Featured Artist… Christine Sharp!

ChristineSharp YAKIMACANYONSPRING CSfb

Yakima Canyon Spring by Christine Sharp

Christine’s art is different. I like that! The colors are vivid, the content not cluttered with detail. It seems to be the most simplified version of what she’s seeing. The colors and subject matter make for fabulous and interesting paintings! I urge you to check out her other pieces!

Here’s a blip about Christine from her website:

Chicago native, Christine Sharp moved to Seattle in 1978 to complete her Master’s Degree and teach at the University of Washington.

Sharp is a renaissance woman, having reinvented herself several times. “My friends say I am like a curious cat with many lives,” says Sharp. So far she’s thrived as a nurse/family therapist, college teacher/researcher, entrepreneur, documentary writer/producer, CNN news director/investigative reporter and for the past 12 years a respected fine artist.

“While some may see my choices as random and disconnected there are interesting links,” says Sharp. “I started out in the health and healing arts and gradually moved into the literary/visual arts . I’ve never been afraid to learn something new and seek out the best teachers to show me the way!”

Along the way, Sharp’s picked up some of the nation’s top awards for her writing and directing. In 1990 Sharp won the coveted Peabody Award and the Gold Medal in the New York Film Festival for her documentary “BACKHAULING” on unsafe trucking practices that aired on MacNeil Lehrer NewsHour.


After sharing the Peabody stage with luminaries like Ted Koppel, CNN’s Boys from Bagdad, Ken Burns and David Lynch, Sharp was recruited by CNN to pioneer the first Northwest News Desk. She investigated/directed news coverage of all the major stories of the 90’s…from Clinton, Gore, Dylan, Santana, and the Queen…to Harding, Simpson, Lewinsky and Unabomber. Sharp told the world the news of the day through her unique lense.

Then following a brush with death from a misdiagnosed genetic blood clotting disorder, Sharp put down pen and camera and picked up the brush. “I always loved to draw and paint but thought I’d wait until I was in the rocking chair to get serious about art. I’m so glad I started a bit earlier to pursue this path. No one knows how much time they have here!” says Sharp. 



Sharp began her art career tackling WATERCOLORS and studied with some of the best artist/teachers like Eric Weigardt, Charles Reid and Zolton Szabo. Sharp earned her signature status in the NWWS, Northwest Watercolor Society, in 2012.

Sharp began painting in oils in 2010 after studying with renown master Ned Meuller. She enjoys Plein Air painting for inspiration but prefers to paint her carefully designed oils in a larger format in her studio in Kirkland,Washington. Sharp is a juried member of the Oil Painter’s of America. Her work is widely collected by corporations and private collectors.

Sharp has been in numerous national and international art shows and galleries. She writes for Artist Magazine and is the founder of the annual Kirkland Artist Studio Tour.  

Currently Sharp is exclusively represented by LISA HARRIS GALLERY, one of the oldest and most respected gallery in Seattle, Washington located in Pike Street Market. CONTACT/DIRECTIONS

Catch you back here tomorrow!

Featured Artist… Andre Reynaldo Lucero!

AndreLucero ToThePond AL

To The Pond by Andre Lucero

I really enjoy Andre’s work. I love the spectacular light and the fabulous tree. The shadows and footprints in the snow are very cool reflecting the warm light of the day. Very nice! It looks like the first day of Spring (2013), ha ha…

Read a blip about Andre from the J.M. Stringer Gallery of Fine Art:

Painting is my passion. I was trained in a more traditional academic setting, but in recent years I have combined my love for the outdoors with my art. It is most exciting attempting to capture on the spot the way the light falls on a beautiful scene or a fleeting aspect of nature. I complete more than 100 plein air paintings a year. I am most at peace painting before nature, outdoors.”

Born in Tehran, Iran in 1967, Andre’s U.S. Military family returned to the states soon after his birth, settling in a Washington D.C. suburb. Early on, Andre’s artistic nature was encouraged by his parents who were both patrons of the arts. He showed early promise, and in high school Andre’s artwork was recognized by the Scholastic Art Awards, which resulted in his work being displayed two consecutive years at D.C.’s Corcoran Museum of Art. In college, Andre continued his study of art, ultimately taking his background in fine art and applying it to the study of illustration at Virginia Commonwealth University, where he was awarded the first Annual Mallory Callan Memorial Scholarship for Illustration. In each of his college years, Andre’s work was prominently displayed in juried shows and began to sell.

