeutic. You know a lot of people always ask me where I find the time to paint. Well any little two seconds I can take in my studio, I take out some paint, do a little bit, and get back to it when I come in from work, at night, on weekends. I wake up in the middle of the night sometimes, and say ?I have an idea?; ?I need to put it on?. I need to put it on canvas, on the p.c., or just on something. I really enjoy working with anything creative.
In addition to her art, this afternoon Gegg also launched her first publication called “The Light, The Dark and Everything in Between”. She describes the two hundred page book as an adventure for the intellect.
Angela Gegg
“I want my readers and my viewers to go through the negative aspects of the book with the more serious topics of conversation first. Then I take them to in between and in between is a place of disarray. I rearrange people?s minds; I talk about different theories, my analogies of different things, things that most people would never think about. And then of course I take you through to the light, because I want to end off the book on a very light-hearted, very nice note, where I talk about love and beauty and anything pretty in life, poetry. I even talk about diamonds; shining stones observing every ray and then I go off into a whole piece about very mundane topics, but also very beautiful topics.” “There’s a little bit for everybody in the book. If you are one person who can?t relate to my book, that?s not possible because there?s so much information in here. I fully believe that every single person can get something out of that book.”
Kara Nisbet, Attendant
“I’ve read the book, well some of the poems, well parts of it. It’s very good. Controversial yes, but I’m sure that everyone will love it. It’s for anyone, all ages. Maybe keep the little kids away from some of it, but it?s a very good book overall. I’m excited to read the rest of it.”
Eleanor Flores, Attendant
“Well I’m visiting from Chicago right now, and I was listening to the radio, and when I turned on my T.V. I saw her and it was very interesting. I liked the poetry and I liked the way she was carrying herself, especially when she was talking Creole. I said look at that white girl talking Creole.”
Maureen Utsman, Attendant
It was so much fun for me to sit with Angela and go over her readings. I’ve always thought she’s had such talent and that she?s very expressive. I’m a theater person myself so I have a deep appreciation for anything that’s creative and I think she’s very creative. The show will run for the next month at the Image Factory in Belize City.

http://www.channel5belize.com/archive_detail_story.php?story_id=16581

Many things Angela

FROM THE CHANNEL 7 NEWS NEWS ARCHIVES Many Things Angela posted (July 6, 2006) She’s rose to fame as the host of a cooking show, but Angela Gegg isn’t about to be pigeonholed as a kitchen queen. She’s shown her paintings and now, she’s produced an anthology of many-things-Angela. She told us about her book today, and why it’s called “The Light, the Dark and Everything in Between.” Angela Gegg, Author “I have just always written from pretty much since the day I was born. I’ve had a paintbrush in one hand and a pen in the other. I have always been writing. Writing is a comfort for me. It makes me feel good. I psychoanalyze different situations, analyze things, sit down and write about my ideologies in life. I have a lot in my head so I feel I need to get it out on paper. It’s very interesting. In my opinion it’s kind of scandalous. Hey I don’t mind, scandal is up but there’s a lot of topics in there that will interest people. (There is) Stereotypism, chauvinism, terrorism–everything is in there. I talk about love, poetry, art. You name it; it’s in the book. It’s all about everything and why not. People always ask why, I want to know why not. Okay I don’t write about birds and bees. Most books on poetry are about birds, bees, all these pretty little things in the world. That is not what I write about. I write about serious stuff. I am a very deep person. A lot of people do know me in that aspect of life but this is another side of me.” Excerpt from Book: [They clearly see my work to be too sexual. They cannot comprehend the fact that I am simply an intellectual because I use words as such like fornication, they assume that I compose my writings while in a state of pure inebriation because I may paint the breast of a woman’s child. These masses choose to create thoughts while I simply smile. I will smile at the masses from now and until the end of my time while I create compose and critically bloom.] Coming in at almost two hundred pages and including racy pictures of the author and her provocative paintings, the book will be officially released tomorrow. Find this article at:

