The Storyteller
Written by Amelia Fleetwood
Portraits by Cristina Trayfors 
In a sunlit studio in Santa Barbara, artist and actor LOAN CHABANOL lets her paintbrush do the talking. “Painting feels like breathing,” she says. “It’s how I process things I don’t yet have words for.”A storyteller in every sense, the French-born Chabanol works from instinct, layering acrylic across canvas with the insistence of someone who must tell her story. Raised between Paris and the south of France, Chabanol left school at 15, launching a successful career in modeling, which later led to acting. Yet it has always been painting that satisfied her most deeply. “I’ve been honing my craft for years,” she says. “With no formal training, there are no rules to my creativity, and I feel I have a sense of freedom, with no limits. I have always painted, because I had an urgent need to communicate my feelings, and this always felt like the easiest way. I had to paint. It’s like breathing.”
Her work, figurative and abstract, and often including an immersive aspect for the viewer, is shaped by emotion as well as the environment the work sits in. “The gallery or the space always influences what comes,” she says. Recent shows in New York, Los Angeles, and Santa Barbara (at the Tamsen Gallery) have carved her a quiet niche. Paris is next. “It feels like time to come home,” she says. When she’s not on a film set—her new movie will hit festivals later this year—or preparing for an exhibition, Chabanol takes private commissions, working closely with collectors to create intimate, intuitive work that speaks where language might fail. mikagirlstudio.com
 
                         
             
                 
                 
                 
                