17 May Weaving Our World
“As an artist and a woman who lives in this world, I feel compelled to make work pertaining to climate change and social equity.”...
“As an artist and a woman who lives in this world, I feel compelled to make work pertaining to climate change and social equity.”...
“This past pandemic year closed off some of the usual avenues for artists,” said Peder Hegland. ”However, it opened up opportunities to explore other experiences.”...
“I’m a narrative painter, so I’ve always just told stories about my community and family."...
“Working on a collage is always an exciting visual journey offering a multitude of possibilities.” - Karlyn Atkinson Berg said. “I love to make pots that invite handling and use, that suggest participation and enjoyment, not only contemplation. " - Guillermo Cuellar ...
“Healthy forests are full of amazing connections. These and many other ideas struck a personal chord with me...
“For me, life is tactile and labor intensive…like my beadwork. It is a patient art form. Choosing one bead at a time and stitching up to 200 beads per square inch, it can take months to complete a piece.”...
“Anything can happen. I’m not trying to copy what I see. I’m going for something that is more of a feeling or impression.”...
“Patience, knowledge and work fuels my optimism. My photographs of plants and pots are hybrids of what I feel are collaborations with nature.”...
Finding a balance between architectural forms and the rural landscape has resulted in pots that function the same, but express themselves differently through the clay....
Watercolors explore chaotic nature of urban landscape Like looking at a reflection in a broken mirror, Don Dickinson’s watercolors explore urban landscapes through a distorted perspective. Ripple River Gallery near Bay Lake will feature Dickinson’s paintings July 11 through August 12. Don Dickinson, who lives and works...