Stephanie Morton-Millstein
Los Angeles based painter and sculptor Stephanie Morton-Millstein explores cycles––of nature, personal identity, mood, and consciousness. Morton-Millstein lets the medium and unconscious guide her, allowing it to reveal accidents and purpose. Her abstract expressionist style is intuitive, often materializing in moments of intense clarity and explosive creativity. Morton-Millstein’s oil and clay paintings emerge through a full-body process, wherein she moves between mediums, layering and sculpting until she feels complete. Her process is diligent, often taking up to six months.
Art has always been a practice of self-grounding for Morton-Millstein. As a child, she felt drawn to photography as a mode of documentation. She remembers feeling an intense urge to take pictures of every detail of her home, intimately aware of the passage of time, change, and loss. She cites photographer Diane Arbus, abstract-expressionist painter Helen Frankenthaler, and sculptor Louise Bourgeois as inspiring her work. Morton-Millstein is passionate about keeping art in public schools, working as a volunteer art teacher, activist and advocate for equality in education.
Art has always been a practice of self-grounding for Morton-Millstein. As a child, she felt drawn to photography as a mode of documentation. She remembers feeling an intense urge to take pictures of every detail of her home, intimately aware of the passage of time, change, and loss. She cites photographer Diane Arbus, abstract-expressionist painter Helen Frankenthaler, and sculptor Louise Bourgeois as inspiring her work. Morton-Millstein is passionate about keeping art in public schools, working as a volunteer art teacher, activist and advocate for equality in education.