Tag: art

  • Waterlogged: Laura Sanders

    Waterlogged: Laura Sanders

    Happy Memorial Day, Artsies!  Hope you are out celebrating with friends and family.  Chances are if you aren’t completely land-locked, you’ll be spending some time in, on or near the water.  Hubby & I are spending the holiday moving from our temporary rental in town to our summer rental on Hayden Lake here in Northern Idaho.  It’s still been pretty chilly here, so we won’t be doing any in-water activities, but I’m sure we’ll find ourselves soaking up the sun and just enjoying lake life.  Columbus, Ohio artist Laura Sanders perfectly captures the wonder of water-logged summers.

    Obstructed Horizon, oil on canvas

    I was immediately drawn to Sanders’ work, not just because George & I will be enjoying lake life this summer, but also because her work beautifully portrays the joyful memories of my own summer lake experiences as a young girl.  My older brother, Jason & I used to spend a few weeks of every summer at the home of our great aunt & uncle, who were active retirees living on small Hall Lake in Northern Florida.  Aunt Helen & Uncle Vernon were still fairly young, but had no grandchildren yet, so we filled the void, spending lazy days swimming, fishing, biking and just generally having the time of our lives.

    Untitled, oil on canvas, 36×36

    Jason was into taking my uncle’s little johnboat around the lake for a spin and biking up and down the clay road, while I, like the girls Sanders’ paints, was more the little mermaid.  I loved being in the water, the feel of it on my skin, the sun beating down, heating up the inner tube until it got just hot enough to need to dunk under for a bit of relief.  Uncle Vernon loved to swim, too, and spent hours in the lake with us, while Aunt Helen was the disciplinarian.  She firmly believed in the no swimming just after lunch rule.. much to our chagrin.  But she always brought us Fla-Vor-Ice’s while we swam, so all was forgiven.

    Noon, oil on canvas, 25×27

    As we grew older, our time at the lake grew shorter.  We became busy with teenage life and Aunt Helen & Uncle Vernon finally had a grandson of their own to spoil.  We moved on, but they held a very special place in our hearts.  They’ve both passed now, Vernon several years ago and Helen just last year.  But the memories we made with them live on.  Every once in a while, a breeze stirs up or I’m near the water, or see paintings like Laura Sanders’ and I am immediately transported back to Hall Lake.  I can feel their presence and hear Aunt Helen scolding Uncle Vernon for keeping us in the water too long, just before she rings the old dinner bell by the back door.

    Cloud Cover, oil on canvas, 52×42
    Later Summer, oil on canvas

    I hope you’ve spent this Memorial Day making some wonderful memories of your own!  To see more of Laura Sanders’ work, please visit her website.  For a little bonus, scroll down to the end of this post to see a special photo from my days at Hall Lake. 😉

    Featured image is Girls and Plastic Floating, oil on canvas.  All images are via the artist’s website or the website of her representing gallery, Rebecca Ibel Gallery.

    Here’s your bonus pic!

    Hall Lake, Summer 1982
    l to r: My brother Jason, our friend & lake neighbor Glenn Hayhurst,
    his sister Shelley, yours truly
  • Friday Faves: A Walk in the Woods

    Friday Faves: A Walk in the Woods

    I’ve made no secret here of how enamored I am by trees.  There is just something so inherently beautiful within the elements of a tree, it isn’t any wonder than artists whose work utilizes wood possess such natural grace and elegance.  Here are a few of my favorites!

    Nestler series by Grant Ward, maple burl, spun aluminum
    & padauk, 19×8
    Cleave series by Joe Segal, 9×18
    Cities and Signs by Evan Blackwell, wood, 26x22x2
    A Lightness in Being, Exercises in Zen #2 by Christian Burchard, madrone burl, 12x12x26

    Grant Ward  | Joe Segal | Evan BlackwellChristian Burchard 

    How about you, Artsies?  Any wood-obsessed artists I should know about?  Tell me in the comments below!

    Featured image is Untitled ( Birds on a Wire ) by Evan Blackwell, mixed media, 8×11.75×2.75.  All images are via the artist’s websites, linked above.

  • The Sweet By & By: Deann Hebert

    The Sweet By & By: Deann Hebert

    There are times I wonder if I have multiple personalities.  I love big cities for all of their energy, culture and swagger.  New York continues to be one of my favorite places in the world.  But I also adore the sweet, slower pace and relaxed living of more rural areas.  Maybe it’s my grandmother’s farm girl roots or my love of quiet and the outdoors.  But whatever the cause, the work of Franklin, TN artist Deann Hebert reminds me of the glory of picnics and winding country roads.

    Blessed

    Obviously, Deann’s subject matter brings to mind life’s simple pleasures.. fields full of flowers, the wonder of a bird’s nest, the sweetness of a secluded little country church.

    Fall Whispers

    She reinforces her bucolic atmospheres by using a soft, neutral palette and layer upon layers of painted texture reminiscent of tree bark and peeling barn paint.

