Size: 24 x 24 x 2
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Victoria Pullen Series: Concanon Coal Mine String Trio Photo and pigmented beeswax combines on Kozo and wood panel
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Nature's Little PsychonautOil on CanvasSize: 16 x 20The ladybug stands still, wrapped in its scarf, watching the world spin in colors and currents. Once it might have raced forward, caught in the rush of living. Now it simply observes. Around it, Amanita muscaria rise like old sentinels, and the sky moves to rhythms that need no chasing. As we age, we come to understand: we do not have to run after every change or fight every wind. There is wisdom in stepping back, in witnessing. Terence McKenna spoke of nature as the great teacher, offering lessons without words. This tiny traveler knows: life’s deepest truths unfold not through struggle, but through stillness. With time, we are invited to become less the actor and more the listener - to watch with open eyes, and let the universe reveal itself in its own time.
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Lilacsacrylic on canvasSize: 30 x 30Since I was a kid, growing up in Queens, NY in the 1960's, I have loved LILACS. We had beautiful lilacs growing in our yard. My sister and I would rush home from school and run to the LILACS and plunge our faces into the luscious blooms. They were cool, damp and so fragrant! Today, I am nurturing my lilacs I planted a few years ago. Waiting, waiting, for the blooms! I used many shades of violet, lavender and blues to recreate those sensual flowers.
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Apple Trees In AutumnOil on CanvasSize: 26 x 23This painting was created at an orchard on my road in a few hours. I love painting from landscape and moved to my area, the Hudson Valley, mainly for that purpose.
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Unconscious Ascentsoft pastel on sanded paperSize: 16 x 12Unconscious Ascent expresses a time when your mind has suspended reality, a time of transition that is impossible to replay. It is that fleeting moment when one questions if it is a dream or something beyond. Fragmented elements move in and out of focus with a veil-like quality, beseeching further exploration.
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Blockhead Series - Monkeyink on paperSize: 9 x 17The Blockhead Series demonstrates the aesthetic beauty of both natural and abstract shapes as well as the meaningful use of color. In Monkey, the strong jawline, rounded form and large ears along with the bright white interior suggests its intellect while the lush, green color suggests its jungle home.
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Textures of History: Sunlit Ironworkoil on panel paintingSize: 20 x 16This bridge in Central Park captured my imagination due to its incredible artistry and the wonderful play of light and color on the aging surface. The strong slanting light and elimination of surrounding foliage serve to bring the railing into stark focus and enhance the color.
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The Dancecarrara marble sculptureSize: 25 x 30 x 6The Italians call marble the "tears of the gods". It is an elegant material to sculpt, as it allows expression from the most delicate to the monumental, highly polished to natural texture, allowing light to penetrate and emanate from its surface. I enjoy shaping such a hard material as marble into sensuous, flowing forms that suggest the human spirit. When I leave elements unfinished or the natural stone the viewer is invited to complete sculpture in their mind’s eye.
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The Trinityacrylic on canvas, paste, markers, pensSize: 24 x 18Unseen expressed within a seen form is my inspiration to explore ideas through art. A sacred triad emerges—father, mother, and child; body, mind, spirit; the seen, the felt, the becoming. Painted, cut, and reassembled, Trinity explores transformation through fragmentation and intuitive reformation. Each figure holds an aspect of the unseen: the masculine, its silent weight; the feminine, its flowing song; the child, its unfolding light. This piece is an icon and mirror—an invitation to remember the wholeness within.
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Lushcollage, acrylic, ink on canvasSize: 48 x 60This diptych was inspired by walks in a subtropical sanctuary near my SWFL home
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City of Joypaint and block printingSize: 18 x 24This piece represents the soulful city of my youth, Calcutta; city of joy and sorrow, watched over by cacophonous black crows, colorful and gray all at once
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Golden Hour Hilltopssoft pastel on pastelmatSize: 8 x 12One evening on the drive home, I noticed the hills glowing in the last light of summer. Above them, small tufts of clouds hung in the dusk sky. The moment felt peaceful and fleeting, and I wished I could sit atop a hill and soak it in. This piece, done in soft pastels, is my attempt to capture the moment of serenity before it slipped away.
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The In-Between SpacesEncaustic, intonaco & tapa on board & wood panelSize: 24 x 30As discord erupts, both locally and globally, and our connections to others become fractured, chaos threatens to press in and crowd out love. We must not forget that we have the power to push back by filling those cracks, those in-between spaces, with kindness, patience, grace and generosity - the seeds of love. When we choose love – even in life’s small and mundane interactions, beauty grows in the cracks and fissures. The roots of this kind of beauty have the strength and power to heal the cracks and fissures, one in-between space at a time. The primary materials in this piece - encaustic, intonaco, and tapa cloth - are durable and lasting and have been used by various cultures around the world for thousands of years. Bound together, they reflect the strength and resiliency of humanity throughout the ages.
