Category: Mixed Media

  • Paraphernalia Resurrected: Randy Mora

    Paraphernalia Resurrected: Randy Mora

    “There is nothing new under the sun”, ( Ecclesiastes 1: 9 ).  Each generation thinks they are better than the last,  but if that were so, why do we as a human race continue to repeat our old patterns and mistakes?   Colombian artist Randy Mora, takes vintage ephemera and creates digital collages that explore ideas that may seem to be modern yet still hearken to the styles of eras past.  His work reminds us that time has not erased our patterns and prejudices.

    Torre Blanca, digital collage, 51.35x66cm

    Mora’s illustrations seem to show us that none of the issues we face today is really all that new.  Man is man and has been of a similar nature since his beginning.

    La Pitonisa, digital collage, 50x65cm

    There has always existed a quest for wealth, for supremacy, for power and subjugation.  It seems to be in man’s very nature to isolate ourselves with others who are like us, judging and condemning those who are not.

    Pan de Vida, digital collage, 46×60 cm

    We live in a world divided between “us” and “them”, being taught from an early age to look out for ourselves first, creating within us cynical, fearful souls who become so self-centered we are unable to empathize and understand anyone whose views may be different from our own.

    Magritte’s Trap, digital collage, 43x50cm
    My Favorite Independent Bookstore: Gay’s the Word, London, commission for The Guardian ( UK )

    The inability to empathize and see the world from someone else’s point of view too often breeds in us feelings of first fear, then of superiority.  Why are we afraid?  Why do we think ourselves better than another?  Each of us is born in the same way, completely innocent and knowing nothing of the world.   To see more of Randy Mora’s work, please visit his website.

    Artist found via Escape Into Life.

    Featured image is Este Año Sí…, commission for Dinero, Business & Economy Magazine.  All images are via the artist’s website.

  • Beautiful Accidents: Caroline Wright

    Beautiful Accidents: Caroline Wright

    Life is what happens to you when you’re busy making other plans..”is a favorite John Lennon quote of mine.  Often, it’s those unexpected moments that bring the most joy.  Austin artist Caroline Wright’s work is full of incidental beauty.

    Icarus, acrylic on rice paper, 72×39

    Abstract painters like Wright know that these happy accidents contribute to the rhythm and spontaneity so many of us love about abstract work.

    Fragments for Sappho

    Her work has wonderful little punctuations of color that keep the eye moving across the surface. But it’s the unintentional drips and marks that really make each piece soar and create tiny little compositions waiting to be discovered.

    Tropicalia, acrylic on rice paper, 72×39

    Even in her quieter compositions, such as the watercolor & mixed media below, the accidents are more subtle.  The way the colors are delicately placed and soak into each other create soft, exquisite transitions.

    Longing Floats, watercolor, ink, acrylic and graphite on paper, 24×18
    Dog House, acrylic, watercolor, ink & pencil on handmade watercolor paper, 30×22

    To see more of Caroline Wright’s work, please visit her website.

    Featured image is Rain Poncho, acrylic, watercolor and pencil on handmade watercolor paper, 30×22.  All images are via the artist’s website.

  • Happy Easter!

    Happy Easter!

    Hope you enjoy a day filled with sunshine and the love of family and friends!  And maybe some bunnies. 🙂

    Rococo Rabbits by Maribel Angel

    Visit Maribel Angel’s website for more somebunnies to love.

  • Friday Faves: Are You a Sweet Genius?

    Friday Faves: Are You a Sweet Genius?

    Tell me ya’ll have at least seen the commercials for Food Network’s Sweet Genius show.  If you haven’t, you are missing out on some unintentional hilarity!  Hubby and I can’t help but imitate host Ron Ben-Israel each time he utters the show’s tagline, “Are YOU a sweet genius?” in a heavily accented voice.  With shows like Sweet Genius, Cupcake Wars and Cake Boss, there seems to be a quest for confection these days.  How about a few sweet artistic treats to kick off your weekend?  Enjoy!

    Big Banana Split by Mary Ellen Johnson, oil on panel, 38×32
    Black Pool Rock by Joel Penkman, egg tempera on gesso board, 17.7×23.5
    Pink Confetti Cake by Peter Anton, mixed media, 40x51x40
    Coffee and Cake by Duane Keiser

    Mary Ellen Johnson | Joel Penkman | Peter AntonDuane Keiser 

    Hope you enjoy some sweet goodies of your own this weekend!