After earning a BFA, cum laude, in 1989, Andre worked for more than a decade as a free-lance illustrator. During that time, his illustrations appeared in numerous publications including The New York Times, Playboy, U.S. News & World Report, The Washington Times, Arthritis Today, Business Law Today, and Government Executive. While his illustration work was honored with the 1995 Virginia Press Association Best of Show Award and the 1994 Award of Excellence from the Art Directors’ Club of Metropolitan Washington, D.C., Andre decided to leave the field of illustration and devote his full attention to his first love, painting. Andre Lucero lives and maintains a studio in Richmond, Virginia.

Andre is an associate member of the Oil Painters of America and a member of Mid Atlantic Plein Air Painters Association, and The Jack Woodson Sketch Club (plein air painting group, Richmond, Virginia).

Catch you back here tomorrow!

Featured Artist… Don Demers!

DonDemers WeatheredWay DD

Weathered Way by Don Demers

Isn’t this a fabulous painting? I love the warm palette… it’s that nice golden light warmth that I find so appealing in paintings. The dirt path with it’s subtle shadows is fabulous, as are the trees and sky. It makes this come together to be one fabulous piece of work! Those two dead trees… spectacular! Don paints a diverse number of subjects from maritime art to landscapes, each as fabulous as the next! Don’s art has graced the covers of many magazines, whoa! He also gives workshops (check out his website for more information!)… I also see that he’ll be a judge at Plein Air Easton. Now THAT’S an event I would love to make it to!

Read a blip about Don from his website, click HERE to read in its entirety:

Mr. Demers was born in 1956, in the small, rural community of Lunenburg, Massachusetts. His interest in painting maritime subjects began while spending his summers on the coast of Maine near Boothbay Harbor.

After finishing an exemplary high school art program, he furthered his education at the School of the Worcester Art Museum, Worcester, MA, and the Massachusetts College of Art in Boston, MA.

Don’s maritime experience came about as a crewmember aboard many traditional sailing vessels including schooners and square-riggers.  He continues to be an avid sailor.

His professional career began as an illustrator and expanded into the field of fine art. His illustrations can be found on many book covers and in national publications such as Reader’s Digest, Sail Magazine, Field & Stream, Sports Afield, Yankee, and National Geographic.

Demers’ diversity has enabled him to apply his skills to clients ranging from American Airlines to the National Park Service.  Various projects have included creating art for national television advertisements, educational television programming and designing art glass for Steuben.

Demers’ body of work has expanded to the study and creation of landscape painting.  These works are created from subjects across the country and beyond, often in consort with other artists of similar inspiration.  His landscape work has garnered him two awards at the Laguna Plein Air Invitational in Laguna Beach, California in 2001 and 2002.  He has also received an award for his painting at the 2007 Crystal Cove Invitational sponsored by the Irvine Museum in Orange County, CA.

Take a minute to check out his website! Catch you back here tomorrow!

Featured Artist… Stacy Barter!

StacyBarter PickinPunkins sb

Pickin Punkins by Stacy Barter

Doesn’t this have a fairytale quality to it? The pumpkins are so cool, and the big one in the wagon is quite like Cinderella’s carriage! The little girl’s face, concentrating on not dropping the big heavy pumpkin… and the dappled sunlight tie this up into one pretty painting. Very nice!

Here’s a blip about Stacy from her website (this is a tiny portion):

Stacy Barter’s oil paintings depict her intense fascination with light and atmosphere. “I am constantly striving to capture depth and dimension in my oil paintings. Working from life, whether it’s from flowers or a model is exhilarating and ever changing.”  “This is my passion, life dedication and contribution”.

She resides in Orlando, Florida with her husband Terry and teaches workshops and is on Senior Faculty with Crealde’ School of Art in Winter Park. 

Before I forget, let me wish you a HAPPY FIRST DAY OF SPRING! Whoa, time flies!