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Uncertain Terrainoil on canvas paintingSize: 18 x 24Uncertain times, shifting perspectives and the need to rebalance in a challenging terrain
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Anhinga at SunsetNikon D850, 500mm lens; photo on archival paperSize: 14 x 11My goal, in photographing wildlife, is to seek interesting poses of subjects viewers may not ordinarily see. This Anhinga, with his tail feathers positioned between two branches, makes the image unique. The yellow background was not manipulated. I photographed the Anhinga with my Nikon D850 camera at sunset with a 500mm lens and aperture of 5.6, which captured the sky's hue. The photo is printed on cold-pressed, fine art archival paper.
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Happy Birthdayoil on canvas paintingSize: 28 x 22My initial intention was to paint a festive gift bag with tissue paper inside. The folds of the tissue paper were interesting to me. The idea was developed as I worked, first finding the butterfly patterned backdrop, then hanging Mardi Gras beads for a more party feel, and finally adding free floating butterflies. I always strive for a little whimsy in my paintings.
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Fogoil on canvas paintingSize: 10 x 12Walking on Boulevard East in Weehawken, NJ watching NYC disappear and reappear as the fog rolled in.
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StillnessAcrylic and pigment on gallery wrapped canvasSize: 24 x 18Stillness invites viewers into a serene and meditative experience through its subtle yet powerful interplay of texture and form. The monochromatic surface, rendered in gentle off-white tones, offers a quiet canvas where tactile horizontal ridges ripple across the work like soft waves of calm. These uneven, parallel lines draw attention to the physical presence of the paint itself, revealing the beauty that emerges when simplicity and patience guide creation. This minimalist composition becomes a space for reflection, encouraging a pause in the rhythm of daily life and an embrace of quiet wonder. It celebrates the power found in restraint and the meditative process of making, inviting contemplation on how stillness can deepen our awareness and awaken a sense of peace. The artwork’s gentle textures and subtle variations create a rhythmic harmony that resonates beyond the canvas, reminding us that profound meaning often lies within gentle, unspoken moments.
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Selenelimited edition archival inkjet print 1/20Size: 11 x 11Selene is the Greek goddess of the moon and here she is with all of her phases. Women have different phases of life, too: maiden, mother, and crone. The moon is a good companion during these changing times. I love working creatively with photography. The light ladies emerge one by one!
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VivaciousPaper cut on canvasSize: 30 x 15It’s an exercise in Neuroscience of human taste through the collage with paper cut from delicatessen catalog. For instance, a visual image of black caviar on salmon papaya evokes taste buds memory, which connects to facial nerves and elicits grimaces and salivary secretion. Would you like to taste?
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TangledwatercolorSize: 10 x 14Sometimes it is difficult to find the right path forward. Nature beckons and also challenges as we enter the puzzle.
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Reveriephoto-encaustic on wooden cradled panelSize: 16 x 12My dancer-muse paused after her stretch upward, seemingly to let the music flow around her. Movement catches my eye, and portraying this fluidity has become one of my overlying themes. After decades of photographing, I often see my world through the lens of a camera. In my more recent photo-encaustic work, I first portray my subject photographically. Then I more fully explore the image and its meaning, I add encaustic wax and build layers of layers of texture and depth.
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Mellow Yellowoil, pigment sticks, charcoal, cold wax on panelSize: 16 x 16My work explores the intersection between natural and human-made worlds through abstract compositions that channel emotional resonance. Drawing inspiration from the Blue Ridge Mountains and urban environments, I translate landscapes, shifting light, and vibrant color into layered paintings that feel both universally familiar and deeply personal. Each piece emerges through a dialogue between intuition and technique. By applying layers of pigment, wax, and charcoal, I establish tension between depth and flatness within the same canvas. This exploratory process invites viewers to contemplate their connections to both natural and constructed environments, and the beauty present in each. My approach has evolved to embrace greater spontaneity while honoring foundational materials and processes. I aim to capture the raw energy of landscapes while exploring the human experience within each scene. By allowing materials to intermingle unexpectedly, I create expressions that speak to our shared desire for awe and elemental connection.
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The Changeacrylic and oil on canvasSize: 24 x 18By embracing the change of how nature and everything in its existence come and go I see not short life spans of living things, but the dynamic cycle of life in every shape and form.
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View of Bandalier National Monumentoil on panelSize: 16 x 12The archeology of Bandalier National Monument is of interest to me because we find traces of past life through it. In wandering through the ancient rock formations, I hope to celebrate the magical images, revealing a history and culture embedded in the surface of the earth. My paintings show a fascination with shapes as they project and recede in space in playful combinations of colors, textures, edges, and lights and darks.
