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Meet the Art Activist and Collector: Ellen Phelan

Article and interview by Cathy Breslaw

Ellen Phelan: Art Activist, Educator and Art Collector Talks about Her Life


Photo by Becky Cohn


Ellen Phelan believes in the development of a ‘cultural community’ and that part of the way to achieve this goal is for each of us to set aside 1% of our income toward buying and collecting fine art.  Phelan has been collecting art since the 1960’s and has dedicated her life to educating herself, her children and the broader community on the performing and visual arts. 

Born in Napa, California and raised in southern California, Phelan was one of seven children, and grew up in a home that fostered exposure to the arts.  Her father was an abstract oil painter and teacher and her mother worked in healthcare. Phelan commented that their home was filled with books and music so that when it came time for formal education, she not only studied business education but also later received a BA degree in Art History and Philosophy from the University of California San Diego. She also studied International Relations at the University of Oslo, Norway and was able to travel through Europe and spent time in New York city visiting galleries where she met the famous art dealer Leo Castelli.

Phelan has held many jobs in the visual arts and one of the first was a gallery she opened in Pasadena called Conde Gallery which she says she did to honor her father’s painting, to get to know artists and help promote their work. She moved to La Jolla in 1964, which proved to be a place where many artists were drawn, and there, she established friendships with various artists and was in close proximity to many artist studios.  Phelan worked for Cassat Gallery in La Jolla where her art collecting began by buying a formalist abstract painting by Andy Spence from Philadelphia and a metal collage work by artist Tom Holland. During a ten year span, Phelan was education director, docent and docent chairperson at the Museum of Contemporary Art, La Jolla which led to friendships with well known artists John Baldessari, Manny Farber and others, and critic/writers Christopher Knight and Bob Pincus as well as the several changing directors and curators of the museum. In addition she held other educational positions. She was a Contemporary Art Instructor for UCSD Extension, Instructional Expert for the San Diego Schools Gifted Program, President of the Art Council Board of the San Diego State University’s School of Art, Design and Art History, and Program Chair of the Contemporary Arts Committee for the San Diego Museum of Fine Art.  She was also Curator of the ‘More is More’ exhibition at the Athenaeum in La Jolla and has been a juror, speaker and advisory board member for various art programs in the San Diego area.

During the 1980’s, in line with her mission to develop a ‘cultural community’, Phelan started a series
of ‘Banquet Seminars’ she held in her La Jolla home.  She would invite one featured artist to each seminar, a group of collectors and art enthusiasts and brought in a catered meal that in some way reflected the work of the artist.  Phelan commented that these gatherings were successful in educating people about particular artists, encouraged meaningful dialogue about art, and sometimes resulted in sales of the art.

Phelan explained that she expresses her own creativity by becoming a curator of her own collection in the various spaces of her home.  Her art collection has been carefully and deliberately arranged in ‘groupings’ of works that Phelan has placed in close proximity to one another.  They appear as small art installations and a thought provoking display in the context of her cottage-like home. 

Ellen Phelan emphasizes that she buys art that speaks to her, and does not buy for investment.  She believes in supporting the auction, gallery and museum system and does not buy from dealers. Phelan’s contribution to the arts and art education in San Diego has been broad and extensive and she has set the bar high for the rest of us who are interested in building a vibrant arts culture in the area.

 

Cathy Breslaw is a southern California visual artist, writer and lecturer who has had over 25 solo exhibitions, and 50 group exhibitions across the country at museums, art centers, college and university galleries and commercial galleries. Her work can be found in many private and corporate collections. Her work and writing can be seen at:
www.cathylbreslaw.com
www.artfullifebycathy.blogspot.com
cathybreslaw@roadrunner.com