    Featured image is Boxed Donuts by Peter Anton, mixed media, 36x37x5.5.  All images are via the artists’ websites as linked above.

  • Art to Inspiration: Pakayla Biehn

    Art to Inspiration: Pakayla Biehn

    This blogging world is chock full of creative and inspiring people.  I am so excited to participate in the collaborative blogging project, Art to Inspiration!  Art to Inspiration is a monthly collaborative blogging project in which bloggers around the world post how the same piece of artwork has inspired them on the first Wednesday of every month.  So let’s get started!

    I was pumped when I saw the artwork inspiration for April, 2 Years, 264 Days and This Morning by Pakayla Biehn, an artist whose work I love and recently featured!

    2 Years, 264 Days and This Morning, oil on canvas, 26×18

    In my gallery days, one of my absolute favorite tasks was to help curate, design and plan how the work was hung in the gallery.  Laying work out, figuring out how pieces relate and the best way for them to work together visually.  So for my first Art to Inspiration, it felt natural to curate my own gallery of work inspired by Biehn’s piece.

    RIGHTTORETURN(DONAUDELTA) by Markus Linnebrink, c-print, epoxy resin on wood, 60×72
    Floral Study by Kristina Bailey, acrylic on canvas, 60×48 ( via Gregg Irby Fine Art )
    The Unending Amends We’ve Made ( Imperishable Wreath ) by Lauren Clay, Acrylic on cut paper,papier-mâché, wire, wood, 30x25x6
    Z.T. by Wil Jansen, oil on canvas, 40x30cm
    The Things We Miss by Lissy Laricchia
    Eggplant by Michelle Armas, acrylic on canvas, 30×40 ( via Gregg Irby Fine Art )

    Pakayla Biehn

    Markus LinnenbrinkKristina Bailey | Lauren Clay | Wil Jansen | Lissy LaricchiaMichelle Armas  

    Visit the artists’ websites, linked above, for more inspiration!

    You can find more information on Art to Inspiration here and if you would like to participate in the next Art to Inspiration, just fill out this form! Follow me and all the other Art to Inspiration bloggers on Twitter by subscribing here.  Let the inspiring begin! 
    All images are via the artists’ websites unless otherwise noted.

  • Friday Faves: Yes, Deer

    Friday Faves: Yes, Deer

    Hubby and I have been going through major winter cabin fever.  Every weekend lately, it’s been either snowing or raining.  We miss getting our hiking on and are ready to see some wildlife actually in the wild ( the diaorama at the local Cabellas doesn’t count ).  There’s just something so magical about coming across creatures in the woods.   Are you experiencing the itch to get outdoors and do some animal watching?  Maybe these will help..

    Guardian Lineage by Duy Huynh, acrylic on wood, 32×32
    Passage by Susan Hall, oil on panel, 43×51
    Yellow Stag by Rachel Denny, wool, polyurethane foam, wood, plastic & steel, 40x19x21
    Stout by Scott Belcastro, acrylic on panel, 20×20
    Bauxite Rose From Her Lifeless Sleep by Deedee Cheriel

    Duy Huynh | Susan Hall | Rachel Denny | Scott BelcastroDeedee Cheriel 

    Happy weekend!

    Featured image is by Corine Perier.  All images are via the artists’ websites, linked above.

  • Saturated Fluidity: Anne Harper

    Saturated Fluidity: Anne Harper

    I am craving color.  It seems like spring has sprung everywhere except where we are.  Don’t get me wrong, I love winter, but after almost 4 months without flowers, I am ready for blooming!  So it should be no surprise that this week I’m drawn to the work of Anne Harper.

    Persuasion #2, acrylic and mixed media on canvas

    Spring is full of contrasts– bright flowers glowing against skies wet with rain.  Harpers work parallels for me the loveliness of an urban spring.  Her liquid color reminds me of my first spring visit to Seattle, where the cherry blossoms littered wet sidewalks.  It seemed magical. ( Probably didn’t hurt that I was newly in love, both with the city and my then soon-to-be hubby! )

    Persuasion #4, acrylic and mixed media on canvas

    Then, the rainy days of spring gradually dry, giving way to the glorious glow of summer.  I am ready.  Are you?

    Spontaneous #2, acrylic and mixed media on canvas
    Persuasion #7, acrylic and mixed media on canvas

    To see more of Anne Harper’s work, please visit her website.  In addition to being a fantastic painter, she is also a talented musician!  You can listen to her tunes here.

    This artist found via Saatchi Online.