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The Hunthandmade paper, acrylic paint, metalSize: 22 x 22I explore the thought process revealing multilevel reflections of my inner self. My artwork addresses the collaboration between nature and culture by abstracting movement, force and tension.
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Blaze of the BrookLinocut block print and soft pastel on paperSize: 18 x 12This piece merges my love for printmaking and soft pastels, blending a Lino block print with pastel painting to create movement, line, and vibrant color. The Lino block was carved through a reduction process and printed on UART pastel paper, allowing the texture to enhance the contrast between bold lines and soft, blended hues. I chose bright, non-local colors to guide the pastel work and amplify the piece’s energy. The combination of these media expresses vitality and fluidity, capturing both structure and spontaneity. This work reflects my ongoing exploration of how printmaking and soft pastels can interact to evoke powerful emotion and dynamic form.
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Power Of One: Visitor to the Cornfieldtissue paper, watercolor paper, gouache, markerSize: 12 x 24One can make a difference. One can become more. I wrote2- haikus for this series of works #1 The Power of One A Single Vision With Voice Powerful and Fierce #2 The power of one Always makes a difference One can become more When I was working on this series I felt that the face starring back at me was powerful, peaceful & enlightened.The painting slowly evolved by the addition of several images-The black bird ( a mysterious spirit animal & other world messenger ) and the crosses which also have a symbolic meaning.
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Piece of CakeColored Pencil on PaperSize: 14 x 18A visit to the Art Institute of Chicago where I enjoyed viewing pieces of art that depicted food inspired this painting as did my love of gastronomic delights like this piece of cake. I work in colored pencils because they lend themselves to the expression of my realistic style as detail work is possible. Color can be vivid, as the pencils have the intense pigment of oils combined with the transparency of watercolor which allows for layering. Food art like this should make you hungry. Finally, I want the viewer of my art to say, “That’s colored pencil?” And yes, I ate the cake!
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Knotty Girl--She/Her seriesMixedFiberTap CordSariSilkYarnSSWshersButtonsBeadsSize: 29.75 x 18.5Knotty Girl is one of my She/Her Series of wall tapestries mounted on Royal Poinciana tree pods found in my community. Traditionally, textile works have mostly been women's work. I love combining fiber with other elements; the stainless steel washers offer an industrial feel while the soft pink Ghiordes knots of yarn and the sari silks of the skirt suggest femininity.
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Sadako Sasaki (Full Flower Moon, Hiroshima, 1955)collage w/ hand-cut rice paper, quilt scraps, inkSize: 13 x 10Sadako Sasaki was a Japanese girl who became a victim of the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki by the United States. She was two years of age when the bombs were dropped and was severely irradiated. She survived for another ten years, becoming one of the most widely known hibakusha -- a Japanese term meaning "bomb affected person". She is remembered through the story of more that one thousand paper origami cranes that she folded before her death of radiation induced leukemia at age twelve on October 25, 1955. After her death, Sadako's body was examined by the Atomic Bomb Casualty Commission (ABCC) for research on the effects of the atomic bomb on the human body, before she was cremated and laid to rest. Sasaki has become a leading symbol of the effects of nuclear war and has become an international symbol for peace.
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Nena: Rememberedacrylic, paper, lace, cloth, and other materialsSize: 20 x 34My creative passage has taken me from a realistic, almost classical representation of the human figure, towards a surrealistic world of figures and imagination where everything is possible as reality and fantasy merge. My current work consists of mixed media assemblages, acrylic paintings on canvas and some drawings. This piece is very personal, it is a portrait of my aunt. It consists of two images of her, one young one old and a variety of objects that remind me of her.
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Tall Tree with Tern and Towheedirect bronze casting of driftwood-modeled birdsSize: 29.5 x 9 x 7I have made about 100 direct-cast bronze "trees," cast from found branches of wood (this one is river driftwood), and also about 350 direct-cast sculptures from knitted or crocheted yarn immersed in melted wax. As there is only one of each original branch or knitted composition, all the pieces are unique. I love seeing the work progress from something soft and impermanent to something hard and long-lasting, and also from plain metal to something colorful and lively.
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Sakura Skyacrylic on cradleboardSize: 12 x 12Sakura Sky pays homage to the brilliant—yet delicately nuanced—colors of Japan’s cherry blossoms, the graceful and continuous movement of their slender tree limbs and the sky that encompasses them in rich, complimentary hues.
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Look Up and Listen to the Starscollage composed of monoprinted papersSize: 20 x 26I have been working on a multimedia series of collages since 2024. In this picture, I used an etching press to print templates constructed from handmade paper. I then pasted these images together to create this "monoprint collage". The title is from a haiku by Koshigaya Gozan.