http://www.7newsbelize.com/sstory.php?nid=7372&frmsrch=1

Angela Gegg Trades Spatula for Paintbrush

FROM THE CHANNEL 7 NEWS NEWS ARCHIVES Angela Gegg Trades in Spatula for Paintbrush posted (April 26, 2006) She’s the woman who turned cooking fine cuisine into pop culture, but while she takes a break from “Cooking with the Smoky Mermaid,” Angela Gegg isn’t using the off season to come up with new recipes, instead, she’s devoting time to her other life, as an artist. While most artists with a few canvasses to hang queue up for limited space in art galleries, Gegg has snagged a sweet gig that will see her paintings, a few dozen of them, line the walls of the Princess Hotel and Casino. For this artist, who’s not afraid to cook up a controversy, it’s an opportunity to draw reactions from folks who would never go to an art gallery. Angela Gegg, “Proskha” “I love the fact that people all over Belize, all over, travelers, anywhere in the world, people who come through this hotel, kids, mothers, brothers, aunts, and uncles can come and see my work. Its not like they are confound to this gallery where they have to go in and take a look at the work, everybody comes to the Princess. To me I am really honored, I am really dumbfounded by the fact that I am able to show my work here and that so many people will be able to be a part of what I create. That’s very important for me, for people to understand and see. Again not many people may like my style of work, I don’t really care. I want you to look at it and be your own judge. You don’t have to like it. I don’t know what reaction I am going to get, hopefully it’s a positive one from everybody. This is me, take it or leave it. I don’t select things to provoke people. I do purely because it is who I represent and who I am as an artist.” Gegg is warming up for a book launch and an Image Factory solo show in July. You can link to more of her work at Proshka.com. Find this article at:
http://www.7newsbelize.com/sstory.php?nid=6309&frmsrch=1

Women Speak through Art

FROM THE CHANNEL 7 NEWS NEWS ARCHIVES Women Speak Through Art: posted (March 7, 2006) This week is Women’s Week and while you can expect the usual workshops, forums, and parades. This year the Women’s Department has added an art exhibition to the list. The artists range from female inmates at the Hattieville to cutting edge artists like Angela Gegg. The show opened this afternoon at the Image Factory. Here’s what it looks like. Bernadine Waight, Inmate & Artist “For me I see that we were together as women and the theme we came up with, ‘united women working together for a brighter future,’ and this shows that we can accomplish whatever we put our minds to. At the end of the day it is up to us. Like I mentioned earlier, yes, we made mistakes and all we are asking society for is to give us a chance. If we fall yes we fall but we are asking society to give us a chance.” Carol Fonseca, Dir. Of Women’s Department “Today the work that you see here is actually the work of the female inmates at Kolbe Correctional Facility and also the work of women’s group throughout our country who the Women’s Department works along with.” The show runs for two weeks and is open to all. Find this article at: http://www.7newsbelize.com/archive/03070609.html
http://www.7newsbelize.com/sstory.php?nid=1336&frmsrch=1

Local Featured in CLICO Calendar ANTIGUA SUN – feature!

