
“When it comes to style, labels and categorizations simply slide off her shoulders, and a unique blend of tradition and creativity comes to mind. She is free to produce the most expressive, refined statement with the delicate touch of a master, giving the viewer a fundamental feeling of peace.”
— Maui News
Attracted by the merging of cultures in a place where nature is still in the making, Joëlle has been residing on Maui since 1982, the place she now calls home.
In 1989, Joëlle was one of the founders of Viewpoints Gallery of which she is presently the Art Director. Introducing shows that make art an integrated part of the community and displaying them masterfully has been a big part of her artistic endeavors.
Her efforts and achievements in this field led her to being asked to install the ‘Art Maui’ annual juried exhibit at the Schaefer International Gallery, Maui Arts & Cultural Center since 2009.
AWARDS & EXHIBITIONS
1975   International Year of the Woman in Mexico, First Price
1985   “World Festival of the Underwater Image”, Nice, France
1987   Lahaina Arts Society – Statewide juried show, Acquisition Award by Hawai’i State Foundation on Culture and the Arts
1988   Hawaii Craftsmen, Following Sea Award Collaboration piece ‘Fiber and Paint’ with Theo Morrisson
1989   Hui No’eau Annual Juried Show, Best in Show, Collaboration piece ‘Fiber and Paint’ with Theo Morrisson
1990   Art Maui – Pledge Purchase
1989 / 1990 / 2001 / 2002 / 2003 / 2008 / 2010   Art Maui – Juried Exhibit 
1992 / 1993 / 1995 / 1997 / 1999 / 2000 / 2002 / 2004   Solo Shows at Viewpoints Gallery
1997   Hokule’a Show, Maui Arts & Cultural Center
2001   Solo Show at Axis Gallery, Tokyo, Japan
2003 – 2011 ‘Back Room Artists’ shows at Hali’imaile General Store
2003 / 2007 Schaefer Portrait Challenge Juried Show, Maui Arts & Cultural Center
2010   Art Maui selection for 2011 publicity image
2013   “Hawaiian Art & Artifacts, Sullivan Collection” @NBMAA, Hartford, CT
2019   Studio Tours event in Lahaina
Joëlle C. Gallery Solo Shows and Events
2002   “Shining Through”
2003   “New Works”
2005   “The Color of Light and a Flight”
2007   “Testimony of Harmony”
2009   “Earth and Water”
2010   “Four Artists”
2012   Grand Opening of new Joelle C Gallery
2015   New works by Joëlle C., Mary Ann Leigh and Karuna Santoro
“Aloha Expressionism” book presentation and signing
2018  “Memories of Water”
Viewpoints Gallery Invitational & Curated Shows
2002   Hawai’i Watercolor Society – Juried Show
2006   Invitational ‘Luminosity: Color exploration with Vanishing Boundaries’
2008   Invitational ‘East-West’
2012   Invitational ‘Color, Light and Space’
2014   Invitational ‘Relationships and Collaborations’
2016 / 2017 / 2018   Invitational ‘Reaching Out’
2004 – 2016   ‘Malama Wao Akua Annual Juried Show’
2006 – present   ‘Celebration of Hawai’i’ Annual Invitational
2016   Invitational ‘Hawai’i Contemporary’
ACHIEVEMENTS & HONORS
1989   Founding member & President of Viewpoints Gallery
2004 – present   Vice President, Art Director and Installations, Viewpoints Gallery
2009 – present   ‘Art Maui’ Annual Juried Exhibit – Installation at the International Schaefer Gallery, MACC
1987 – present   Member of the Maui Aikido-Ki Society; Achieved the rank of Yondan (4th dan) black belt
2016   Juror and exhibit installation of Art Kauai
2019   Juror and Exhibit designer for the 2019 Mālama Wao Akua Exhibition at the Hui No’eau
 
															 
								 
								 
								 
								 
								 
								 
											 
