Skip to content
Capilano Courier
Menu
  • Home
  • Sections
    • News
    • Features & The Profile
    • Arts & Culture
    • Letters
    • Humour
    • Video Production
  • About
    • Advertise
    • Contribute
  • Meet the Crew
  • Online Issues
  • Events
Menu

Artist Feature: Coralie Mayer-Traynor

Posted on March 3, 2020March 3, 2020 by Logan Dillon

Logan Dillon // Contributor 

If you’re an artist in this age, you know it’s difficult not to feel pressure from the sheer amount of people doing similar work. It’s hard to feel that your art is truly unique with the immense amount of other work there is to compare it to. Yet it’s through this self-doubt that artists thrive and create their best pieces—never fulfilled, always trying to improve.

Coralie Mayer-Traynor’s inability to be content with her own work is what defines her as an artist. Mayer-Traynor’s work draws in the viewer with a level of intricacy and detail that makes her pieces so unique. She draws from moments or memories that begin as an image in her head. Mayer-Traynor visualizes that image, and brings it into reality through her work, sculpting and perfecting it until it’s materialized as an artwork.

The IDEA student draws inspiration from the Baroque period. She is particularly influenced by Caravaggio, an Italian painter known for combining a physical and emotional view of the human state, along with his dramatic use of lighting. Caravaggio’s form is embodied throughout much of Mayer-Traynor’s work.

For Mayer-Traynor, art is a way of communicating her feelings; it allows her to express herself without words. When asked of her defining stylistic elements, she found it difficult to answer. 

“I know that every person who does any form of artistic expression has their own unique mark; like the way that artists paint lines, there’s always going to be a difference,” she explained. “But I don’t feel like it has too much soul yet—if that doesn’t sound too grim.” This self-effacing comment makes her chuckle. Her words, it seems, are a reflection of her art practice: never satisfied, revising, tweaking and reworking each piece until it’s the best it can possibly be. “Everything I do has to be perfect.” 

Follow Coralie Mayer-Traynor on Instagram @cmaiyr

Category: Culture

Post navigation

← Thirteen Explores Family Disintegration During The Okanagan Forest Fires
The Life of a Doula →

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Latest News

  • International Tuition Increase Approved, and 432 Letters From Students Disregarded
    Tuition fees have increased by five per cent for all international students, and a substantial portion of the student body is disappointed […]
  • Carney Says Canada to Recognize Palestine
    Western powers align, but little to change on the ground    Theodore Abbott (he/him) // News Editor   As Israel prepares to force […]
  • AI Slop: ChatGPT Shown to Kill Brain Gains
    A recently published study from MIT brings to light the effects of relying on AI models to think critically for us   Kayla Price […]
  • Stalled Negotiations for Unionized Student Employee Wages
    The MoveUP union and Capilano University fail to find common ground to start negotiations that would address the urgent issue of student […]
  • Cybersecurity Breach at CapU
    Reporting on the recent phishing incident that encouraged students to send $850 to scammers Yasmine Modaresi (she/her) // News Editor […]
  • 2025 CSU Election—Record number of disqualifications & three directors removed from office
    The trend towards greater rates of participation in CSU elections after the pandemic is interrupted, and the rise of disqualifications had […]
Video Production
Join Adam and Ben as they share their favorite money-saving tips for getting the most out of your fast food runs. From sneaky menu tricks to wallet-friendly hacks, you won’t want to miss this episode.

📖 Read the full issue and more:
https://www.capilanocourier.com/
📲 Follow us for updates, stories, and behind-the-scenes:
/ capilano.courier
Fast Food Life Hacks
Subscribe
© 2025 Capilano Courier | Powered by Minimalist Blog WordPress Theme