Catch you back here tomorrow!

Featured Artist… Jeremy Mann!

JeremyMann TheWhiteVanity PrincipleGlry

The White Vanity by Jeremy Mann – Image: Principle Gallery

How amazing is this? The intricacy of this girls top is amazing. Her reflection in the mirror… spectacular! The rough looseness of the wall, vanity and mirror – out of this world! Jeremy isn’t fooling around, this dude can paint!

JeremyMann AfterTheStorm PrincipleGlry

After the Storm by Jeremy Mann – Image: Principle Gallery

I think it’s so cool when artists are diverse. Jeremy lives in San Francisco and paints many downtown scenes that are out of this world. If you haven’t yet discovered Jeremy, check out his work, it’s pretty darn amazing!

Read a blip about Jeremy from his website:

Jeremy Mann – Biography
Jeremy Mann(b. 1979) graduated from Ohio University with a Cum Laude degree in Fine Art-Painting. Afterward, he ventured out to California where he earned his Master’s Degree with Valedictorian honors at the Academy of Art University in San Francisco. Since then, Mann has garnered substantial attention in the art world. Praised by critics and collectors alike, his work recently graced the cover of American Art Collector magazine.Executed on medium to large-scale panels, each exciting work demonstrates the artist’s unmistakable style. Working on wood panels provides a strong support, where Mann can utilize a number of techniques: staining the surface, wiping away paint with solvents, and applying broad, gritty marks with an ink brayer. Mann paints with confidence and flair. He addresses complex compositions with a mature eye and his colors are both vivid and atmospheric.

Living in downtown San Francisco, Mann paints his immediate surroundings with intimate, dynamic expression. A number of unique compositions are inspired from the city’s pavement, where reflected street lamps and neon signs glitter in the rain. In each work, Mann imbues the city with drama, mood, and personality..

Ever ambitious, Mann covers a wide range of subjects beyond cityscapes: interior scenes of lone, young women as striking and restless as the city itself; a bold and intriguing self-portrait, masterful still life paintings, and pastoral scenes that recall the landscape of his hometown.

Catch you back here tomorrow!

Featured Artist… Lorenzo Chavez!

LorenzoChavez AMarchDay MkngbrdGalry

A March Day by Lorenzo Chavez

So many things to love about Lorenzo’s work. In this particular painting, the iciness of the water drew me in, the stark dark line of vegetation in the background was a nice pop and then that oh so awesome shadow line. Absolutely lovely! You must check out Lorenzo’s work, he’s got a great website! I found this particular image on the Mockingbird Gallery website, very nice!

Here’s a blip about Lorenzo from the Mockingbird Gallery website:

Lorenzo Chavez is from New Mexico where he enjoys a connection with the colorful and historic Southwest and its striking landscapes. He studied at the Colorado Institute of Art and the Art Students League of Denver.  Intensive private study of the Impressionists and 19th century American and Russian painters has made him aware of the wonderful possibilities of painting from life.

 Chavez’s work in both pastel and oil is devoted to plein air landscapes with an emphasis on the American West.  His passion for his craft and his visceral connection with whatever landscape surrounds him weave a powerful undercurrent of emotion and accessibility.

 Chavez exhibits in national invitational exhibitions across the country including the Pastel Society of America, Artists of America and Artists of the West, The Northwest Rendezvous Group, Landscapes of the American West and Plein Air Painters of America.  His worked is exhibited in the C.M. Russell Museum, Laguna Art Museum,Gilcrease Museum, Loveland Art Museum,Pasadena Art Museum, Albuquerque Museum Miniatures and the Bradford Brinton MemorialMuseum.  He was invited to exhibit 7 pastels at the 2010 summer Exhibition for the Society ofPastelists in France.

 Chavez’s work is featured in prominent galleries and magazines including Art of the West,Southwest Art, Pastel Journal, Art-Talk andAmerican Artist.  He was cover artist for The Artist’s Magazine.  He is an active member of the Western Rendezvous of Art, California Art Club, American Impressionist Society and the Pastel Society of Spain.

Catch you back here tomorrow!