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Look Up and Listen to the Starssmall marble headSize: 8 x 6 x 6This small 2022 marble sculpture is an invitation for stargazing. More than half of the world's population lives in cities so we forget and overlook the innate relationship with the Universe. Beyond light pollution, there exists above our heads the same night sky, the same Milky Way, the same stars and galaxies that make no difference whatsoever between humans on Earth who might, if they wish to do so, look up and learn more about the sound waves of stars.
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Smith Mumsrecycled brown bags & acrylic on canvasSize: 16 x 20The gorgeous annual mum show at Smith College was the inspiration for this collage
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Talisman #8acrylic on wood panelSize: 24 x 18The Talisman series began as free experimentation with watery acrylic and ink on paper. Gradually a central portal or entity emerged. In Talisman #8, I also used molding paste for texture and the application of a linoleum block.
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Lilies 20251crayon, pastel and digital photo collageSize: 24 x 18Joy, happiness, anxiety, pain, grief… any and all emotion that come with being a parent or caregiver-- my work explores the idea of memory, motherhood, children, health, life, place, and identity. While investigating the role of the caregiver lilies and their pads are not only beautiful, but they are also caretakers of the ecosystem in which they live. They purify the pond water and create a protective home for aquatic creatures—such as fish and frogs.
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Grasping For AirAcrylic on Fabric24Size: 20 x 14The inspiration for this piece came from a PBS documentary that I watched on Frida Kahlo.
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Grasping For AirAcrylic on Fabric24Size: 24 x 18 x 3.5I am attracted to both the flow of fabric and the elements of construction that transform an unstructured surface into a sculptured form that fits a human body. Seams, edgings, buttons, zippers and all the other ways that cloth becomes clothing find their way into my current body of work. Like an abstract painting, my work emerges from a process of deconstructing and then reassembling the fractured elements from my collection of discarded clothing.
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Breakthroughsoft pastel on paperSize: 20 x 26Light breaking through dark clouds highlighting mountain peaks
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Feeling A Little Blueacrylic on canvasSize: 20 x 16"Feeling a Little Blue" was an exploration in creating a predominantly blue painting that still had depth, visual impact, and emotion. The Ophelia-like figure contemplating her blue-watery fate.
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Guanine Molecular Dancingacrylic, acrylic pen , paper collage on canvasSize: 28 x 28I am a biochemical engineer turned artist. Using fast-drying acrylics, unconventional tools, and collage, I embrace spontaneity and imperfection. My paintings evolve intuitively, revealing textured layers and organic meaning while exploring interconnectedness across science, cultures, disciplines, and inner and outer worlds. This piece reflects how the fundamental structures of life take on fluid, rhythmic forms. The Guanine (G) molecule—a nucleotide of DNA—transforms into a dynamic dancer, its movement inspired by my own dance practice and echoing the invisible forces that shape all living beings. Each pink dot marks an atom within guanine’s structure, labeled as C (carbon), H (hydrogen), N (nitrogen), or O (oxygen), reflecting its true formula, C₅H₅N₅O. Flowing organic elements, scientific notations, and ethereal light intertwine, bridging the molecular and the cosmic. Like the series it belongs to, this painting dissolves boundaries—between science and art, structure and spontaneity—to celebrate the shared essence of existence.
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Autumn Viewarchival watercolor pigments and paperSize: 4 x 6Autumn is my favorite season, so ultimately I end up doing some kind of Autumn painting every year. This painting really began with the stone wall, later morphing into a painting about Autumn. This Autumn painting is a bit different from previous ones I've done because there are no leaves, though there is a tree. The colors of Autumn leaves are featured in the painting but not the leaves themselves. This painting that was not about Autumn when I began it totally turned into another expression of my love for the season. I am not surprised!
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Othergraphite on 300lb archival paperSize: 19.5 x 29.5The drawing "Other" refers to the deep divisions in our world today and the way we see and fear each other. While the work obviously refers to immigrants and the physical U.S. border, it also refers to the invisible psychological, emotional, and cultural wall that divide and separate us. I made the chain-link fence appear significantly thicker, sturdier, and with much smaller openings than a typical fence. This was to enhance its sense of impenetrability. I wanted to contrast the cold hardness of the metal with the warm softness of the human skin that touches it.
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7-Eleven, Downtown Chicagoacrylic on canvasSize: 30 x 20Downtown Chicago has a handful of 7-Eleven stores. Often, they are in beautiful, older buildings. I love the bright colors and clutter.
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Scars of the Earthacrylic, ink, gold leaf marker on linenSize: 24 x 24Scars of our Planet is a dialogue between our planet’s crisis and my creative expression. We are leaving the earth imbalanced with natural disasters happening for more frequently. This painting is symbolic to those, fires, droughts, and scars that we are leaving behind as our planet continues to warm, and extreme weather is more common.
