Artist and coach contributes to MSD community and creative culture

Photography By Melissa Sweredoski of Moments By Mel

A lifelong artist and creative coach teacher, Lori Arbel has found the balance between art and academics, with her detailed work keeping people together.

“Two students who come to mind are Daniel Farji and Alyna Taub,” said Arbel. “We’re still friends and we’ve watched each other evolve as artists, as humans, and those are the most special relationships.”

From as early as 5 years old, Arbel has had an interest in art and knowledge. Many people think of a library as tall walls with boring, ancient volumes. But she saw it as a place with inky treasures and one that offered advice.

“I’d go to the library and I always had a stack of arts and crafts books,” said Arbel. “I remember being at the kitchen table making paper-plates arts and crafts with my cousin, and in that moment, I remember saying, ‘I love this.’”

Arbel later went to the University of Florida for her two-year undergraduate degree and a minor in photojournalism and art. She used art as a method to help heal and worked through the heartache of her mother’s death. She was then inspired to become an art educator, and at Florida International University she earned her master’s in art education.

For 20 years, Arbel’s career led her to teach in Manhattan, New York, and throughout South Florida. She is known for her mixed-media artwork, including drawings, paintings, prints, photographs, montages, and designs.

One example is Arbel’s “Thought Patterns,” a mixed-media collection using marks to question how people connect, respond, and make marks on the world while embracing emotional introspection for content — a creative expression as dialogue. Pops of bleached buttercup golds and yellows illustrate metaphors, and irregular lines may symbolize negative energy turning in a positive direction.

Arbel’s educational mission for Holocaust Remembrance Day and the currently all-virtual exhibition “#Marks4TheirLives” combines her artistic talents along with submissions provided by the public, who can participate and send in their projects for inclusion in the online gallery.

The exhibition focuses on a simple mark or line, on any size paper. This is to make a mark for each year of someone’s life, to celebrate their existence and uniqueness, and to honor the 1.5 million children whose lives were taken in the Holocaust.

“It’s a pun for March for Our Lives and March for the Living, which is a Holocaust program trip to Israel and Poland,” said Arbel.

This is meant to symbolize how everyone will confirm their own mark and existence and share their reflection on the process. The mailed submissions will be woven together to create a quilt, a celebration of life. All works will be displayed in a traveling art exhibition.

Arbel’s first full-time job was 20 years ago as an artist at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School. After leaving Manhattan, she returned home to Parkland. She volunteered as a teaching artist with Eagles Haven, a wellness center created for the MSD community following the mass shooting.

“We created art together,” said Arbel. “It helps to heal and be in a loving and supporting environment.”

Alyna Taub has a history with Arbel. For nine years, Arbel has been a mentor, teacher, and friend to Taub. Their relationship began in high school when Arbel allowed Taub to express her creativity when the drama of high school swamped Taub’s teenage years. Through numerous lunches, class sessions, and after-school hours, Arbel supported Taub’s love of poetry, surrealism, and illustrations. Taub was inspired to go on and graduate from the University of Florida with a bachelor’s in visual arts.

“She’s been a constant support of inspiration, unconditional love, and friendship,” said Taub. “And I’m forever grateful to have a bright soul such as her in my life.”