Water Reflected in Art & Dance - Vania Lozano


Women Mind in Water: Artivist Series Water Reflected in Art & Dance - Vania Lozano

About Vania Lozano

Vania Lozano is an independent visual artist and dancer. Vania grew up in Puerto Morelos in Quintana Roo, Mexico. She is the daughter of marine biologists whose work focused on the lobsters of the Mexican Caribbean. Vania’s childhood was immersed in water. As a little girl Vania thought she was born knowing how to swim. Water is reflected throughout her art and her dance. Recently she created and produced a video reflecting on her feelings about the isolation related to Covid-19 and her connection to water.

Water, Dance, and Visual Art as Creative Expression

Vania Lozano says water has always been important to her, so it naturally inspires her art. Since 2013, she has worked as an independent artist, combining painting, dance, movement, and video to explore her relationship with water.

Vania began by capturing her choreography on canvas, translating movement into visual art. Over time, she added video as a way to express her work in three dimensions and show the connection between body, water, and emotion.

Earlier in her career, Vania danced with a company that taught her how to move underwater. She later used that training to create her video, Resignificando “Vida”. The piece reflects her feelings about living in a world changed by COVID-19, including uncertainty, loneliness, and isolation.

In the video, nature, movement, the ocean, and water help give meaning to her experience. Water becomes both setting and symbol, holding emotion while offering a sense of connection and renewal.

On the Women Mind the Water Artivist Series video podcast, Vania shares how dance, painting, and underwater movement come together in her creative practice.

Pam Ferris-Olson

Pam Ferris-Olson has a Ph.D. in Leadership and Change from Antioch University and master’s degrees in Biology and Natural Resource Science. She has studied ocean creatures, worked in communications, and now focuses on the relationship between women, water, and communication.

Pam has worked as an educator, writer, photographer, videographer, artist, and podcaster.  Her work has appeared on TV, in newspapers and magazines, and on a host of online sites. .Her non-fiction book, Living in the Heartland: Three Extraordinary Women’s Stories, featured three contemporary women as they struggle to live graceful lives weighed down by generational trauma and systemic racism. Both her dissertation and her book demonstrate that even though our personal journeys differ, they still resonate with us. These stories connect and lift us.

Pam’s work now focuses on the ocean. She is an ecological artist creating quirky images of marine animals and installations aimed at engaging, informing, and stimulating dialog. She is a podcaster and hosts the Women Mind the Water Artivist Series which explores the connection between the work of artivists and their impact in influencing change.

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Fisherwomen, Stories of Maine's Strong Women - Ali Farrell

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Marine Debris Transformed into Colorful Sculptures, Ocean Sole - Erin Smith