If
you've lived in Utah for more than a few years then you're probably
aware of the The Road Home homeless shelter and the annual
fundraising drives held around the holidays to benefit those in need. But what isn't highlighted is that their organization needs help
year-round, both financially and in goods and services for those who
find themselves working through one of the worst times in their
lives. Its that kind of need and outreach for public support that
inspired the event we'll be talking about today.
--- Submerged
In Art started last year as a one-night only event featuring some of
Utah's finest up-and-coming artists, donating their works to raise
funds for the worthy cause. Giving members of the community a
chance to both help out and take home an exclusive piece of artwork.
Last year's event raised over $4,000 and almost assuredly guaranteed
its return this year, starting at 6PM tonight at 2275 South Highland Drive
(above The Tap Room) and going until last call downstairs. I got a
chance to chat with the event's founder, filmmaker Iosua Tai
Taeoalii, about himself and the plans for tonight, along with some
thoughts on local art. All with photos from last year's event.
Iosua
Tai Taeoalii
http://www.submergedinart.com/
Gavin:
Hey Iousa! First thing, tell us a little bit about yourself.
Iosua:
Evaluation of self is such an awkward thing... but here I go... I have
a beckoning passion for creation and I exert all of my being into it
whether it be of importance, like a commercial piece for a client or
whether it be something simple, like the landscape of my yard. I'm
easily agitated and, quite honestly, a nightmare to be around if I've
been creatively stagnate for a long period of time. A certain amount
of neurosis runs in the family genes and it shows it's ugly face when
I'm at my most creative, but I try and use it as a tool rather than a
handicap. That said, I'm a simple guy, with usually silent opinions,
a passion for filmmaking and a strong dedication to my
family.
Gavin:
What first got you interested in filmmaking, and what were some of
your early influences?
Iosua:
When I was ten years old, at a sleepover party, we watched "The
Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2" and followed that appetizer up with George Romero's "Day Of The Dead" entrée. The following
morning I had my mom drive me over to The Costume Closet to buy fake
blood, latex and anything else related, cause I knew that I wanted to
be a special F/X artist like Tom Savini. In the following years,
armed with a prepubescent angst and a HI-8 video camera, I started
making short horror movies with the neighborhood kids. So my early
influences were people like Tobe Hooper, Wes Craven, Clive Barker and
George A. Romero. It wasn't until I saw "Pulp Fiction" for the first
time that I realized I had to make movies. I saw that movie sixteen times
in the theater and that was it, that was what I was gonna do with my
life... Make movies. Fortunately my parents were supportive of the
ambiguous dream and the summer after I graduated high school, they
flipped the bill for me to start film classes at the U.
Gavin:
What made you choose the U for your degree and what was their
program like for you?
Iosua:
I'm a mamma's boy and didn't want to stray to far from family, so
the U was the obvious choice for me and at that time I remember it
being a solid program, which it probably still is. Just to verify
though, I never got my degree. My second year in, a professor sort
of hinted to me that I should consider dropping out. I felt like I
knew what I needed to know about movie making and I got the sense
that he knew I had aspirations of shooting a feature. So I think his
suggestion was, rather than spend my money on college, I could spend
it on a movie. So at eighteen, I dropped out and shot my first feature. A
fantastic decision too, cause the absolute best way to learn how to
make a movie is to MAKE ONE.
Gavin:
Almost immediately out of high school you started a production
company called Weird Chief Pictures. What made you want to start your
own so quickly?
Iosua:
I was infatuated with Quentin Tarantino. Seeing "A-Band-Apart"
at the first of all his movies, I just thought that was what you do.
I was really just being a copycat. Quick thing about the name of my
company. I don't consider myself to be weird and don't necessarily
even like the word "weird", but in high school, while
experimenting with things like LSD and Dramamine, I'd deviate and
while we'd be trippin', my friend, Dewey, would always call me the
Weird Chief. Well, he died when we were seventeen and so when I was
thinking of a name for my company, that just seemed right, in honor
of Dewey. Worked out too, cause it's a name not easily
forgotten.
Gavin:
Since starting the company you've made several films. What has it
been like for you creating full-length movies, and has it gotten
easier over time or is it always a challenge?