Featured Artist… Craig Mitchell!

CraigMitchell JewelOfTheHighCountry CM

Jewel of the High Country by Craig Mitchell

Impressive, right? This is a good size painting, 36 x 48 and just fabulous! I love the brilliant blue sky, the stoic trees, the light on the rocks and the movement in the water that you can hear if you sit still enough.

I featured a cool artist (Tom Hughes) on Monday, (what a nice guy by the way!) and as I was looking at his website, specifically his LINKS (I love when artists post links to supplies they use, art they appreciate, and blogs they read, so thanks for sharing, Tom)! This is how I ran across Craig Mitchell.

Here’s a blip about Craig from his website:

“My father was a fisherman. In teaching me to fish he also gave me a great appreciation for the natural world. Virtually all of my paintings begin as plein air studies used as reference in the studio. Nothing can substitute for painting on location where the colors are true and my view of the earth is unfiltered. Inspiration comes from extended trips into remote wilderness areas of the West where I experience a spiritual exchange within a pristine environment. As a contemporary impressionistic painter, I balance the respect of nature’s conventions with my own interpretation of hue, composition and unity expressed in a fluid painterly style. I also give a nod to the past in technique and other time-proven principles and traditions that transcend artistic genres as a sound foundation for artistic innovation. My personal goal is to explore the process of creation, to engage the viewer in looking and therefore seeing; to capture a transient moment in time and place that eludes us in a busy world.”

Catch you back here tomorrow!

Featured Artist… Tom Hughes!

TomHughes GoldenGate TH

Golden Gate by Tom Hughes – Image

Golden Gate is a painting that Tom quickly did while scouting for workshop locations. Fabulous! I love plein air paintings, they just amaze me.

I truly enjoy Tom’s work… and his website… WHOA! I especially love the  GREATEST HITS link. These paintings are sold but Tom shows the finished painting and the sketch he used to get it to that point. And they are FABULOUS!  Just don’t take my word for it, check them out!

When looking at Tom’s “Greatest Hits” Charles Movalli crossed my mind (another fabulous artist, read more about HERE or HERE…). After reading Tom’s website I see that they are friends. Very cool indeed! I’m keeping my eye on this fabulous artist… can’t wait to see his work in person one day! I would love to be taking his workshop right now… it starts today in Marin County (CA).

Here’s a little blip about Tom from his website:

Tom Hughes was born in Massachusetts in 1965.  He attended Northeastern University and M. I. T. for physics but left in 1986 to work as a staff artist for the Christian Science Monitor daily newspaper, until 1989.  After this, he did freelance illustration for a few years while he taught himself to paint.

Hughes has been a professional artist – having finished his last actual job in 1992 – for 20 years.  He paints figures, portraits and landscapes in various media: oil, acrylic, watercolor and alkyd.  He has had solo exhibitions at galleries in San Francisco, Lake Tahoe, the New England states, and France.  His work has been featured in American Artist Watercolor magazine and Fine Art Connoisseur, for which he painted the magazine’s publisher Eric Rhoads’s portrait in oils.  Tom Hughes is one of the artists whose work is featured in a book about watercolor painting skills, Watercolor Painting by Tom Hoffmann, published in 2012 by Watson-Guptill.

In 1999, Hughes moved from New Hampshire to Meeks Bay on the west shore of Lake Tahoe where he and his wife Charlene lived for several years.  They now reside in Alameda, CA.

Catch you back here tomorrow!

Artist Elizabeth Pollie captured the beast… perfectly! Study #17.. Charlie!

charlie by elizabeth pollie

Study #17 by Elizabeth Pollie, Image Via Elizabeth Pollie

I almost fell and couldn’t get up. Seriously. When I saw the image come across on my phone, that tiny image on my Blackberry, I truly thought it was the photo of Charlie until I went to the computer and pulled up Facebook. Artist Elizabeth Pollie has been doing a study a day (30 studies/30 days) and they are so exquisite, each and every one is just breathtaking. You wonder how ONE person can have so much talent!? It boggles my mind.

