Spring Bazaar: The Artists
For details and pricing just click on the art work when it's in the featured box. You can then add it to your cart and continue shopping or checkout. All works are shipped or delivered by the artist at no additional cost, within the continental United States.
KAT ZINNA
www.katzinna.com [email protected] After retiring I thought I would renew my creative interests. I love color and motion and try to express it in my art. The process can be arduous but is always rewarding. Perhaps the best part, is enjoying the creativity and stimulation of my fellow artists. |
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Carol Hayman Carol Hayman, photographer-printmaker, is a retired Anthropology Professor from Austin Community College. Her work suggests myths and daydreams in a dreamworld of cosmic nature, evoking notions of disappearance, deconstruction, and self-effacement. It would seem that landscapes are eternal, but in reality they are almost as fleeting as the expression on a person‚ and just as moody. The images bridge past and present, the mystical and concrete. These monochrome photo intaglio prints are pulled at Slugfest Print Studio, Austin, TX on an American French Tool Press, from original photographs by the artist, on Arches BFK Rives paper with Charbonnel ink. www.carolhayman.weebly.com [email protected] |
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Hyekeun Park
Ludwig Wittgenstein said, ‚"What can be shown cannot be said". I am concerned about the wordless moments I have had in my life emerging through my art-making process. I am examining the visualization of my mindscape, toward direction for future output. My goal is to bridge the two worlds of Eastern and Western world experience through the use of action painting in relationship to body gesture, memory, touch and timing. In this sense, my painting can be viewed as a minds cape filled with my personal expressions and with my physical presence and absence at the same time. The purpose of my work is to achieve an understanding of how paintings can be an expression of my identity and culture, while remaining relevant to principles of painting. I am stimulated by visual references such as aerial views of the landscape, especially of the Rocky Mountains, Eastern art such as Korean calligraphy, and the paintings of Jackson Pollock, Hans Hofmann and Sam Gilliam. My paintings will involve time, process, and material experimentation along with personal observation. Methods of experimentation will include varying densities of mixed media such as gesso/paint to be dripped and poured to achieve a variety of mark making. Color combinations will differ from layer to later and changes in surface will result from this process at which time I can decide which ones are furthering my idea and which will be eliminated. Like many action painters I want to close in on a manner of working that incorporates the experimental and that which is under control. Time is a key element in the process. As materials are poured onto the canvas, (which is on the floor), I wait a couple of days or longer to see how the elements merge and then wipe, scrape, or add, revealing and covering layers. [email protected] |
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John Michaelson
Several Pen&Ink had been created, inspired through heavens of Mojave Desert, another to the edge of Arizona. This pencil capture is of a friend, desert cowboy in Joshua Tree, my home. My images are always covered acrylic with mat.& frame. JTMArt.net [email protected] |
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Eileen McKeon Butt
ISO: peace, order, stability, hope... These challenging times have propelled me on an internal quest to find meaning and order in spite of the chaos surrounding us. In response to this desire, an abstract landscape has arisen to answer the challenge. Boundaries and channels of color, form, and line have emerged to assert themselves against the maelstrom. They have brought me hope and purpose. I hope that this series of drawings, which I call "Isolation Creations" speak to you as well, with their reminder that creativity is the most powerful force in the Universe. eileenmckeonbutt.com [email protected] |
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Beverly Dennis
I am fascinated by space, color, light. I am delighted by evidence of all of these. A painting is the perfect meeting point. Any thing I see around me is fair game. The vastness of space that encloses us or invites us into intimacy. The color that changes and reveals. Light that focuses or obscures. The painting is that device that transforms 'reverie into reality and vice versa.' The painting tells me more about you than you know. beverlydennis.net [email protected] |
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Jayshree Vakil
"I work in many mediums, with a goal to liberate color and lines from being purely descriptive to becoming free and expressive - suggesting emotion rather than a simple documentation of what the eye sees. I let the imaginative process conceive abstraction with energy, color, and feeling. My art is informed and inspired by travel around the world as well as every-day events in daily life. While my works range from portraits and still-life to abstracts, my preference is for semi-abstracts that allow creative freedom while still conveying some form." JVfinearts.com [email protected] |