Iosua:
The process of making a film, features particularly, is much like
the process of raising children. If you've never done either then I
don't know any other way to describe it to you. But for those who
have raised children, you know that around every corner is a new
challenge and the only surprises are when there are no surprises. I
will tell you this, I am most passionate about making movies. Every
aspect of the filmmaking process works for me mentally. And, no, it
really never gets easier. If it ever got easy for me then I'd know
that I'm doing something wrong. When something becomes easy for you,
it just means you're not pushing yourself creatively.
Gavin:
You've also created a few local television series, including the
long lost “3.2 Percent”. What made you want to branch into
television, and what was that like compared to filmmaking?
Iosua:
Oh yes, the long lost "3.2 Percent". I loved making that
show and often times wish I was still doing it, especially when I'm
at a cool event in Utah, cause I imagine "3.2" covering it.
That was a fun show to do and I learned a lot about this land of
Zion and the people who exist here. I never really wanted to go into
television, but again, it was something new, and at that time it
seemed like an adventure I wanted to involve myself in. I learned
quickly that television was not for me.
Gavin:
Since then you've also become an artist, mainly working with
spraypaint and acrylics, but also focusing on photography. What made
you want to jump into art after film?
Iosua:
Well, I've actually always used art as a way of paying the bills,
with tattooing friends and painting commissioned pieces here and
there, but making independent movies isn't always the most lucrative
business, especially when you're doing most of the financing
yourself. I found I was spending more money then I was making.
Around the time I gave the axe to "3.2 Percent" I was
facing a foreclosure and a pile of unpaid bills. So to do the
honorable thing, I made arrangements to start a new job tying rebar.
I hadn't worked a real job for 5-6 years, so this was a big deal.
The Sunday night before my first day of the dreaded construction
life, I was scrambling trying to figure a way to avoid it. A few
days prior, I had painted a picture of Miles Davis for my wife
Adrienne for her birthday and without her knowledge, I decided to
list it on eBay. Just to see if there'd be interest in it. In less
than an hour, the painting sold. So after apologizing to Adrienne, I
painted a few more and those sold. As you can imagine, I killed the
construction gig and started painting pop art and selling it on eBay.
Pop art was really happening at the time and there was such a demand
for my work that I had my wife quit her job and pick up the can.
Luckily she herself is an artist, so we were both painting like, thirty pieces a week. That was six years ago, and since that day, my wife and
I have literally sold thousands of paintings all across the world.
We've got paintings in Israel, Hong Kong, Africa, Cyprus, Vietnam,
Chad, Jordan, South Korea, Japan, Italy, France, Germany, Sweden,
Switzerland, Denmark, Iraq, Jerusalem, all over the UK and holy shit,
on and on and we even have pieces in all fifty states. So the painting
is paying the bills right now, but I can tell you this, I'm itching
to shoot a movie and I've got a fantastic one on the burner. Expect
to see a big picture from me in a year or two.
Gavin:
With the various artforms you've done, why did you choose to take on
so many rather than stick with one and master it?
Iosua:
That's how I continue to push myself and keep things fresh. I've
really done it all and each medium has it's own certain charm for me.
Like a cage fighter, I'd rather be well trained in multiple fighting
styles than mastered in just one. Talk to Matt Hughes 'bout
that.
Gavin:
Where did the idea come from to start up Submerged In Art?
Iosua:
I have a lot of idle time in the winter, so I had been stagnate for
a while, and as my wife jokingly says, I was feeling a lack of
attention. I had an urge to do something huge... something
creative... something different. We were driving through the SLC and
I saw an empty building and thought "that'd be a great place for
an art show", and just like that, the wheels were turning.
Here's the thing, I've never felt comfortable laying claim to the
title of an artist. "Engineer" works for me, so with that
mindset I've never fit into any kind of art scene, but I do have a
sincere yearning for my work to be appreciated in my home town. I'd
been getting so much attention worldwide, and yet, on my own stomping
grounds I felt neglected and so did many of my other suburbanite art
friends. Our scene involves mortgages and children, so being part of
any hip scene doesn't currently work for many of us. So last year's
show was a way for me to help my friends show their work in an
environment that they didn't really have the opportunity to do.
