 Laurence Chen
So I’m riding around Bellevue with this very high-energy
27-year-old painter, and I’m starting to think, “Well, maybe I
should take up painting.” That’s how infectious my companion is.
She makes it sound like so much fun.
Jordan Swain ’00 offers me a warm diet soda from her emergency
stash of supplies she keeps in the back of her car because she
often doesn’t have time to stop and eat. We pull into Children’s
Village, a safe haven in Renton for women and children who have
been homeless, refugees, or victims of domestic violence. Swain and
other artists donated their time and talent to brighten the rooms
of the shelter with murals. Swain transformed one large playroom
into a jungle. A friendly-looking leopard reclines on a tree branch
directly above a nonplussed monkey. Across the room, an equally
nonthreatening lion emerges from the underbrush.
Her work here, as well as other venues, is donated, but
excellent publicity for her business, Jordan Swain Fine Art, an
intriguing blend of fine art and children’s art. Although she
paints children’s art on canvas, most of her work is murals, many
of which are in children’s bedrooms.
At last count, 63 of her murals enliven walls of various
habitations around the area. Much of her business comes about by
word of mouth, and much of it is repeat business.
Although she says the murals are her passion and she exudes
little artist’s angst or torment, she admits to a certain tension
between her “fine” and children’s art.
“It’s almost like a crisis,” she says. “I want to be an artist,
on the one hand, and be taken seriously. But some people think all
I do is little kids’ murals.”
But shortly after, she tells me that sometimes she’ll stretch a
canvas, not knowing which direction her imagination will take her.
Each requires a completely different mindset, she says. I suspect
the choice is more anticipation than crisis.
She avoids the conflict to some extent by generally avoiding
copyrighted images such as Teletubbies and their ilk and trying to
raise the mural images to a fine-art level.
“Children are a lot more sophisticated than we think,” says
Swain. She also teaches art to children, through private lessons
and at the Kirkland Arts Center. Children appreciate things like
color, she says, and often ask about the meaning of things.
Regarding the murals that are proposed for their rooms, she says
that she has yet to encounter a child who’s not known what he or
she wants.
She’s witnessed some battles, though, recounting in particular
one little boy who insisted he wanted the Death Star on his bedroom
wall.
Deciding on a theme involves some creative psychology on Swain’s
part. One recent commission, for example, was for a girl who wanted
unicorns and mermaids. Swain knew that she’d outgrow those ideas in
about six months and persuaded her client instead to go with a
Parisian theme.
Jordan’s grandmother is a painter, who taught her progeny to
“never stay between the lines.” The creative impulse seems to
permeate the whole family. Jordan’s sister is a musician. “I don’t
think my parents ever told us to be doctors or lawyers.”
Although her painting at Washington State University tended
toward the moody and symbolic, the seed of her interest in murals
was planted by her advisor, Ruben Lira, who informed her that the
Research Park was looking for some art.
“I said, well, I can show them some paintings.” But Lira
suggested she propose a mural.
Which she did, even though “I had no idea what I was talking
about.” But evidently, Lira did, and Swain figured it out, as her
rainforest mural still resides at the Research Park, a visual
legacy that students rarely enjoy.
—Tim Steury
Jordan’s husband, Clifton ’00, is a
manager with Automatic Data Processing and an avid promoter. They
met at the Homecoming game when they were freshmen. See www.jordanswain.com for more about her art.
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