B4 THE ASTORIAN • SATuRdAy, JuNE 5, 2021 Seperanza’s piece ‘9-5 No More’ is featured at RiverSea Gallery. Speranza: ‘I’ve wanted to be an artist since I was 5’ Continued from Page B1 Next, she’s looking for- ward to transitioning back into jewelry making for the Astoria Sunday Market and other projects. Speranza was intro- duced to jewelry making at the Oregon College of Art & Craft. Before joining the college, she worked at a jewelry store. She decided to try her hand at a met- alsmithing class at the col- lege, she said. “I really, really liked it so when I actually went to school I decided to enter the metalsmithing program,” she said. Here, she learned how to work with many differ- ent materials, allowing her to create both jewelry and smaller sculpture pieces. Painting is the more recent medium Speranza has delved into. When she went to graduate school at East Carolina University, she initially enrolled in the school’s metals program but wanted to try painting, too. “In my second year I told my painting teacher, ‘I’m going to try this, I don’t know if I’m going to like it or not but we’re going to give it a whirl for a semes- ter’ and I just kind of fell in love with it,” Speranza said. “Since grad school, I’ve been honing and refining my voice in it.” Always snapping pho- tos of eye-catching scenes and architecture she sees around town, Speranza finds unwavering inspiration in her Astoria surroundings. “(My photos) end up being a vault of source mate- rial. Sometimes I’ll take a picture of something and then look through my phone and think, ‘Oh, I really like that, that could be a jumping off point for a sculpture or painting,’” she said. Astoria’s historical A piece of jewelry Speranza created. Speranza buildings and unique land- marks are especially atten- tion-grabbing for Speranza. “I’m definitely drawn towards architecture,” she said. “So I love being in a town like Astoria where there’s a great deal of his- tory. I’m really attracted to the grittiness of the build- ings and enjoy just seeing the history.” Inspiration within Immediately before the coronavirus pandemic, Speranza spent February 2020 in rural Finland, where she completed an artist resi- dency at the Arteles Creative Center. She had the opportu- nity to do group meditation classes, which have had a lasting impact on her work as an artist. “It really just allowed me to learn those habits that allow you to listen to your thoughts,” she said. A lover of creating, being an artist has been a lifelong talent of Speranza’s. “I’ve wanted to be an art- ist since I was 5,” she said. In kindergarten, Speranza had a homework assign- ment where her teacher asked what she wanted to be when she grew up. Speranza answered: artist. When she went to art school in her 20s, Speranza said it cemented her career choice and she fell even more in love with creating. “I don’t really know where that came from but I would consider it a calling,” she said. Zoë Buchli is a contrib- utor to The Astorian and Coast Weekend.