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Magnoliasoil on canvasSize: 24 x 30Portraits are my favorite subject. While I am painting a face, I am one with the person, and there is an exhilaration that comes from achieving this intimacy. To me, comparable to painting faces is painting flowers. My favorite is the Magnolia. I am attracted to it because of its colors, so delicate and nuanced, from white to cream to amazing tints and shades of pink. By weaving elements of art such as shape, space, color and value, my goal is to elicit a kind of internal gasp of recognition from the viewer: “Ah, yes, that is a beautiful painting”.
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Chugach Sunset Iacrylic on canvasSize: 30 x 40The beauty and variety of the natural world has always been my source of inspiration. From early memories of the rural New England dairy farm of my youth, I have cultivated a curious reverence for the environment around me. My practice relies on close observation followed by intuitive expression. My paintings serve as visual poems of lived experiences. I paint my memory of a place or moment in time. Instead of reproducing what I have seen, I use meditation, music, and improvisation to stir my visual creativity. I work slowly to allow the paintings to evolve over time, layering pigments, lines, materials, and shapes to evoke natural colors and textures. The resulting compositions radiate an underlying organic energy. I hope my works draw viewers in and invite an emotional response. This painting is my experience of the sky and the Chugach Mountains seen from my hotel room in Anchorage, Alaska.
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Pieces of Mesculpture steelSize: 13.5 x 10.5"Pieces of Me" invites viewers to reflect on their own experiences of heartbreak, offering a space for solace and transformation. In the process of creating this sculpture, I navigated my own emotions, caring for the piece with tenderness as if I were engaged in a dialogue with myself about the complexities of breakups. This journey underscored the importance of self-compassion and the necessity of allowing time to heal. Inspired by my personal experiences, my creative process was rooted in deep introspection and a profound connection to the material. Ultimately, "Pieces of Me" seeks to resonate with others, fostering contemplation and encouraging them to embrace their own paths toward healing and renewal.
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Passion of FreedomEthcing on PapaerSize: 22.5 x 17.5This ethcing was inspired by a doorway in Pennsylvania. The red door caught my eye with its strong patterned glasswork and unique composition. With my etchings, I typically work large and on zinc plates with nitric acid. “Passion of Freedom” was printed twice, with the other ethcing sold to a collector.
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Tidalfluid acrylic, oil and cold wax on canvasSize: 36 x 25A call to art for climate changing conditions has me finding beauty in spite of human neglect. The dream of continued attention and the hope to take care of our challenges, makes this universal plea an alert and action.
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Over Currentphoto on paper, fabric, beads, transparency wovenSize: 12 x 12I am drawn to materials that have history and relevance to everyday life. For many years, I have deconstructed and reassembled photographic prints with a variety of materials and processes, resulting in the development of new imagery. I am passionate about the subjects that I work with. They include people I am intimately familiar with, unknown subjects from old photo albums, and photographs of noted artists and writers. Connecting with subjects on a personal level enables me to find something deeply personal about them to portray. This mixed media portrait on paper is sourced from a found vintage album. The graininess of the original photo comes forward in a similar way as pixels from a computer image. A back and forth dialogue between analog and digital creates a sensation of time present and past and makes for a new interpretation of the subject.
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Hanaink, charcoal, acrylic, pencil on paper on canvasSize: 12 x 12From my series of Faces from another era. I use equal liquid charcoal, charcoal, ink, graphite and acrylic paint, so it is hard to quantify which medium describes my work. The drawing of the face emerges from the surface using Chinese Ink, liquid charcoal, graphite, gold paint, acrylic and gesso on Chinese paper on canvas. The deep black of the liquid charcoal passages is a contrast with the sensitive softer graphite lines. Capturing feeling and expression with the use of line and passages of black is the essence of my work.
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Portrait of Ariellepastel on sanded paperSize: 10.75 x 10.75Portraits are very special to me because they are a window into the soul. I love to look at a person's face and engage in the possibilities of who they are. Putting Arielle in an abstract background, just colored lines, lets the viewer image who she is.
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Pink Shoesdigital photography, inkjet archival printSize: 16x 12.5I love photographing people on the streets of New York City. What is exciting and energizes me is how spontaneous the process is and how unpredictable people are. I saw this person sitting in front of the Fashion Institute of Technology, and asked if I could do a portrait. What attracts me to photograph someone may be an expression, their clothing, an action or a detail. It certainly helps when the light is good and the background complements them. You often may find me out on the streets of NY, capturing the fast-paced dynamics of life there.
