Since changing
careers, Sara Sill ’73 has had two solo art exhibits.
(Courtesy Sara Sill ’73)
Sara Sill ’73’s
Mountain Birds collage started with two photographs of walls
in Saluzzo, Italy.
From
Wall Street to Carnegie Hall Law career behind her, Sara Sill ’73
now lives in art world
After college and law school, Sara Sill ’73 had been handling
corporate contracts, public offerings, and mergers and acquisitions
as a corporate lawyer in New York. The work was interesting but
not personally compelling.
In the mid-1980s, she read a New York Times article about a nonprofit
organization, Young Concert Artists, that helps unknown musicians
break into the public arena and gain the experience, publicity,
and contacts necessary to make successful solo careers. Sill, who
had played the piano since childhood and majored in architecture
at Princeton, called the director of YCA to arrange a meeting. Within
months, she had left Wall Street behind to become the organization’s
director of development and finance. Of the career change, Sill
says, “I never looked back.”
Because many of YCA’s performers have had no professional
experience outside their conservatories — some don’t
even own formal concert attire — Sill helps some of them shop
for their first tuxedos or gowns. The musicians also must learn
how to shake the conductor’s hand, how to deal with adoring
fans, and how to handle both good and bad reviews. “They have
the talent,” says Sill. “It’s the rest —
the exposure, the polishing of the raw stone —that is up to
us.”
Of the 300 to 400 musicians who audition each year, only three
or four are selected by YCA. Among the musicians YCA has promoted
are soprano Dawn Upshaw, pianist Murray Perahia, and the Tokyo String
Quartet.
Surrounded by people making art, Sill has rediscovered her own
creative energies as a visual artist. She had drawn and painted
in her youth, but she didn’t have time during college and
while practicing law. “It was a part of my soul that I put
away,” she says. In the mid-1990s, during a trip to see the
Parthenon in Greece, she started drawing again. “I was surprised
how much was still in my hands,” she says.
Since then Sill has had two exhibits at the National Arts Club
in New York. Her recent works are collages inspired by summer trips
to Europe. She photographs statues, boats, restaurant tables, local
scenes, and lots of buildings and architecture elements. When she
returns to her New York apartment, she cuts and pastes her photos
to make collages. She then enlarges those collages and glues them
onto museum board or transfers them onto etching paper. With paint
and brush she accentuates or edits the photos, sometimes adding
elements that weren’t actually there or blurring or deleting
extraneous details. “I use paint to suggest what I saw,”
she says. Some of her artwork incorporates everyday items that she
collects during her visits: food labels, a piece of film, a ticket
to a show.
Although Sill, who was born in Israel, long ago left corporate
law, her former self — dressed in a pink ruffled blouse with
a demure tie — popped up in her exhibit last May. In a self-portrait
she had glued photos of herself from different periods into windows
of a palazzo in Venice.