Local featured in ClICO 2006 calendar Saturday December 17 2005 ST. KITTS – The work of a Kittitian artist has been selected to grace the pages of CLICO’s 2006 calendar. Barbara Kassab, whose work often reflects Kittitian history, culture and nature, but who recently developed a penchant for portraiture, is one of the featured works of Caribbean artists, which are displayed on next year’s calendar. The 2006 calendar showcases original paintings and assemblages of 12 female Caribbean artists. “Their works, through abstraction and realism, depict the substantial impact Caribbean women have had on the social fabric of the region,” a release stated. Rest of th Article Beginning of the Article The release from CLICO stated that through its calendar initiative the company “hopes to encourage young would-be artists to follow their dream, but also to help facilitate greater trans-Caribbean interaction and the development of more corporate social responsibility programmes.” For the past 14 years, CLICO has produced the iconic calendar, which features the works of renowned and upcoming Caribbean artists who might not have enjoyed levels of success in their own country, but whose works can compete with any offering of the “developed world.” The 2006 calendar was launched in Port-of-Spain two weeks ago at CLICO’s Art Gallery. Other artists featured in the calendar are Daphne Meyer of Haiti; Belkis Ramirez of the Dominican Republic; Alcina Nolley (St. Lucia);Wendy Nanan, Trinidad & Tobago; Angela Gegg, Belize; Lillian Blades, Bahamas; Tina Rosita Ebanks, Cayman Islands; Susan Mains of Grenada; Akima McPherson of Guyana; Ilene Themen of Suriname and Joscelyn Gardner of Barbados.

Image Factory @ 10 Exhibition

Two well known organizations are today celebrating ten years of promoting the arts in Belize. This morning News Five spoke with the founders of the Image Factory and Stonetree Records to find out what they have accomplished and what are their plans for the future. Yasser Musa, Director, Image Factory “We have surpassed what we set out to do. When we started in 1995 with the first show with Gilvano and Sergio Hoare called the First Realist, our real plan was only to develop more exhibitions to document our visual arts.” Jacqueline Woods, Reporting Today the Image Factory celebrates ten years of promoting art through exhibitions in Belize. But as explained by its Director Yasser Musa, there was more than just displays going on North Front Street in the first decade. So what does the future hold for the Image Factory? Yasser Musa “Our view and I have tried to convey this to as many artists as possible, is to yes, have a respect for the history of what has taken place, and to kind of put it in a box and in that way try to erase it so that when you do future projects you are not obligated to what you did before because then you won’t be fresh and you won’t be innovative. But our agenda for the future is to be forward thinking as we were in the first ten years and try to develop new expressions and try to uplift the next generation of visual artists. We hope the next generation of artists will see the first ten years as something that they can look to. So that is our hope.” Works that have been exhibited over the past decade form part of the anniversary celebration.

Additionally, artists who have not yet had their pieces promoted at the well-known gallery have also been invited to be part of the event. Yasser Musa “We have gotten a good response. We’ve gotten over sixty works of art, by over sixty different artists, most of them from Belize?over fifty of them. But we’ve had artists that have exhibited here from Cuba, Guatemala, Honduras, as they have too sent in their works.” There are also plans to renovate the Image Factory so cruise ship tourists and other visitors will be able to access the facility from the riverside.

It was a double celebration occurring over the Belize City Swing Bridge as Stonetree Records is also celebrating its tenth birthday. Ivan Duran, Managing Director, Stonetree Records “Since we started in 1995, the idea was to start producing local artists, which you probably remember back in 1995 there were no recording studios in Belize, so artists usually had to go abroad to record, if it was Guatemala City, L.A., New York, or even Mexico City.” “We started by recording local artists in Belize. The only other attempt in the past was made by Andy Palacio and Sunrise Records, which they used to have a little studio at the old Bliss, but that was limited production, mainly cassettes. So in 1995 Stonetree was the first company to put out a locally produced CD, which was Andy Palacio’s Keimou album and Bredda David’s Raw CD.”

In the past ten years, the company has produced twenty-five recordings. One issue that remains very much a concern is copyright that does affect the production of music. Ivan Duran “Because at the end of the day it’s about the public realizing that the only way they’re gonna have new music is if they support the music that is available now by buying original products. And that’s the only way that we can continue to produce music and that’s the only way why artists will ever pay somebody to go into a studio to record. So that’s very critical and we are very fortunate also that in Belize our market has sustained the industry up to this point. We depend one hundred percent on the local market.” Duran says he remains encouraged by the fact that they have not seen many instances of local works being pirated. This Duran believes is because Belizeans are beginning to support their local artists.