    Nests

    Her work makes me want to load up a picnic in my bike basket ( ok, I don’t have one yet, but I’m working on it! ) and ride along the fence line, saying hello to cows and horses and passersby.

    The Painted Fence
    Country Barn

    In the words of John Denver, Country roads, take me home!  At least that’s what the country mouse side of my personality is longing for today.  The city mouse may show up again tomorrow. 😉  To see more of Deann Hebert’s work, please visit her website and Facebook page.

    Featured image is Easter Sunday.  All images are via the artist’s website.

  • Uninhibited Aberrations: Michelle Y Williams

    Uninhibited Aberrations: Michelle Y Williams

    I have such admiration for people who live moment to moment, seizing each day as if it were their last.  The artwork of Houston artist Michelle Y. Williams is the artistic equivalent of the ultimate in uninhibited spontaneity.

    Plan I, mixed media on canvas, 56×58

    Perhaps it is the perceived improvisation of abstracts like Williams’ that attracts me so deeply.  They call to the place in my spirit that longs to be the kind of person who doesn’t need to plan carefully, one who can just pick up and go at a moment’s notice.

    12-143, mixed media, 12×12

    Pops of fluid color flow across the canvas among veiled foggy tones and textures, like vivid mirage-like pools.

    Plan K, mixed media on canvas, 52×52

    In the midst of the tonal textures, we find surprises of color and light.  It’s almost as if we’re wandering lost through the fog, catching glimpses of life in the mist.

    Plan h, mixed media on canvas, 56×58
    Plan i, mixed media on canvas, 56×58

    Please visit Michelle Y. Williams’ website to see more of her work.  If you happen to be near Tulsa, OK, be sure to check out her current exhibition at Exhibit by Abersons, a beautifully curated gallery!

    Featured image is Plan G, mixed media on canvas, 77×39.  All images are via the artist’s website.

  • Artsy on Escape Into Life: Christina Baker

    I love it when fans of an artist’s work remind me to feature them!  So of course, I had a V-8ish slap-myself-on-the-forehead moment when the Managing Editor at Escape Into Life saw me post on Twitter about Christina Baker’s work and reminded me how awesome it would be to feature her over there.

    Runaway Tears by Christina Baker, acrylic on canvas, 48×48

    Please go over and take a look!

    Christina Baker on Escape Into Life

  • Natural Replications: Brenda Mallory

    Natural Replications: Brenda Mallory

    Whenever we go hiking, my eyes are always drawn to the textures and details surrounding me.  I love running my hand over rough & scaly tree bark and soft, green moss.  Portland artist Brenda Mallory’s sculptures mimic the abstracted details found in nature, the very ones that enchant and fascinate me each time I step outside.

    Explosion in Gold, wax cloth and welded steel, 18x18x10
    Explosion in Gold ( detail )

    Mallory’s work follows nature’s patterns of repetition and rhythm, organic forms grouped together to a soft, undulating whole.

    Undulations, Waxed cloth, nuts, bolts, welded steel, 48x70x6

    She juxtaposes the natural molds and materials with more industrial elements like bolts and welded steel so that the sculptures become a statement man’s impact on old growth systems and environments.

    Scaffold, waxed cloth, welded steel, 14x18x4
    Waveform (dark), waxed cloth, threaded rods, nuts, 31x5x4.5(detail on right)

    To see more of Brenda Mallory’s work, please check out her website!

    Featured image is Trophy ( detail ), cloth, wax, welded steel, 20x20x13.  All images are via the artist’s website.

  • Of Bygone Days and Carefree Ways: Signe & Genna Grushovenko

    Of Bygone Days and Carefree Ways: Signe & Genna Grushovenko

    Every family has an unofficial photographer.  That one person you can always count on to be there, camera in hand, to capture milestones, special gatherings and stolen moments.  My maternal grandmother played the role in my family.  She filled album after album of memories to leave behind and those photographs are among my most treasured possessions.  They are a visual storybook of our family history.  Greenville, South Carolina artists Signe and Genna Grushovenko find the precious memories of strangers and translate them into paint.

    Horizontal Wine, oil on linen, 36×36

    Though the source photographs themselves have been abandoned by their owners, whether by choice or loss, the artists capture the moments and further anonymize them, erasing faces of features and expressions.  Thus they become instantly relatable.  The faces could be you.. your brothers.. your mother.. your grandmother.

    Beach Friends: Process Colors, oil on linen, 30×40

    The husband and wife painting duo collaborate on each canvas, husband Genna supplies the underlying layers of color, pattern and texture onto which wife Signe applies the inspired composition of color blocked figures and settings.  The use of a vibrant, limited palette allows the eye to focus on form and depth– and there is plenty of it to be had!

