Colors of the Song

Singer Misha Penton utilizes new instruments in a moving, mixed-media art show at The Jung Center.

Artists Misha Penton

What compels so many musicians to paint? For soprano Misha Penton, painting is a meditative and cathartic process, and provides solace from the demands of her career as a contemporary classical singer and impresario of her performing arts company Divergence Vocal Theater.


Out of what started as a private and therapeutic pastime, Penton has created a substantive body of work, including several acrylic paintings now showing at The Jung Center of Houston through Sept. 28. The show’s title, Blood & Salt, comes from a text by Penton, who also writes; it describes what lies beneath “the armor we wear in the world.” Sound provides an additional layer of meaning at the exhibition. Using QR codes displayed by each piece of art, viewers can access audio of Penton singing and chanting her mysterious, stream-of-consciousness writings.

Onstage, in costume, her dark hair styled to evoke the heroines of ancient Greece or Romantic-era literature, Penton is a riveting performer. But painting, not performing, is the medium Penton goes to for “an emotional release,” she says. “It’s a very personal practice that is now becoming more externalized. I’m now thinking of it in the same way as music and performance.”

Her expressive brushwork evokes the transformative energies of fire, water and air to reveal a series of highly charged and emotional inner landscapes. Perhaps not surprisingly, much of her recent work, including hundreds of delicate, ephemeral watercolors, emerged from a period of intense professional transition. “I felt very stuck in my creative life,” says Penton. “I had been doing these very complicated, large-scale music productions that were kind of eating me alive. So I decided I’m not going to do that anymore.

“I can get myself busy and make stuff,” she adds. “But the challenge was how do I put those skills to good use, and not just produce for the sake of producing.”

To stay connected to those skills, Penton kept watercolor pads on her kitchen table, and occasionally stopped her day-to-day activities to quickly paint a line or two here, a dab of color there, until she had amassed several completed paintings. It took a while. “I attribute all that I am doing now as the result of waiting,” says Penton, whose first successful show took place in Austin this summer. “Waiting and allowing what needed to emerge in my practice to emerge.”

Artists Misha PentonSinger-painter Misha Penton

Born in Germany and raised in upstate New York, Penton and her energy-entrepreneur hubby have made the Heights their home base. She firmly believes that living and working in Houston has allowed her various creative obsessions to converge. “People here respect you for the gumption and audacity to just do your thing and realize your vision,” says Penton. “For an artist, that’s a huge gift.”

Art+Culture
Leadership in Action: John Kuykendall Traded Newcaster Dream for Success in Luxury Retail

John Kuykendall, Showroom Manager, Sub-Zero, Wolf and Cove

How did you get to where you are today? Growing up I had envisioned myself as a news anchor, living in NY and enthusiastically saying into the camera “Good Morning America!”. To this day, I am still a news/political junkie. My mother owned fur salons so specialty retail, luxury retail was in my blood through the family business. Eventually, mom shuttered the stores and I was recruited to a large specialty retailer. Over the next 30 years, I was in commissioned sales on the sales floor, became a department manager, worked my way up to buyer and store manager. Although I never became a newscaster, I did live in NYC for a few years. But Texas is home and with aging grandparents, I felt the pull to come back to my roots. A headhunter approached me. I never envisioned myself in the high-end appliance market, but there are so many similarities. Clients want a memorable experience; whether shopping for diamonds and fur or remodeling their kitchen.

Keep Reading Show less

THE CORINTHIAN WAS the scene for a haunted happening benefiting Children’s Museum Houston. The decidedly adult bash was filled with dark allure, gothic glamour, and generosity to the tune of $1.14 million, the second-highest total in the event’s history.

Keep Reading Show less
Parties

Morris Smith, Tilman Fertitta and Toni Smith

THE HOUSTON CHILDREN'S Charity gala is always anticipated, thanks to the big-deal musical acts brought in to entertain; this year it was Chicago. But the headliners this year were the generous donors, who seemed to surprise even event organizer with their largesse, with a total till of $6.2 million, a record.

Keep Reading Show less
Party People