    Featured image is a detail of Persuasion #4.  All images are via the artist’s website.

  • Friday Faves: Branching Out

    Friday Faves: Branching Out

    Hubby and I are treehuggers.  Not in a holier-than-thou, I-always-recycle, never-ever-use-plastic-grocery-bags kind of way ( though there may be a little of that ), we’re more the Babe!-did-you-see-the-size-of-that-tree, doesn’t-that-tree-trunk-look-like-the-Venus-de-Willendorf, oh-I-want-to-hug-it variety.  As the days get longer and the weather gets slightly warmer, we’re beginning to plan lots of treks into the woods to do some tree-gazing.  One of our favorite things to do is lay on the ground and look up at the trees and their branches.  So to get you in the mood for perhaps a little tree-gazing of your own, here are a few artists who share our woodsy love!

    Rumis Ladder by Adam Shaw, oil on canvas, 64×70
    Rusted by Liz Ruest, digital collage, prints available
    All Things Great and Small by Angie Renfro, oil on panel, 30×24
    Eastern Redbud II by Susan Goldsmith, white gold leaf with pigment print, oil pastel, oil paint & resin on panel, 36×36

    Adam ShawLiz Ruest | Angie Renfro |Susan Goldsmith 

    So how about you, Artsies?  Any tree-hugging plans this weekend? 🙂

    Featured image is The Truth Calls Us Into Being by Adam Shaw, oil on canvas, 70×50.  All images are via the artist’s websites, linked above.

  • Little Happy Somethings: Trish Grantham

    Little Happy Somethings: Trish Grantham

    Some days my happy mood gets kicked in the gut first thing in the morning.  This usually results from something I’ve read online that a) infuriates me, b) disgusts me, c) leaves me sick to my stomach and shaking my head in dismay, or d) all of the above, as was the case this morning.  So it is only fitting that the work of today’s artist, Portland’s Trish Grantham, is the perfect antidote for what ails me!

    The Creators, mixed media, 54×24

    Unapologetically sweet, Trish’s work is filled with joy-inducing imagery.  Masked-bandit-like birds, happily wise woodland creatures, smiling toast (!).. they all speak to me, saying “Hello! We’re here to remind you that the world is really a happy place filled with kind beings!”  Many of the world’s inhabitants have simply forgotten how to be truly grateful, gracious and happy.

    The Creators Gather, mixed media, 24×12

    Just as it is impossible to look into the face of a smiling child and not smile back, as I was looking through Trish’s portfolio, my pursed mouth and heavy heart where replaced by a light-hearted grin.

    The Flight Instructor, mixed media, 30×36

    This world can be an ugly place and for some reason, it seems, many of the people in it are striving to make it even more hostile, all for the sake of their fear of someone taking away something that never truly belonged to them.  We don’t own this world.  It owes us nothing.  Oh what a happier place it would be if the world were ruled by the creatures in Grantham’s work!  Instead of devouring the innocent, the wolf instead sets the baby birds free to live as they please.  Sure his belly may not be as full, but his heart will be bursting.

    Free to Fly, mixed media
    Sympathetic Sea, mixed media, 72×60

    Trish’s work spoke to my weary heart this morning. I hope it speaks to yours and perhaps, instead of choosing bitterness and hate, you will instead choose joy.  I have.

    To see more of Trish Grantham’s work, please check out her website.  If you happen to be in Portland, OR ( And if you are, how about sharing a little housing advice?  What areas are affordable but still nice & safe?  Hubby and I are looking to the future.. ), sorry for the sidetrack– you can see Trish’s work in Portland at Augen Gallery, a delightful contemporary gallery downtown.

    Featured image is The Futurist, mixed media, 24×12. All images are via the artist’s website.

  • Friday Faves: Taste the Rainbow

    Friday Faves: Taste the Rainbow

    Mmmm.. Skittles.  Now that I have you craving some multi-colored chewy candies, let’s talk rainbows.  The ubiquitous symbol of hope seems to be everywhere these days.  Artists are embracing prismatic colors and shapes like mad!  Check out a few examples I found..

    Sarah Applebaum
    Lisa Congdon
    Christopher Derek Bruno
    Marco Puccini ( via Design Milk )
    Mark Warren Jacques

    Be sure to check out the artists’ websites to see more rainbow-hued wonders!

    Sarah Applebaum 

    Lisa Congdon

    Christopher Derek Bruno  

    Marco Puccini

    Mark Warren Jacques 

    All images are via the artist’s websites, unless otherwise noted.