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Brigitte Micmacker: Bella and JP, this is your first joint exhibition, although you have worked together for nine years and have even been called the “odd couple”. How did your relationship begin?
Bella Feldman: In 2000 I had a sequence of three exhibits in different parts of the country. I needed more help than the assistant I had then, Chris French. I asked a former student if she knew anybody and she sent JP my way. He was only hired on a temporary basis but, when I returned from a much needed vacation, Chris who had been with me for four or five years decided to leave and so JP fell into the job. He turned out to be the best assistant I have ever had.
B.M.: Bella, when you began exhibiting as a sculptor thirty-five years ago, as well as when you established yourself in a long career as a professor, and as the chair of the sculpture department at a major art college, beginning in 1965 in a field then mostly entirely dominated by men, what did you have to do to be considered a respected professional, and not a “woman sculptor”?
Bella: I needed to be desperate enough for the job to endure the insults in the then all-male Sculpture Department. When the head of my department tried to get rid of me so he could give my job to a male protégé of his, I had to take the case to the then Board of Equalization which dealt with cases of discrimination. I won. His successor managed to get rid of the entire department in order to hire his own. I stood my ground tenaciously. When he resigned in a pique I became Chair. But for 20 years I had to deal with the man’s hostility in as civilized a fashion as I could muster. My endurance was fueled by the research which showed there wasn’t a woman teaching sculpture within a 100 mile radius of my home. It was considered a male profession. I continued to teach and to exhibit with considerable acclaim and that won me respect as a professional.
In 1996 I was awarded an exhibition at the Fresno Museum “California Woman Sculptor of the Year.” My 8 year old granddaughter when she came to the opening looked at the sign and, without prompting, said “If it was a man artist, they wouldn’t have written ‘Man Artist of the Year.’” I have received many honors and awards over time. I am very, very good at what I do, but I believe a man with these honors, etc. would have fared better than I as a woman did.
B.M.: JP, you studied jewelry and metal art at the California College of Art and Crafts in Oakland (now CCA) where Bella taught for 35 years, yet you never took any classes from her. When you first walked into Bella’s studio to work as an assistant in 2000, do you remember what first struck you about Bella?
JP Long: I had long admired Bella’s work and jumped at the opportunity to work for her. What first struck me about Bella was that she was definitely from the East Coast. Strong, direct, and blatantly honest—which I respond to very well, having grown up in New England.
B.M.: (JP) How old were you? Were you looking for a mentor at that point?
JP: I was 21 when Bella hired me. As you mentioned before, I graduated with a degree in Jewelry/Metal Arts, which was excellent training. That department still believed in teaching technical skill. But I always wanted to go big. So when the opportunity to work for Bella arose, it was the perfect situation. All my life I’ve looked for mentors, and I’ve been fortunate in having had a number of wonderful teachers—most of whom were powerful women.