    Urban Stroll, oil on linen, 30×40

    We always tend to look back on “the good ol’ days” with fondness.  Whether or not the days were really good is debatable, I suppose.  But I think there is much we can learn by looking back on the imagery of our past.  How to be content.  Living with less but living more.  Enjoying simple moments with family and friends.

    Little White Dress, Little White Dog ( Large ), oil on linen, 36×36
    Four Layered Lounge: Citrus, oil on linen, 48×48

    I hope your weekend was filled with simple, blissful living!  To see more of Signe & Genna Grushovenko’s work, please visit their website.  Oh and be sure to check out one of their gorgeous pieces hanging in the 2012 HGTV Green Home!  PS– My hubby is convinced that we’re going to win one of the dream homes. 😉

    {Artist found via Dolan Geiman.}

    Featured image is Sunspot Class Portrait, oil on linen, 48×60.  All images are via the artists’ website.

  • Friday Faves: Of Sea and Sky

    Friday Faves: Of Sea and Sky

    In case you can’t tell by the blog’s background, I have a favorite color.  I love most of the blue family, but am always immediately drawn to the color turquoise.  Or, as my niece Kendall calls it “toy-quoise”.  So it should come as no surprise that my favorite artwork includes a heavy dose of my beloved hue.  Here are some turquoise favorites I’m digging this week:

    Gypsy Blue by Erin Ashley
    The Search For Green by Jeanne Opgenhaffen
    Enhanced Sunspots After Galileo I by Rachel Brumer
    Wish You Were Here by Josh Reames
    Unobstructed Effort by Sharon Booma

    Erin AshleyJeanne Opgenhaffen | Jack Doherty | Rachel Brumer | Josh ReamesSharon Booma 

    Do you have a favorite color, Artsies?  Do tell!   And be sure to take some time to check out the artists’ websites, linked above.

    Featured image is Gypsy Blue by Erin Ashley.  All images are via the artists’ websites, linked above.

  • Fractured Worlds: Clark Goolsby

    Fractured Worlds: Clark Goolsby

    With the advances in communication and technology, our world in many ways seems much smaller than it once was.  But it also feels like we’re losing touch even as the lines of communication are more open and free.  How many times have you been guilty of texting instead of calling?  Substituting online interaction for the real people just outside your door?  The work of mixed media artist Clark Goolsby reminds us just how fractured our world has become.

    Plastic Messiah, mixed media on linen over panel, 18×24

    Culture and news spreads more rapidly than ever, for better or worse, lives can be changed overnight thanks to media exposure.  Families text, Twitter and Facebook each other while in the same house, even the same room, instead of having a real conversation.  Almost all of our needs can be met online– work, news, reading, shopping, etc. and the more we rely on it, the more insidious it may become.

    Unknown Degredations, mixed media on wool over panel, 16×20

    Goolsby’s use of line recalls the wires and cables that connect us and make all of this communication possible.  But we also see in his use of graphics lettering & images and brightly hued, fractured geometric forms that this bombardment of media, though enticing, takes it toll on our psyche and our relationships.

    Untitled III, mixed media on canvas, 12×12

    I’m as guilty of the overuse of technology as anyone.  I write this blog.  I use Facebook & email as my primary means of communication with friends & family who are far away.  But nothing beats a day spent outdoors with my husband or having a face to face conversation with a friend.

    Untitled Shape I, mixed media on canvas, 54×68
    Scrape, mixed media on canvas, 30×24

    Do you have a strategy to avoid communication overload?  Please visit Clark Goolsby’s website to see more of his work.  But after you’ve spent some time with his work, turn off your computer and talk to a loved one face to face. 😉

    Thanks to Cacaphony Art House for introducing me to this artist!

    Featured image is Unknown Degredations, mixed media on wool over panel, 16×20.  All images are via the artist’s website.

  • Architect of Happy: Tory Cowles

    Architect of Happy: Tory Cowles

    When you were young, did you ever dream of living in make believe places?  Like Willy Wonka’s Chocolate Factory, The Jetson’s futuristic abode  or maybe the Smurfs’ village?  The work of Tory Cowles reminds me of the bright, whimsical worlds that inhabit our childhoods.

    #495, mixed media, 60×48

    Given that Cowles’ background includes working in interior design, woodworking and carpentry, it makes perfect sense that her abstract mixed media work would have an architectural quality.

    #562, mixed media, 48×48

    She’s creating landscapes full of whimsy and imagination, an abstracted, make-believe toyland where you might feel like you looking right into Candyland.

    #642, acrylic on canvas, 72×60

    Cowles’ work reminds me of hours spend building houses and worlds out of anything we could find– blocks, spools, pipe cleaners, my grandmother’s colorful Tupperware.  Worlds that appeal to the child in all of us, yet are sophisticated enough for adult eyes.

    #596, mixed media, 48×60
    #569, mixed media, 48×48

    To see more of Tory Cowles’ work, please visit her website.

    Featured image is #495, mixed media, 60×48.  All images are via the artist’s website.