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New Voyage #1acrylic paint, tissue paper, on plywoodSize: 18 x 18In 2020 our world turned upside down. My experience with Covid19 and the lockdown reoriented my approach to life and art and I explored the world of abstraction more seriously. I began studying with Nicholas Wilton, a west coast artist, taking many online courses with him. He encourages following one’s instincts and taking risks. I am attracted to the freedom, the movement, and the limitless opportunities to rearrange reality through collage. And it is also terrifying, losing control and trusting intuition. It is a never-ending process of growth and change that continues to force taking chances, feeling uncomfortable and uncertain, making, and resolving mistakes, and learning to be an effective critique.
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Freshen the Flowersoil on canvas paintingSize: 24 x 20“Freshen the Flowers” is a painting about memory and traditions. I remember my mother often buying fresh flowers on Fridays and I started that habit for myself many years ago. I borrowed the name from a favorite poem by Mary Oliver because I was thinking of the quiet joys that are overlooked and that she so often writes about. My painting process is a developing story between my materials and myself. My curiosity to learn more about my family histories and understand my culture and patterns has been a large focus of my art practice. I’m interested in weaving together storytelling, cultural identity, observations of the everyday, and nostalgia. For me, the narrative I’m creating becomes secondary to the narrative a viewer creates for themself. My paintings, using rhythmic color, layers, shapes, marks and lines, evoke memories and invite you to meditate on your own personal histories.
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Unravellingacrylic with photograph, collage papers, stringSize: 20 x 20This piece speaks to the stark differences between women of privilege and women who are oppressed. On one side is a woman looking at her reflection in the mirror. She's proudly, defiantly exposed. On the other side is a woman covered and barely visible, except for her expressive eyes peeking out from her face covering. The strings represent being tied and bound, as in being held back, rights stripped. But the strings are also there to show the bond women have universally, which joins them together in a common thread of femaleness- dreams, hopes, desires, need of community and empathy.
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Notes to Selfacrylic with collageSize: 24 x 24A mixed media abstract painting, done with Golden Fluorescent neon paint, Golden Interference paint, house paint, Golden acrylic paint, graphite, Chrome markers, graphite, hand printed papers, and gold leaf. This piece shows brilliantly in black light. The inspiration for this art is love and giving voice to our convictions in difficult times.
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Small Islands Series #2acrylic glaze on gessoed paperSize: 24 x 30I am inspired by my immediate surroundings: landscape, architecture seascape, skies or an object …all that convey a unique quality not only in their own appearance but in how they reflect surroundings and project unique energy in that context. It’s that impression that remains and asks to be recorded. The sparse style and subtle tones of each work reflect my deep bond to the vastness and simplicity of nature which I seek to translate from the purely material to the realm of the transcendental with a layering of transparent tones. My subject matter can be seen as a diary of locations visited which convey both a nostalgic memory of the simplicity and restorative effects of nature which have become increasingly overlooked in lieu of technology and as a future documentary comparison.
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Chromatic Dawnsculpture: plexiglass/woodSize: 16 x 16 x 2I am interested in the expression of color and reflections as a language. The transparent nature of plexiglass makes it possible to create visual statements of color and hue that are not available with other materials. My work explores the nature of individual colors and their interaction and reflections. The composite of the individual components creates a distinctive visual statement. Much of my work has been influenced by the beauty of the sunrises and sunsets on Long Island. My work is meant to be joyous and celebratory.
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Reverberationlimited edition archival print, 2/50Size: 9.5 x 12.5Reverberation captures the tension and release in musical sound waves that revolve around modulating tonal centers. Delicately balanced, all-encompassing vibrations generate dissonance and tension in the audio and emotional space that ultimately lead to resolution.
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Delta Debutanteoil on canvas paintingSize: 60 x 48The work above is a result from years of creating primarily female figurative works. They began as a result from being asked to submit a design for the international ballet competition held every three years in our city. I began taking liberties with the figures to represent a variety of walks of life with the main message remaining consistent and that being empowerment, beauty and encouragement.
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Thoughtful Womanartist drawing & handdyed fabrics, textile mediumsSize: 12.5 x 17.75Following the completion of a large-scale work measuring 9 feet by 8 feet, I welcomed the opportunity to return to smaller, more intimate compositions. Thoughtful Woman emerged during a period of transition, as I awaited the arrival of Spring and sought the quietude of detailed, focused work. Inspired by a drawing from my book Rise with Radiance, this piece reflects a meditation on renewal and the beauty in the cycle of the seasons. I approached the creation of this work without a predetermined plan, allowing the process to unfold organically. Trusting my intuition, I let my inner self guide the evolution of the piece, resulting in an experience that felt liberating. Through vibrant colors, intricate stitching, and textures, I engaged closely with fine details and vibrant colors, feeling a restorative balance between creative practice and the arrival of my daffodils, cherry blossom trees, hyacinth, and buds.