Charlie is “Study #17”. Wow! It is so perfect that words truly escape me. I simply cannot stop looking at it. (STUDY? I say to myself? If I were to paint something that wonderful, I would declare myself a master and call it a day! Hee)

This is the image that was on my blog post entitled You again? Ugh…! from February 23, 2013. Elizabeth commented on that post and said that it looked like a painting… so I quickly emailed her back letting her know she was more than welcome to the image! That evening I saw the painting pop up on Facebook.

Will she just go away?

I. Almost. Fell. Over.  Elizabeth’s painting is so fabulous that it brings tears to my eyes. Wow. Am I weird? Ha ha…

Elizabeth Pollie shows her work locally here in Charleston, SC at the Horton Hayes Gallery. She is a phenomenal artist with more than just talent. This woman can SEE. She is so perceptive that she picked up the very essence of Charlie. You must check out her work, you will be floored. I’m preparing you in advance. There is no higher praise I can give. More than just a great artist, she’s such a nice person, and quite hilarious. She is as eloquent with her words as she is with her paintbrush. Most all of her posts bring a smile to my face. I love that about her!

Here’s a blip about the Elizabeth Pollie Fine Art Gallery  located in Harbor Springs, MI – I can’t wait to get there one day!

Elizabeth Pollie Fine Art is located in Harbor Springs, Michigan. The gallery specializes in representational painting by nationally acclaimed artists. The focus of EPFA is on extremely high quality fine art for the discerning client. We welcome both first time buyers as well as seasoned collectors.

Please visit us in the summer at 231 E. Main Street, Harbor Springs, Michigan 49740.

Read more about Elizabeth on a previous post… or from her website.

Catch you back here tomorrow!

Featured Artist… Matt Smith!

MattSmith at-home-in-the-canyon MS

“At Home in the Canyon” by Matt Smith

“AT HOME IN THE CANYON” is an amazing piece. I love how the little bird is in that big open space. He looks like king of the castle. The light is fabulous, the rocks are rugged and some of the best i’ve seen… and that moving water… nice!

Here’s a blip about Matt from his website:

BIOGRAPHY

Matt Smith was born in Kansas City, Missouri in 1960.  At an early age he moved to  Arizona.  He later moved to Europe where he lived two years in France and one in Switzerland. In subsequent years Smith painted in Germany, Austria and Italy.  Smith has lived most of his life in Arizona, where he has a deep attachment and respect for the Sonoran Desert.

Smith graduated from Arizona State University with a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree in painting.  He spent a vast amount of time studying the traditional styles of such landscapes masters as Maynard Dixon, William Herbert Dunton and Edgar Payne.

Most of the time, Smith can be found painting en plein air from southern Arizona to the Canadian Rockies.  He also paints the California coast to the mountains of Colorado. “I appreciate traditional landscape painting and I am inspired by the pristine landscapes of the American West.  I enjoy working in areas where one can travel for miles without seeing the influence of man.  When I paint, I feel I’ve hit the mark when I’ve captured a balance between mood, look and feel.  You know you’ve succeeded when viewers sense the desert heat or the chill of a mountain snowfall.”  

Smith currently lives in Arizona with his wife, Tracy, who is also a painter.

Catch you back here tomorrow!

Colin Page… Show in Charleston, SC – March 1- 15, 2013

ColinPageShow2013 skfb

Maine artist Colin Page. NICEST GUY EVER. Here. In Charleston… if you’re in the area don’t miss out!

Ooooh, a tease… a hint of things to come! These are some of the paintings that will be at the Smith Killian Gallery March 1- March 15, 2013.

Colin will be in town giving a workshop beginning Friday, March 1- Sunday, March 3, 2013. Make it to the gallery, check out his work, and take a piece home! The opening reception is Friday, March 1, 2013 from 5-8PM.

Here’s a blip about Colin from the Dowling Walsh Gallery in Rockland, ME (click on link to read more and to see more paintings):

Colin Page

Colin Page’s 2012 exhibition was highlighted in Maine Home + Design’s April 2012 art issue. To download a copy of the article, click here: “Show Stoppers.”

Biography

Colin Page was raised in Baltimore, MD and attended the Rhode Island School of Design. He transferred to Cooper Union with a concentration on painting. Upon graduation he lived in New York City for three years where he was an active member in the art world. In search of a more diverse landscape, Page moved to Maine where he found more time to devote to his art.

