Glo Ramirez shows off her artwork at her Juneau apartment on Monday, Dec. 31, 2018. (Michael Penn | Capital City Weekly)

Glo Ramirez shows off her artwork at her Juneau apartment on Monday, Dec. 31, 2018. (Michael Penn | Capital City Weekly)

Adorable art started to make fears manageable

Juneau monster maker anticipates busy 2019

This is already shaping up to be a monster year for Glo Ramirez.

Ramirez, a Juneau artist who’s known for cuddly and playful creature designs you may have seen on postcards at Alaska Robotics Gallery, is anticipating at least two showings of her work in 2019.

“It was a great year, and I’m looking forward to the next one,” Ramirez said. “I didn’t think I’d have any shows in 2019.”

“I’ve been trying to be more organized on the business part,” she added. “I can do the art, but honestly the business part has been quite tricky.”

ADVERTISEMENT
0 seconds of 0 secondsVolume 0%
Press shift question mark to access a list of keyboard shortcuts
00:00
00:00
00:00
 

Ramirez said she doesn’t have a theme picked out for the shows — she also works in ceramics and creates abstract works — but her signature-style monsters will be featured.

[Shoveling leads to snow art]

“They’re awesomely cute like a bunch of ninja kittens,” Ramirez said. “It’s basically my tagline.”

She’s also the scenic designer for Perseverance Theatre’s Young Company production of “Disco Alice: The Wonderland Remix.”

Ramirez said making a set with era-appropriate flourishes for “Alice,” which opens in March, has been a departure from her usual work.

“It has been quite a journey,” Ramirez said. “I am not from the ’70s, so I have to listen to a lot of music and get into the groove of the whole situation. It’s going to be the whole Black Box, so it should be like a full immersion.”

Fun-sized scares

The blank-eyed, fuzzy creatures Ramirez creates tend to elicit the same response as Jim Henson’s most child-pleasing Muppets.

They’re technically monsters, but they’re far from ferocious.

“I like her work, it’s sort of whimsical and funny, and it makes me smile, which I sort of appreciate in art,” Inari Kylanen, store manager for Alaska Robotics Gallery.

However, the work has its roots in feelings of frustration, sleep deprivation, anxieties and fear.

“I started with that because I couldn’t sleep,” Ramirez said. “It started that way, just trying to let go of those fears and putting it on paper.”

The monsters also owe their existence to Ramirez, who is originally from Puerto Rico, relocating to Juneau almost three years ago.

“It started when I actually decided to stay in Alaska,” Ramirez said. “It was the summer, and I went to visit some friends, and then it was a beautiful, beautiful summer. It trapped me.”

While she was enchanted enough to stay, the long daylight hours were less than ideal for Ramirez’s sleep cycle.

That bled into her artwork, and Ramirez drew a sleepy monster she dubbed Nix the Monster, Mother of the Night. She sports moose antlers and a constellation body inspired by the Alaska night sky and state flag.

Other fuzzy, masked anxieties soon followed. Visualizing worries as tiny, adorable creatures has a way of making them manageable.

“They’re cute and they’re cuddly and nice, and they’re a way of saying if my fears or this small I can hang out with them,” Ramirez said. “They have masks because you never know what’s going on behind a mask.”

[Ramirez shows kids how to make monsters]

Lifelong interest in art

While Ramirez has only been drawing her monsters for the past few years, her interest in art goes back much further.

She couldn’t paint on the walls, but Ramirez said her parents would hang up large sheets of paper that she could decorate.

“My parents were very supportive, just giving me art supplies all the time,” Ramirez said.

Despite the support, Ramirez had the idea that art was not a viable career deeply entrenched in her head.

“I tried to study other stuff, like computer programming,” Ramirez said. “One thing I kept repeating is, ‘Oh, if I have time to start drawing again.’”

Eight years ago, while still in Puerto Rico, she lost her job, and suddenly, she did have that time.

Ramirez began working on her art and went to Puerto Rican comic conventions and developed her style.

“In the beginning, even as an adult, I tried a lot of being inspired by other people’s art, but I think the great part of those little monsters, what I’ve been doing now is they’re easy to find a personality with them,” Ramirez said.


• Contact arts and culture reporter Ben Hohenstatt at (907)523-2243 or bhohenstatt@juneauempire.com.


Glo Ramirez shows off her artwork, including these folded tiles, at her Juneau apartment on Monday, Dec. 31, 2018. (Michael Penn | Capital City Weekly)

Glo Ramirez shows off her artwork, including these folded tiles, at her Juneau apartment on Monday, Dec. 31, 2018. (Michael Penn | Capital City Weekly)

Glo Ramirez shows off her artwork, including these monster stickers, at her Juneau apartment on Monday, Dec. 31, 2018. (Michael Penn | Capital City Weekly)

Glo Ramirez shows off her artwork, including these monster stickers, at her Juneau apartment on Monday, Dec. 31, 2018. (Michael Penn | Capital City Weekly)

Glo Ramirez’s monsters tend to be more friendly than fearsome. (Courtesy Photo | Glo Ramirez)

Glo Ramirez’s monsters tend to be more friendly than fearsome. (Courtesy Photo | Glo Ramirez)

Masked monsters are a recurring theme in Glo Ramirez’s work. (Courtesy Photo | Glo Ramirez)

Masked monsters are a recurring theme in Glo Ramirez’s work. (Courtesy Photo | Glo Ramirez)

More in Home2

Laura Rorem is a member of The Evangelical Lutheran Church in America. (Courtesy photo)
Living and Growing: Practicing true patience

“Have patience, have patience, Don’t be in such a hurry, When you… Continue reading

U.S. Sen. Lisa Murkowski delivers her annual address to the Alaska Legislature on March 18, 2025. (Jasz Garrett / Juneau Empire file photo)
Opinion: The silence betraying America

“How we came to a place where we are fighting now with… Continue reading

This rendering depicts Huna Totem Corp.’s proposed new cruise ship dock downtown now being considered by the Juneau Assembly. (City and Borough of Juneau)
Opinion: Approval of new cruise dock moves forward

Aak’w Landing, the long-proposed cruise dock development in downtown Juneau is one… Continue reading

(Juneau Empire File)
Community calendar of upcoming events

This is a calendar updated daily of upcoming local events during the… Continue reading

Jonathan Swinton, executive director of Gastineau Human Services, presides over a ribbon-cutting ceremony for the opening of a remodeled behavioral health clinic at the nonprofit organization’s Lemon Creek campus on Thursday, Oct. 24, 2024. (Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire file photo)
My Turn: Three affordable housing solutions for Juneau

Homelessness and affordable housing continue to plague far too many in our… Continue reading

A male peacock showing off its colors. (Jatin Sindhu / CC BY-SA 4.0)
On the Trails: Three observations to ponder

While we are waiting (?patiently?) for spring to really get rolling, here… Continue reading

Just-baked cinnamon rolls ready to serve. (Photo by Patty Schied)
Cooking For Pleasure: Easy cinnamon rolls

My father really loved cinnamon rolls. In his later years I would… Continue reading

The U.S. Capitol in Washington on Wednesday, March 12, 2025. (Eric Lee/The New York Times)
My Turn: Important questions for Dan Sullivan and Nick Begich

Dan Sullivan and Nick Begich, what are you going to do to… Continue reading

The Mendenhall Glacier Visitor Center on Feb. 22, 2025. (Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire file photo)
My Turn: Volunteer for the right cause

Recently I was asked by a friend to volunteer at the Mendenhall… Continue reading

Most Read