Mixed media collage paintings: I am interested in the way collage can be integrated into paintings so that one is not conscious of the boundary between the printed image and paint. Beauty and silence play an important part in my artwork. The paintings become quiet meditations on meaning and existence.
Allen Patrou is an award-winning portrait photographer with a studio in the Sunnyslope area of N. Central Phoenix. Allen creates beautiful studio and location portraiture in the Greater Phoenix area. Allen's photography includes family, high school seniors, dance, children, glamour, talent, business, fantasy, wedding portraits, fashion and more.
My name is Anthony Farias but everyone knows me as “Eli.” I am an Artist but more than that I am a creative thinker who hopes to change the world and do some good here on this earth before my time is up. I became an artist to inspire the minds of the youth, invigorate our culture and give back a little beauty to this world.
Ann Osgood is a painter located in Phoenix Arizona. She works in a variety of art styles from abstract expressionist to natural and urban landscapes. She enjoys working from live models and outside En Plein Air as well as in the studio.
Making nature and wildlife come alive for those who love the Southwest. Cheuvront’s pieces reveal an ongoing fascination with the Western and Southwestern wilderness, whether reflected in a local trail or a remote lake only reachable by a long backpack. Her enthusiasm is translated into a vibrant, modern palette and energetic, dynamic brushwork. Look for studio and plein air works showcasing the Yosemite highlands, Sonoran desert, and the red rocks of Sedona.
Christy A. Moeller was born in Texas, but developed her love of art while living in Germany as a child in the 80'S. Her mother would take her to all the greatest art museums in Europe and fostered her desire to create masterpieces of her own. She has explored a myriad of art styles, but is most defined by her work in oil paints, blending disquieting mixtures of surrealism, fashion, and anthrozoology to explore the strength of women and their emotional role in society. Her pieces range from endearing to enigmatic, while offering clues that reveal the dark side of her subject’s feminine beauty.
I am a ceramic artist and educator, living in Phoenix. Currently, I am professor of ceramics and drawing at Paradise Valley Community College.
Clay is a filter through which I discover, and explore my world. With clay I can create objects which make real the ideas passing through my brain. I like to make images in clay of those things which I am trying to understand, like, why are people afraid of other people? And, what are the most important things in my world?
I seem to be evolving into a more contemporary, almost abstract direction lately. Hum...it's where my hand wanted to go. I decided to keep this one simple, leaving all the foreground details to your imagination.
Elena Erős (pronounced: Erosh, which means "strong" in Hungarian) was born in Moscow, Russia. Her first art teacher was her father Boris Egorov, aircraft designer. She continued her art education with realist painter A. Motovilov. In 1971 she competed with thousands of other talented young people and after series of entry exams won a coveted place at the Faculty of Applied Art, Moscow State University of Design and Technology, where she studied under renowned Russian Artists. In 1973 Elena Eros was awarded an ‘Outstanding Student International Scholarship’, enabling her to continue her education at the Hungarian University of Art & Design in Budapest, Hungary, from where she has MFA in Men's and Women' Fashion Design.
Artist Elissa Nowacki enjoys adolescent humor, paranormal romance novels, 80's punk/alt rock and taking over her family's kitchen table to paint. When she isn't assistant principaling at a K-8 public school in Phoenix, she can be found in her tacky pajamas, using art as meditation from the stressors of adulting.
Elizabeth Butler is compelled to search out the beautiful. She feels deeply connected to the earth and strives to communicate through her paintings the awesome and moving power in the beauty of the natural world around us. Ever grateful for the artist vocation, when not painting, she is happiest barefoot, outside, touching the earth, and dancing.
Ellen Nemetz is a contemporary artist based in Phoenix, Arizona.
Nemetz studied Biochemistry and Molecular Biology at the University of Madison, Wisconsin. As a military wife, Nemetz traveled extensively until settling in Arizona. She studied art at the Maricopa County Community Colleges from which she has twice received the League of Innovation Award.
Everywhere Nemetz has lived, water has influenced her emotions. Her paintings of water reflect not only the beauty of water, but the necessity of water in our desert environment for our health, recreation, and happiness. So much of our enjoyment of the outdoors in Phoenix involves water: in pools, floating down the Salt River, boating on the reservoir lakes that ring Phoenix. Here in the desert, water is more precious than in any other location.
Since the late 70's I have been drawing and painting. I was the kid in the corner absorbing the world around me, then replicating what I could see and feel. I majored in visual arts during high school, and at Arizona State University. My education experience and self-taught practices continue to keep me inspired. With each piece of art I strive to give back my understanding of the subject matter through the skill of expressionism.
Tres Elegante Designs: Handcrafted statement jewelry for the person who wants to be seen, recognized, and taken seriously.
This is what I was born to do. From the time that I was 8 years old I knew that I would be an artist. There just wasn't any doubt, no second choice, no question. To create art, in whatever form it may be, is part of my purpose in this life.
I am obsessed with the hidden nature of things. As a painter of surreal desert landscapes I produce work that reveals the luminous beauty hidden in displaced objects and barren desolate horizons.
My process consists of using found objects. I create a still-life setup and then create a landscape scene around it resulting in a painting that evokes the beauty and desolation of the desert.
The types of objects I select to use as reference for my paintings are usually heavily rusted and broken pieces of metal. Reusing these discarded objects gives them a second life and a beauty they may not have originally had as tools or other useful items.
I taught high school and college art for 34 years, retired in 1999.
My artwork, primarily printmaking, is included in shows and private collections worldwide.
My motivation for making art is entirely personal and experiential. Figures, color and design principles, and life experience feed my work.
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