Page creates all his work on site and focuses on capturing the atmosphere and light of a scene. He believes through painting he finds moments of beauty in the space around him.

Artist’s Statement

“Through painting, I share unexpected moments of beauty that I find in the space around me. Painting is how I share the poetry of experience. ”

Colin gave an artist talk about his exhibition, “Camden”, at the Camden Public Library in March 2011. Watch the video here: Colin Page Artist Talk 2011.

Colin gave an artist talk about his exhibition in June 2010, which is available to watch here: Colin Page Artist Talk 2010.

Catch you back here tomorrow!

Image via Smith Killian Facebook

Featured Artist… Christine Lafuente!

ChristineLafuente BoatsInManset LaurelTraceyGallery

Boats in Manset by Christine Lafuente{Image}

Most of you know what I’m going to say… LOVE those pops of orange. Lawdy! That beautiful orange next to that rich gorgeous blue… oooowie! Makes for a nice piece! The palette is nice, the composition is serene and happy… kind of like you’re on the back of one of those boats with an iced tea in your hand soaking up the sun after a long winter… ok, maybe I have a wild imagination, but it’s a feel good painting for sure!

ChristineLafuenteBlueCartonsJellyJar LaurelTraceyGall

Blue Cartons & Jelly Jar by Christine Lafuente{Image}

It’s not always easy to paint everyday subjects so that they’re interesting… THIS is interesting to me… perhaps its my fondness for jars, especially with cool lids… (you can use them for SO many things!). Again, that pop of a bright color wakes this painting up leaving the rest of it nice and serene. Very nice.

Here’s a short blip about Christine from her website:

Christine Lafuente is a widely exhibited Painter and Pratt Institute Instructor. She received a Bachelors of Art in English from Bryn Mawr College (1991), a Certificate in Painting from the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts in Philadelphia (1995) and a Masters of Fine Arts in Painting from Brooklyn College (2004).

Catch you back here tomorrow!

Featured Artist… Richard Kooyman!

RichardKooyman Campfire2 rk

Campfire #2 by Richard Kooyman

How is this for loose? I love how it allows your imagination to run free… This could be a group of friends who get together for big campfires, telling great stories, toasting marshmallows, eating brownies… oh wait. I think I’m hungry… all this talk of food!

Amazing paintings are to be seen on Richard’s website. This man is versatile. I love his trees (yep, that’s a tease, now you have to go look ;) truly, they are wicked good)!

Here’s a blip about Richard from the **Emily Amy Gallery

The writer James Joyce believed that the best art was that which “grabs the viewer and arrests them and turns their focus outward from themselves.”

It is my hope that others seeing my paintings can focus their attention outward and become moved by the expansive beauty of both the natural environment and the painted surface.

I am deeply influenced by the art of Fairfield Porter, Tom Thompson, William De Kooning, David Hockney and Victor Higgins and all those that search for beauty through paint.

**Please note… the Emily Amy Gallery has since closed. Richard is now represented by the Pryor Fine Art Gallery

Catch you back here tomorrow!

Featured Artist… Melanie Parke!

MelanieParke anneirwinfafb

Art by Melanie Parke – Image from Anne Irwin Fine Art Facebook

This caught my eye right away. Different. Yes. Many layers, which I adore. The bright happy flowers looking out of the open window is sweet. The overall colors very spa like, with the darker and more vibrant colors anchoring towards the bottom. Nice! I saw this on Anne Irwin Fine Art’s Facebook page. Melanie has created some nice pieces, check out her website!

Here’s a blip about Melanie from Emily Amy Gallery in Atlanta, GA… and I’ve got to say… this is creativity at it’s finest! The statements/bios/about the artists that I run across are usually very UNpersonal, but we the people (hee) like to know a little something about you… it just makes your art more personal to us. Great job Melanie, this is awesome!:

Statement

A few notes on femininity and my art.