Having it be a charitable event for the Road Home just made
sense.
Gavin:
With all the charities and organizations in town, what influenced
you to specifically focus on The Road Home and the work they
do?
Iosua:
There are many struggling artists out there on the brink of being
homeless themselves and with that in mind I had the idea to see if
there were any artists that were clients of the Road Home who would
like to display their work. Then the idea naturally grew to having
the show be a charity event for The Road Home. Last year we featured
Josh Sloan who was a seventeen year-old artist who was at the Road Home with
his family at the time. Of what we did that night, as far as the
money that was raised and the amount of people that were in
attendance, seeing Josh sell his work and noticing a new sense of
hope and inspiration in him is what gave me the best feeling. This
year we'll be featuring two artists from the Road Home and I'm
excited to see their work and hope that we're able to double the
funds that we raised last year.
Gavin: Last year the event raised $4,000 by night's end.
Did you know then you'd be bringing it back or was it kinda
in-the-air at that point?
Iosua:
It originally was just gonna be a one time thing, but the energy at
that show was incredible and I received so much positive feedback
that it was a quick realization that Submerged In Art was
gonna make a return. I sincerely hope for it to eventually become a
staple event in Utah. Right now it's a one night only show, which I
like, cause of the exclusivity of it, but in the future years to come
we may expand it to a three day show, and maybe even later a month long
show.
Gavin:
What made you choose the old Sit N' Sleep building on Highland for
the location?
Iosua:
Sugar House is such a cool area, especially right there on Highland,
and it's a damn shame they tore that whole corner down to just have a
big, ugly empty space. It makes no sense to me. I remember when I
was growin' up, that area seemed like the hippest place to be. It
was always so packed with weirdos, beatniks, and all the kind of
people I wanted to hang with when I grew up, then in a blink of an
eye, there's a big pit there with nothing. Makes me sick... Anyway,
I digress... Sugar House just feels right to me. So naturally when my
wife and I were scouting locations, we drove through Sugar House and
the Sit N' Sleep building was the first vacant building we saw and I
knew right then that was gonna be the place. The added benefit of
having a bar downstairs is awesome. Last year we weren't able to
obtain a liquor license so we pumped all the guests up with energy
drinks and coffee. It's always nice to have some sort of social
lubricant at an art sow. So having The Tap Room downstairs is perfect and with a $3 donation to the Submerged In Art show, you'll be provided with a drink ticket that can be redeemed at the Tap Room for one beer. Valid that night only and until supplies last.
Gavin:
What was it like getting The Tap Room involved with the event and
using their place?
Iosua:
When I told Dennis, The Tap Room owner, about our operation and that
we wanted to do it upstairs, he was incredibly helpful in contacting
the landlord, who by the way donated the space for the night. So to
thank Dennis for his assistance I decided, rather than pursuing a
liquor license for the event, that we'd just send our guests to drink
his beer.
Gavin:
What was the process like in getting artists, many of them brand new
to the art scene and very experimental, on board to
contribute?
Iosua:
Artists are hit up all the time to donate pieces to charity events
that are used to raise money and they always do, but with the Submerged show, the artwork is a means to get people to
gather, the prizes donated by local businesses are the means to raise
the money. Each artist will also donate a portion of their sales
from the night and they are encouraged to donate a work from their
collection to a silent auction, where all the proceeds go to the Road
Home. Nine times out of ten, when you ask an artist to participate in
an event like this, it's an enthusiastic "YES". I also
brought back a lot of the artists from last years show and then added six more. Submerged started out as a way to show the
artists who don't always get the Utah praise, the underrated and
often overlooked artists and I'd like to try to keep it that way,
even with myself. In the future, If ever at any point I feel like
I've over-saturated Salt Lake with my work or that I've become too
popular, I'll pull myself from the Submerged show.
Gavin:
For a quick rundown, who do you have on display this year, and what
other events have you got planned?