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Self Portrait in Studiographite and charcoal on paperSize: 32 x 24I wanted to use technical skill to explore layered narrative to produce a self portrait. The drawing’s composition, with its art-within-art motif, invites viewers into a personal, almost introspective world, echoing the recursive nature of artistic creation itself. The choice to depict myself holding another artwork is a visual metaphor—it nudges viewers to consider not only how artists present themselves, but also how they value and interact with their own creations. The reflections in the glasses are particularly arresting; they not only demonstrate technical prowess with highlights and optical nuance but also gently underscore the idea of seeing—inwardly and outwardly. This motif hints at the multiplicity of perspectives an artist must hold: that of creator, subject, and observer.
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Auspicious Moment In Timeoil on canvas paintingSize: 48 x 36After hitting a deer with my car, I was devastated and proceeded to create several paintings on the topic. This is one where I am in empathy with the deer identifying as the deer. The expression on my face is that which I experienced as a witness to the deer a second prior to impact.
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“Dreaming of Black Swan Ballet”plaster with gray and transparent red oxide patinaSize: 36 x 12 x 8My muse had been a ballerina in her native Brazil. Now in her 50 ‘s she practices daily. Once an artist always and artist.
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Sahara Dustacrylic on canvasSize: 16 x 20Florida annually gets an influx of nutrient-laden dust from the Sahara, thousands of miles away. Usually it means red dust on my porch rails, but on this particular evening it tinted the sky. Events like this remind us of the the complexities of relationships within the natural world, and the importance to conserve and honor these systems that we are only beginning to understand.
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Feeling Happyacrylic on gallery wrapped canvasSize: 20 x 20I have joined a life drawing group after many years of not practicing life drawing. It has been great fun, and I am finding figures appearing in many of paintings. This was a painting that emerged out of abstract lines haphazardly placed. It was a joyful experience, hence the title "Feeling Happy".
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Mystic Charmeracrylic paint on a natural gourdSize: 16 x 8My artistic goal is to create seductive surfaces and provocative forms that involve the viewer visually in emotional and intellectual adventures. The natural gourd is the canvas for my painting
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Yellow Sky Interioroil on wood panelSize: 12 x 12Andrea Sacker is a New York based painter working in oils, gouache and watercolor. I paint places, people and things that are dear to my heart, collecting and distilling the images mostly from my own photographs. I use my intuitive sense of color and composition to reflect my emotional relationship to the subject mostly within the satisfying limitations of a square. During the height of covid and the 'shutdown', I unconsciously started painting the interiors of my home over and over and over. This is one such interior.
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Point Judithoil on canvas paintingSize: 29 x 23On a hot July day, I was returning by ferry from Black Island to the mainland. In this small village, Point Judith, located on the coast of Rhode Island, several fishing boats were moored to the pier. I have always been attracted by the atmospheric old boats peacefully moored on the water. At this moment, they were shrouded in fog, giving the place a more romantic character. Having stopped, I made a sketch and some photos, finishing the painting later in my studio.
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Reflectionsoil on canvas paintingSize: 11 x 14After years of working directly from Nature, I have turned my gaze inward, where I have discovered these magical visions. A love of Nature is still always present, and a reverence for Mother Earth abides in my soul. It is as though, during all those years of painting the view from the outside, there were these reflections growing within. Now, I wait quietly for these images to come up--sometimes, the results surprise even me.
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Unstill Life#2oil on stitched canvas and bridal veil fragmentSize: 29 x 22The painted constructions emerge as transmutations of my most resounding responses to the world around and within me. They are not mere representations but transformative expressions born from profound encounters with the natural world. These works memorialize instances of revelation that occur in the space between observation and understanding—ephemeral moments that would otherwise slip away unrecorded. My artistic practice weaves together accumulated experiences, approaching that sense of truth discovered only when fully immersed in the artistic elements. In these moments of complete sensory engagement—when one is simultaneously aware of nature's boundless energy, the boundaries between self and environment dissolve. This construction serves as a vessel for that transcendent understanding that emerges when the senses are fully enmeshed in the natural world. It invites viewers to access their moments of revelation through the layered, textural dialogue between material and memory. Shadows are the natural consequence of being.
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Sadnesstransfer film print of digital collage on paperSize: 10 x 7I am fascinated by how seemingly mundane objects can transform into unique and unexpected images which reflect the trauma and emotions of today’s world. This image is part of a series whose starting point was a photo of a simple gas cap embedded in a sidewalk. Each time I looked at the gas cap, it metamorphosized into something new. Here, after color, line, spatial and compositional changes and the addition of new elements, the gas cap became a stone backdrop to a ghostly procession. I simplified the added figures so the viewer would focus less on anatomical detail and more on the scene’s emotion. The result was a digital collage which I transferred to arches 88 paper with transfer film.