Personal and Professional Impact:

I only learned to really wear a dress after art school when I shined shoes at a Chicago night club in a Betsy Johnson little black dress. My pay was based on tips and needless to say the tips were good. I grasped a new perspective of my femininity around that same time when I was unexpectedly invited, but declined, into a high class call girl ring. Tempting as it was, I had paintings to make and I changed jobs to work in a gallery. During those 20 something years I was doing line drawings based on the misconceptions men and women have about their own and opposite sex.

But that was then. Now 20 years later, I am still very aware of being a woman making paintings. I made the choice of not having children in order to continue my studio practice. When I met my husband I offered to have his baby but that he would have to take care of the child, and luckily he was of the same mind not to. Now we are both painters and he does far more than his half of our domestic chores, bills and the maintenance of our business.

There were not many examples or role models of women who were able to do both children and art in the 80’s and 90’s, equally few men who were willing to share the responsibility. There are more of both now and that makes me happy that younger artists have more options. At 43 I am so grateful that I could continue my painting life uninterrupted.

I identify much of my femininity with my mother who was not your typical housewife from cable’s 1960’s Madmen. She was/is a strong willed, unconventional, horse-breeding, hard working, take charge mother who in all circumstances preferred working outside on a project. She couldn’t fathom a career as an artist for me. Still, she was my role model. A sensual tomboy, a woman who had dreams and determination, who knew what she wanted and a pioneering spirit to make it all happen. Seeing her follow through on her wild hair ideas made me realize it was possible to follow mine, to forge my own path as a painter.

Feminine Elements in the Work:

I have heard viewers surprised that my work was by a woman.

Painting is a pleasure seeking process for me, and abstraction a vehicle with which to think. I defy polarized thinking. I believe the subjective, raw emotion, knee jerk of self reference as an approach to creating only has life when paired with objective examination – connecting conceptual reasoning with abstract ideas and theories of the mind. Elements of accident, drips, crude and tentative mark marking might represent a vulnerable, stumbling, faltering humanness. A willingness to be too exuberant or to utterly fail. And I am interested in interchanging these gestural features with facets of excising line, precise shapes, or graphic forms that may reference mental processes of math, geometry, order, reason, or multiplicity.

I am patient with my work, perhaps nurturing, and do often think of them as little soldiers perhaps more than children. I am willing to see them through. However, I want them to know poetry and the great books. To know the virtues of hard work and the drunkenness of play. I like to look at them for a long while and to have tea with them. I am detail oriented with them, but give them room to be independent. I want them to flirt and I want them to be serious. If my paintings were a girl I would want them to intrinsically know how to dress for the cotillion but not necessarily keep their voices down or have conventional manners. To do what was necessary to stimulate conversation. I have to admit: I would want them to be beautiful, pretty, sexy, dirty and smart.

Melanie Parke January 2010

Catch you back here tomorrow!

Featured Artist… Morgan Samuel Price!

MorganSamualPrice KiawahPathway msp

“Kiawah Pathway” by Morgan Samuel Price

Nice painting… Kiawah Pathway… and it looks just like that tropical location. Lots of palms, big trees and lots and lots of green. Nice light, and the moss in the trees… very good, just a hint to let you know what it is! Seems like it would be easy to whip this painting out… but when your subject has so much of the same color going on, you have to know what you’re doing. I would say Morgan has figured it out quite nicely, wouldn’t you? I’m glad she found her passion early!

Here’s a blip about Morgan from her website

Art has always been an investment on numerous levels. Focused on astute observations requires all my resources.

My reason for painting; I am passionate about the process. I enjoy the challenge. The intrigue of the pursuit of a painting that conveys my enjoyment of the light in nature is gleaned from my experience while observing what piqued my attention.  The love of beauty is the joy of my life as an artist. I am never bored. Capturing the allure, in the simplest things or an expansive view is why I stay a student of observation, to discern those fleeting moments.

Many years ago, a most gifted artist, Loran Wilford, said to me, “You will become your own teacher”.  This simple yet prophetic statement became a fact in my career. I feel very fortunate that early in my life I realized this study would keep me focused as I pursued this multifaceted demanding passion. Being receptive is an asset. Lucky me, I found my passion early.

I’ll say! Lucky indeed! Catch you back here tomorrow!