Iosua:
Myself, my wife Adrienne Taeoalii, Troy Henderson and his wife
Trisha Henderson, Brian Gerber, Adam J. Woolsey, Mason Fetzer, Adrian
Prazen, Kali Mellus, Sonya Evans, Veronica Perez, Kat Martin, Darrell
Driver, Sandy Parsons, Alex Boynton, BERG and even the Craft Sabbath
co-op. Some of those names you've heard, and a lot of them you've
never heard and I like it that way. We also have DJ Sayo spinnin'
for the night, and some gorilla-style poetry from world renowned
poets, Jean Howard and Jesse Parent alongside some members of the
Utah Slam team. There will also be music performances by Brian
Bingham and The Precinct. All in all, a recipe for a good
time.
Gavin:
Are you planning any last minute additions or surprises, or are
things pretty well set at this point?
Iosua:
I did have a last minute addition. I invited a talented local
artist Daniel Overstreet to design a painting for the show and he
painted this incredible 4x8 painting that will go up for auction the
night of the show. As far as surprises go there really are none at
this time, but I will say, if you're going to attend the show, keep
your eye out for the monkey!
Gavin:
Going local for a bit, what's your take on the local art scene, both
good and bad?
Iosua:
Good and bad... On the plus side, Utah has a tremendous amount of
quality, innovative artists, but on the negative, I personally feel
like there are not enough desirous art collectors to support the
magnitude of artists existing here. It's like a social mixer with a
gender ratio of 90/10. I've been all across the U.S. selling my work
and I've seen those cities spewing of arts and culture. Cities like
Chicago, or even Denver, they have thriving art districts that spread
for miles and miles. I don't feel like we have that kind of place
here. We have "Gateways" and "Districts" where
money is being spent hand over fist. There's not a large centralized
location here for the arts and It seems too thinly spread out to me.
With exception to the Utah Arts Festival, where I've done very well
selling my work. In fact, it's the best art event that I do, and I
exhibit in over thirty shows a year from San Francisco to Florida. Don't
get me wrong, I've always been an advocate for the Utah art scene,
but I just feel like there's a lethargic support for the arts here.
For example, if we were doing this Submerged In Art show
in New York or Los Angeles, there'd be this anticipation that some
prestigious curator would see the show and want to pick up some of
the artists to continue in their gallery, but here, it's like, "Wow,
that show was awesome", then that's it. It's like working a
dead end job with no path to promotion. Unfortunately, I don't know
the remedy and I think it's just the way it'll always be in this
state.
Gavin:
Is there anything you believe could be done to make it more
prominent?
Iosua:
I wish, but I think that's in the hands of the community and the
majority population.
Gavin:
Moving onto the Road Home, what's your opinion on the work they've
tried to do over the years and the impact they've made on the
community?
Iosua:
This year alone they've restored over 365 families to a stable home
through their Rapid Rehousing program. That's an incredible and
inspiring feat. I believe it's never a bad thing to want to help out
the less fortunate. It's easy to overlook the unfavorable things in
our existence, but miraculously enough, it's just as easy to look and
to do something about it, and in fact, I believe it to be more
fulfilling.
Gavin:
Beyond this event, what are some things people can do to help out
their organization?
Iosua:
Be a part of the solution. Stay informed. Become a volunteer.
They also have an easy donation process at their website, where you can also make an ongoing pledge and
learn about their community events, which serve as a great way to
raise funds and awareness. They are always in need of toiletries,
blankets and clothing and you can donate those items at their
downtown facility located on 210 South Rio Grande Street (455 West).
There are restrictions to what items can be donated so just go to
their website for a list of those.
Gavin:
What can we expect from you over the rest of the year?
Iosua:
Dunno yet. However, I did just sell my last feature film called
"Darkroom" to a distribution company and that should be
available on DVD and digital download in the next six months or so.
And I'll also be starting a new movie hopefully sooner than
later.
Gavin:
Aside from the event, is there anything you'd like to promote or
plug?
Iosua: My website, and support your local artists,
instead of buying a piece of art from a chain retailer or any kind of
"Mart", consider going to an art festival or street fair,
or the Gallery Stroll and purchase some work that comes from someones
heart. You'll be surprised how inexpensive it can be and you'll also
have a more interesting story to tell about the piece you have
hanging on your wall. Thanks for the interview!
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