Artists in Practice

Artist in Practice | Cole Douglas by Dorian Maldonado

Gallery space featuring works on the wall and hanging from ceiling

July 11, 2024 - August 7, 2024
530 S. Coast Hwy, Oceanside, CA 92054
Open Reception:
Saturday, July 13, 2024 2-6pm

Download press release

From July 11th - August 7th at The Hill Street Country Club will host multi-disciplinary artist Cole Douglas (he/him) as he expands on his existing series of abstract mixed-media works on canvas. These new pieces are of a previously unprecedented scale, taking full advantage of the gallery’s open space to develop new techniques and build a more robust mark-making language. Visitors are invited to visit and view works as Cole’s work progresses and attend a public open house with light refreshments to meet the artist.

Cole Douglas pictured in the Hill Street gallery, photo by Astrid Gonzales

Artist Statement

After an injury induced identity crisis, I found myself seeking a resolution to the pain I’d felt after carrying the burden of being a Black man in a white America. I soon found that painting and time in nature were a panacea to my ills. The nexus of my identity as a Black man in addition to these activities presented me with the foundation of my work: negroes nature nurture. That is, the juxtaposition between the Black American and natural experience. I present the Black experience in a meaningful way, seeking resolution to our issues and a future reimagined with healthy, thriving, and carefree Black people. 

 I blend gestural acrylic palette knife strokes with energetic oil stick lines to inspire reflection, growth, and the sowing of seeds. Leveraging these mediums, I am able to create an active painting that explores the possibilities of a fruitful Black future. Through these paintings, an intentional reconfiguration of Black values and actions is had – resulting in meaningful change for future generations. That is, the sowing of seeds in our garden.

 The process used to create these radical abstractions lend towards continual discovery as opposed to a specific final destination. This process-based approach, inspired from my engineering background, creates boundless expression to encapsulate all feelings that exist within a given situation allowing the works to serve as both a medium of healing and a path forward to change for myself and others. Creating a community for other people like me searching for healing and love.

About Artists in Practice

Artists in Practice is a studio development and exhibition opportunity curated by the collective efforts of Hill Street Country Club. This innovative program is designed for artists who seek to explore ideas and create new works of art free from the constraints typically imposed by institutional deadlines and art world expectations. At Hill Street, we believe in fostering an environment where artists can use the gallery space as an experimental studio, thereby encouraging a sense of liberation in their artistic practice.

This program offers artists a unique opportunity to exhibit their in-progress and completed works as a ceremonial act of letting go, allowing them to transition into new phases of their creative journey. Our goal is to support artists in creating the pieces they are most passionate about and to explore those ideas that occupy their thoughts perpetually, without the paralyzing fear of failure. Through Artists in Practice, we aim to cultivate an atmosphere where artistic experimentation and freedom are paramount in the art-making process, thus enabling artists to push the boundaries of their practice and embrace the full potential of their creative visions.

Artist In Practice | Tarrah Aroonsakool and Marcos Rodriguez-Mallard by Dorian Maldonado

July 8,2023 - July 30, 2023
530 S. Coast Hwy, Oceanside, CA 92054

OPEN RECEPTION : July 8, 2023 at 7pm to 9pm

The Hill Street Country Club welcomes artists Tarrah Aroonsakool and Marcos Rodriguez-Mallard for an experimental collaborative installation.

From July 8th to July 30th the gallery at the Hill Street Country Club will be taken over by two local artists interested in how capitalism and consumer culture impact the natural world and direct interactions with our environment, each other, and ourselves. Bringing forth themes of mental health in relation to the natural world around us, and the broad scope of human experience, and trauma. The final installation will evolve and change with opportunities for the public to visit while in process, please note: this exhibition includes graphic depictions of animals.

Tarrah Aroonsakool (she/her) ( on the left)
is a San Diego-based artist interested in materials and people deemed “less than” by Western capitalist structures. Her previous works have included depictions of human and animal bodies as consumer objects represented in a range of repurposed materials. Using discarded materials and waste to make art is central to Tarrah’s creative impulse and helps her to look at the world around her differently. She has recently moved deeper into abstract sculptural works and will be experimenting with slowing down and reconnecting to material and craft. 

Marcos Rodriguez-Mallard (they/them) (on the right) is an undocumented Mexican artist based in San Diego, working in mixed media, photography, and video. Their projected video, Tarrehe in Miquiliztli (Escucha la Muerte, Listen to Death), shows animals that have been killed on local roads. Marcos sees these paved streets as interventions in the landscape driven by religion, necessity and industry. In allowing people to move to and from work and home, streets and cars have disrupted the natural patterns of animals with a certain degree of collateral damage. The artist can be heard speaking a text written by Maurillo Sànchez Flores in Nahuatl and Spanish meditating on death, the visceral reality of it, and the philosophical question of what happens when an animal, person, or culture dies. The piece invites the viewer to consider how they situate themselves in or against the landscape and how willing Western colonialism and capitalism is to sacrifice lives and whole cultures in the name of convenience and profit. Marcos will also exhibit several mixed-media pieces along this same theme.

Visitors are invited to schedule viewings as the installation progresses and attend an opening Satuday July 8th 7pm to 9pm. This paired installation is part of Hill Street Country Club’s Artist in Practice which invites artists to use the gallery as an extension of their own studio and experiment within an exhibition opportunity.

Editor: Akiko Surai