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From Many Wounds We Bleed
Steve Cavallo Solo Exhibition

Steve Cavallo is an artist living in New Jersey. Since graduating from the School of Visual Arts in 1979, his art has been exhibited nationwide in art galleries and reproduced on book and magazine covers for over three decades. He works in a variety of mediums, especially watercolor, in a style that might be called dramatic realism. The human figure is a defining element in his work, as stories of real people's lives are told with pathos and joy. Recent exhibitions include Eulogies (solo exhibition) at Western Gallery in Los Angeles, I came so far for Beauty at Riverside Gallery in Hackensack, NJ, and There But for Fortune (solo exhibition) at Eunnam Museum in Gwangju, South Korea and Comfort Women in George Mason University in Virginia.

As an adolescent, his interests in art and music had always evolved around human rights issues. In his youth, the protest songs of Bob Dylan and Phil Ochs sparked his interest in equality and injustices.

As Cavallo began his studies at New York¡¯s School of Visual Arts, his work gravitated towards the issues of the abused, the misguided and the oppressed. He work several years freelancing for the NAACP doing an annual calendar for Carver Federal Savings Bank as well as group exhibits on Human Rights.

 
 
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In the early 1990s while traveling on Highway 395 near Independence,CA. Cavallo saw a sign for the entrance to Manzanar Relocation Camp. He pulled into the historic site and photographed the remnants of the camp. "It was such an eerie feeling, to walk among the ruins of what was once a prison camp for people who were innocent; they just happened to be of Japanese ancestry.¡± Weeks later when returning home to New Jersey he began a series on the internment camps, speaking to a former prisoner of war who spent 3 years of her youth in a facility at Tule Lake.This small series of paintings was part of several art exhibits and eventually, after spending sometime on the back burner, it re-emerged and became part of a series entitled ¡°Playing Army¡±, which were watercolor paintings of children playing with action figures. The action figures, which were painted as the green plastic soldiers that many children played with in the 1960s, depicted the atrocities of war. Green action figures of holocaust victims, internment victims, orphans and widows of fallen soldiers as well as ¡°Comfort Women¡±.

¡°Beginning this series, the term Comfort Women was new to me. A neighbor suggested to me, if I was going to portray the horrors of war, I should do some research on this subject. I began reading a book by Dai sil Kim Gibson entitled Silence Broken, testimonies of former sex slaves, and began work on a group of paintings that would eventually lead me to Korea and to become the designer of the first memorial dedicated to Comfort Women in the Western World¡±.

In 2008, after being interviewed by KBS, a Korean news station, He was invited to Korea to meet with 8 of the surviving victims from this World War II atrocity. In September of 2008 he flew to the House of Sharing in Gwang Ju South Korea and spent a week with these women getting to know them.

Upon his return, he met with several Korean interns and members of the Korean American Voter¡¯s Council to discuss the possibility of doing a memorial for these women in America. ¡°I contacted the Mayor of Palisades Park, James Rotundo who had been a longtime friend of mine, and explained who comfort women were. He immediately said that he was interested in working with me on this project and the wheels were in motion¡±. One year later, in October of 2010 they unveiled the first memorial dedicated to this issue and these women. Following this historic event, Cavallo was invited to exhibit at the Kupferberg Holocasut Center in Queens NY and then to Korea for a solo exhibit at Eunnam Museum in Gwang Ju.

In July of 2012 he exhibited in Los Angeles CA at the Gallery Western where the exhibit was covered by Fox International news. This exhibit has now been followed by another group show in Fairfax Virginia featuring seven artists who all focus their work on Comfort Women, including author and filmmaker Dai Sil Kim-Gibson, who wrote the book that he was inspired by many years ago when he began this series.

It is now 2014. Steve Cavallo still works on the comfort women issue. He has been fortunate enough to have been able to work in some way on three of the eight memorials dedicated to Comfort Women. His newest exhibit at the Nabi Museum of the Arts is entitled ¡°THROUGH MANY WOUNDS WE BLEED¡± and will be on display from August 3-30 at the museum inside the World of Wings Complex. These large watercolors focus on the day to day struggles that the women endure, rather than touching upon the war years, a subject the women themselves would rather not talk about.

Cavallo is honored to be joined by two former ¡°Comfort Women¡± Ok Son Yi and Il Chul Kang on the first of the two receptions he will have at the Nabi Museum. On August 4that 3pm, Halmonie Yi and Kang will meet with Cavallo and view the exhibit. The public is welcome to attend. On August 9that 5 pm there will be a Meet the Artist Reception where all are welcome to see the exhibit and enjoy light refreshments.

In 2015 Steve Cavallo will exhibit at John Jay College of Criminal Justice in New York City in a two person exhibit called ¡°Of Human Bondage¡± exploring Human Trafficking past and present.


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