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Denise Schneyer
Denise Schneyer paints in pastels, acrylics and mixed media. Her subjects range from landscapes, still life, pet portraits and abstracts. All work are originals, with commissions accepted. www.deniseschneyer.artspan.com [email protected] |
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Stacy Najim
Stacy studied art & design at Michigan State University and worked extensively with color theory and its influence on psychology. While animals are a favorite subject she also delves into the world of dreams and surreal visions that come through fleeting thoughts or ideas. Her art has been displayed most recently in a virtual Bass Concert Hall exhibit, the Herberger Theater center in Phoenix, AZ as well as local Austin, Michigan & Phoenix galleries, businesses and restaurants. She works mainly in Oils, Acrylics, and charcoal and digitally with 2D and animation as a medium. A Michigan native, she lived in Arizona for 10 years before moving to Austin in 2015. She is a member of Creative Arts Society of Austin. Her work can be viewed on her website at 517davenport.com where she also consults on marketing and design projects. 517davenport.com [email protected] |
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Joyce LaBaw
A retired mechanical engineer, Joyce feels blessed to be able to explore her artistic vision in landscape and abstract paintings, often finding inspiration in Texas scenes. These reproductions of original acrylic paintings are directly printed on composite aluminum panels 3mm thick. Panels come preinstalled with a 1/2" thick block hanger on the back which gives the metal panel the appearance of floating off the wall. No framing is necessary. www.joycelabaw.com [email protected] |
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Matthew Tardy
Matthew is an Austin-based visual artist who draws inspiration from his own struggle with Terminal Cancer and Borderline Personality Disorder. His art depicts intentionally simple forms that bring about deep, relatable emotions from the viewer. https://matthewlouis.art/ [email protected] |
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John Berry
My sculpture is made from pieces of fossiliferous Walnut Limestone found in my backyard or dug up by my neighbors. I try to make the most of each rock, letting its shape determine the subject of the piece, and leaving rough stone where the natural rock shape does not match the composition. For some pieces the rough outer surface is part of the composition. www.johnlberry.com [email protected] |
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Kathy Kelsheimer
Kathy Kelsheimer is an expressionistic and realistic artist who uses various mediums; from fused and stained glass to paintings in inks, acrylics, oils and pastels. She enjoys trying new mediums to express her feelings and has won many awards throughout the state. Facebook.com/KJKelsheimer [email protected] |
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Martha Kull
I really like painting, drawing, and creating visual art. I love experimenting with different mediums and styles. Many of my favorite childhood memories involve drawing and painting and pretending to be an artist, fashion designer, or architect. My favorite art subjects are sunsets, seascapes, and trees ‚Äö I enjoy trying to capture ‚Äö the beauty that is in all of nature in my art work. But there are many other subject areas that capture my attention, so I also dabble in other landscapes, still lifes, collages, and anything else that strikes my fancy. https://fineartamerica.com/profiles/martha-kull [email protected] |
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Terri St.Arnauld & Frank Yezer
Polaroid Emulsion Transfer is now an extinct process. We feel it has a richness of color and a sparkle not found in the current instant films. These began as 35mm slides, enlarged onto Polaroid film. Then the image (emulsion) is soaked, lifted off the film base and transferred to a cotton paper. PlatinumPortraitsPhoto.com [email protected] |
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Theresa Bond
The natural world is my muse. My experiences as a wife, mother, grandmother, and citizen of the world, influence my work. The concerns of our environment, man‚ impact on his surroundings, and the future of the planet influence my subject choices. There is beauty in small moments; my goal is to capture the essence of those moments. tbondartist.com [email protected] |
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Shruti Mehta
Shruti Mehta uses a variety of media for her art pieces. Mehta's art work is displayed in the City hall in Austin as a part of the People's Gallery 2020-22. Austin PBS made a short movie on Mehta's art style and her journey as an artist in December 202o, featured on PBS as well as Decibel ATX. Mehta likes to create pieces that are influenced by regional arts of India and she skillfully assimilates the European art styles. Please email/call Mehta for art inquiries. [email protected] |
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