															 “Keep looking,” she says.
Then I see it: the way the painting moves from an abstract background . . . to outer leaves that are more defined, but still stylized and expressive . . . to the precise and realistic detail at the flower’s core. “Lightness and Passion,” acrylic on paper, is a metaphor for the journey Joëlle Chicheportiche Perz has traveled over the years. Most artists begin with figurative work and evolve (if at all) toward abstraction. Joëlle went the other way.
When she welcomed me into her small, sunny studio, I had surveyed the varied works on those walls, monoprints, lithographs, watercolors on paper, acrylics on canvas, plaster on wood, and asked, “Which are yours?”
“All of them,” she had replied. “Each one represents a different period in my artistic journey. I consider myself an explorer of the visual phenomena.”
She grew up in Paris, surrounded by intellectualism and art. At the age of five, only slightly precociously, she realized that art was her passion; after high school, she studied fine art and art history at the University of Aix-en-Provence. “I wanted to be a professor of art at the university level,” she says. “I thought that was the one way to make a living at art.”
A visit to Montreal during her university years changed the course of Joëlle’s life. “I saw my first mural paintings there and fell in love with the idea of making art as a part of the urban landscape, art touching people’s lives on a grand scale.” For a year she worked as a waitress to pay her way to Mexico, arriving in the New World with only a small pad of watercolor paper and a pint-sized box of paints. “My first show was done with that,” she says. “I was very conscious of simplicity.”
“Keep looking,” she says.
Then I see it: the way the painting moves from an abstract background . . . to outer leaves that are more defined, but still stylized and expressive . . . to the precise and realistic detail at the flower’s core. “Lightness and Passion,” acrylic on paper, is a metaphor for the journey Joëlle Chicheportiche Perz has traveled over the years. Most artists begin with figurative work and evolve (if at all) toward abstraction. Joëlle went the other way.
When she welcomed me into her small, sunny studio, I had surveyed the varied works on those walls, monoprints, lithographs, watercolors on paper, acrylics on canvas, plaster on wood, and asked, “Which are yours?”
“All of them,” she had replied. “Each one represents a different period in my artistic journey. I consider myself an explorer of the visual phenomena.”
She grew up in Paris, surrounded by intellectualism and art. At the age of five, only slightly precociously, she realized that art was her passion; after high school, she studied fine art and art history at the University of Aix-en-Provence. “I wanted to be a professor of art at the university level,” she says. “I thought that was the one way to make a living at art.”
A visit to Montreal during her university years changed the course of Joëlle’s life. “I saw my first mural paintings there and fell in love with the idea of making art as a part of the urban landscape, art touching people’s lives on a grand scale.” For a year she worked as a waitress to pay her way to Mexico, arriving in the New World with only a small pad of watercolor paper and a pint-sized box of paints. “My first show was done with that,” she says. “I was very conscious of simplicity.”
 Mexico was artistically enriching, affording Joëlle enormous opportunities for expressive growth. Still, she felt keenly the loss of a social support system, the kind of safety net France provides its citizens. For a time, Joëlle literally was a starving artist. She persevered, and by 1975 had not only received her first mural commission, she’d won first prize for a painting in honor of the International Year of the Woman.
That’s when she decided to leave. “I was twenty-four and it was becoming too easy. I could see myself becoming better known, but I wanted to keep learning. I longed for more challenges.”
In 1977 Joëlle moved to San Francisco, and studied printmaking, a craft she has continued to develop throughout her artistic career. She also found herself plunging into the melting pot, trying to adapt to a new country, a new language, and survival in the big city. “Each time I have moved to a new country, I have had to let go of patterns and prejudices. The robes of cultural conditioning fall away, and you become naked. I have had to let go of a lot of things to follow my heart.”
Mexico was artistically enriching, affording Joëlle enormous opportunities for expressive growth. Still, she felt keenly the loss of a social support system, the kind of safety net France provides its citizens. For a time, Joëlle literally was a starving artist. She persevered, and by 1975 had not only received her first mural commission, she’d won first prize for a painting in honor of the International Year of the Woman.
That’s when she decided to leave. “I was twenty-four and it was becoming too easy. I could see myself becoming better known, but I wanted to keep learning. I longed for more challenges.”
In 1977 Joëlle moved to San Francisco, and studied printmaking, a craft she has continued to develop throughout her artistic career. She also found herself plunging into the melting pot, trying to adapt to a new country, a new language, and survival in the big city. “Each time I have moved to a new country, I have had to let go of patterns and prejudices. The robes of cultural conditioning fall away, and you become naked. I have had to let go of a lot of things to follow my heart.”								 Throughout her years of study, Joëlle had sold very little of her work. She’d been in no hurry to “make a statement” in the art world, preferring to pursue her quest for knowledge. “This slow growth enabled me to enjoy not only the product of creation but also the process,” she recalls.
“The galleries wanted me to do the underwater paintings that were so popular. I had no money, and still I said no. I would never have gotten to the places I need to be if I had said yes.”
To support herself, Joëlle taught. She worked on boats. And always, she studied. “I learned to let the work guide me, to choose materials and techniques according to the essence of the subject.”
Her willingness to let go, and the training that enables her to “bring all the tools to the task,” have combined in Joëlle to create an openness and readiness that seem to draw serendipity’s blessings like a magnet. Each time she risks, she advances on the path to deeper understanding.
Throughout her years of study, Joëlle had sold very little of her work. She’d been in no hurry to “make a statement” in the art world, preferring to pursue her quest for knowledge. “This slow growth enabled me to enjoy not only the product of creation but also the process,” she recalls.
“The galleries wanted me to do the underwater paintings that were so popular. I had no money, and still I said no. I would never have gotten to the places I need to be if I had said yes.”
To support herself, Joëlle taught. She worked on boats. And always, she studied. “I learned to let the work guide me, to choose materials and techniques according to the essence of the subject.”
Her willingness to let go, and the training that enables her to “bring all the tools to the task,” have combined in Joëlle to create an openness and readiness that seem to draw serendipity’s blessings like a magnet. Each time she risks, she advances on the path to deeper understanding.
 “In the past I had huge revelations. Now they are more subtle. Some you might not notice at first, and yet to me they can be stunning or simply delightful. Like the way a color that appeared dull suddenly brightens and becomes luminous when associated with another color; or the change of mood an object evokes, depending on the light that shines on it. I also found that if you focus on beauty, beauty will surround you. That is the greatest reward of my work.”
It’s a vision and reward she shares with her husband, Oliver Perz, a mechanical engineer who has become her manager and her partner in creating the environment they call home. Seven years ago the couple purchased two acres in Kula along the edge of a ravine. They cleared out scrub and planted beds of flowers, fruit trees, and vegetable gardens. A terraced path leads down to the canyon floor, and the gazebo that is Joëlle’s sometime studio. A pohaku wall, the remains of an ancient route to the crater summit, lies along the dramatic cliffs at the property’s far boundary. A rocky depression an unexpected feature revealed during the clearing will form a natural basin for the lily pond Joëlle and Oliver have planned; the transformation is ongoing.
As is Joëlle’s.
“I draw a lot of inspiration from my garden,” she says, “but I don’t necessarily paint it. Some things I like to leave alone, letting the stones keep their secret and giving me a chance to discover them with new eyes every day. The passing moment, the joy and playfulness of the light, the mystery of shadows, the universal quality of a single flower, this I like to capture.”
“In the past I had huge revelations. Now they are more subtle. Some you might not notice at first, and yet to me they can be stunning or simply delightful. Like the way a color that appeared dull suddenly brightens and becomes luminous when associated with another color; or the change of mood an object evokes, depending on the light that shines on it. I also found that if you focus on beauty, beauty will surround you. That is the greatest reward of my work.”
It’s a vision and reward she shares with her husband, Oliver Perz, a mechanical engineer who has become her manager and her partner in creating the environment they call home. Seven years ago the couple purchased two acres in Kula along the edge of a ravine. They cleared out scrub and planted beds of flowers, fruit trees, and vegetable gardens. A terraced path leads down to the canyon floor, and the gazebo that is Joëlle’s sometime studio. A pohaku wall, the remains of an ancient route to the crater summit, lies along the dramatic cliffs at the property’s far boundary. A rocky depression an unexpected feature revealed during the clearing will form a natural basin for the lily pond Joëlle and Oliver have planned; the transformation is ongoing.
As is Joëlle’s.
“I draw a lot of inspiration from my garden,” she says, “but I don’t necessarily paint it. Some things I like to leave alone, letting the stones keep their secret and giving me a chance to discover them with new eyes every day. The passing moment, the joy and playfulness of the light, the mystery of shadows, the universal quality of a single flower, this I like to capture.”
 Light. Enlightenment. I should have known. I remember that Joëlle is an avid student of aikido, a martial art that teaches you to center your being and focus your energy. From this source, too, Joëlle has drawn the confidence to trust.
“What I am looking for is simplicity,” she says, “the balance and peace of mind that enable me to do my art, express my passion for life, and create a little more happiness in this world. I love when people tell me they find a healing in my work.”
Light. Enlightenment. I should have known. I remember that Joëlle is an avid student of aikido, a martial art that teaches you to center your being and focus your energy. From this source, too, Joëlle has drawn the confidence to trust.
“What I am looking for is simplicity,” she says, “the balance and peace of mind that enable me to do my art, express my passion for life, and create a little more happiness in this world. I love when people tell me they find a healing in my work.”								 
															