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The Sky Always Winsacrylic on primed canvasSize: 20 x 16I was enchanted by the sky's changing color as the sun set over the water.
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A leisurely Sunday of Pup, Park and Peoplepen on paper with watercolor washes.Size: 6 x 12I love drawing and painting people and animals where ever I happen to be ...trains, buses, waiting rooms, parks, etc. Most of my subjects don't know that I'm drawing them. I draw from life and often mix and match to create idyallic yet quirky scenes. I was walking a close family pet in the park. In my mind, she jumped up on the bench of random strangers and became family. it inspired this bucolic friendly Prospect Park image.
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Dawn Glow soft pastel on sanded paperSize: 8 x 16This scene spoke to me on a May sunrise morning on the coast as I was looking for inspiration for a pastel. The light was so stunning I had to capture it. It has a wonderful glow.
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Underpass platinum/palladium photographSize: 5 x 7In my art work, I capture the simple beauty in everyday life, the commonplace or ordinary scenes in the environment. These images offer us rare moments to enjoy quiet beauty and serenity. I use water and light as beautiful threads that draw the eye in, providing an opportunity to examine nature and the built environment. I use the platinum/palladium printing process to capture a softer, painterly effect, evoking late 19th century idyllic landscapes and lending a poetic quality to the image.
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Wetlands using digital photography and photoshopSize: 17 x 25I love going to Green Cay Wetlands and Wakodahatchee Wetlands, too. The weather was perfect for a perfect wind blowing the plants and water. I used my camera to move as I was walking with the plants. What a lucky day for me.
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Diane oil paintingSize: 24 x 18It's ineffable.
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Breakthroughoil on canvas paintingSize: 20 x 16I have a fascination for skies: clouds, variations of light, nuances of color, and the awesome scale of what is above us, ever changing in a kaleidoscope of pattern. My inspiration comes from transforming these shapes and beautiful light shows into a kind of blend between abstraction and realism. By capturing a segment of sky in patterns of light that intrigue me, I attempt to generate a sense of illumination that springs off the canvas. It can never be actual light, but the endeavor to create as close an approximation of it is what drives me.
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Mountain Streamtransparent watercolorSize: 14 x 11Transparent watercolor reflecting the vibrance of the water and the lush vegetation on the mountain
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Torii Gate, Tokaido RoadphotographySize: 20 x 24Traveling the ancient Tokaido Road in Japan, I approached the remnants of a temple and its damaged Torii Gate. A Torii Gate signifies the passage from human life to a spiritual realm. Although the gate was a ruin, it was still a powerful, ethereal symbol. With the misty horizon beyond the gate, I was transported on a spiritual journey.
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This is Why I Love the Beach: French convo, Playa Picasso, NIcemonotype with pastelSize: 9 x 12.75The sea calls me. I am so happy while there, fascinated by its power and mystique, and calmed by the soothing, rhythmic sound of the waves- but also equally fascinated by the other beach goers. My recent body of work explores my personal family history and its love of the beach in all seasons, and my own fascination by the random beach bodies that I encounter, the world over, at any beach, in any season. I am currently making monotypes, derivative of my beach sketchbooks. This piece, from a drawing of two, in your face French divas, on the Coté D'Azure.
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Through the Hollow WoodMonotype: Acrylic on Sumi Paper and YUPO, CollageSize: 5.5 x 5.5I use stencils and masks which I have made from YUPO, a synthetic material, to use in creating monotype prints. The build up of color and pattern on the stencils/masks over time creates interest of its own which, in turn, adds an intriguing element when combined as a collage elements with my monotypes. I use a chair motif in much of my work as a metaphor for human feelings. The chair in this piece may suggest a sense of reflection or, perhaps, a journey, or something uniquely personal to the person viewing it.
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Car Reflection(2025)photograph on paperSize: 14 x 11I have been photographing reflections for years- in water, through store windows, the shiny parts of motorcycles, and random surfaces. Images taken this way become distorted and abstracted, and can perhaps, conjure up an alternate reality. From there, the viewer can create the story of his/her choice, allowing the conscious and the subconscious to interact as they wish.
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Retooling the Millsacrylic paint, fabrics, cork, bobbins, yarns, wireSize: 24 x 18Imagine the magnitude of quickly reviving the old mills across America to retool for speedy manufacturing. It seems such a monumental task, that took a generation to build the first time. Growing up in New England I was surrounded by textile mills, some still working, some newly converted to restaurants and shops. Here's my take on attempting the modern retooling of those textile mills. Created with acrylics, fabrics, fibers, and metal bobbins, the weaving of the fibers represents a mix of old and new fibers, with gold wire to hint at the future.
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Abstract XVotters wheel and hand built high fired ceramicSize: 20 x 12 x 13I create small vessels on the wheel, manipulate them adding texture and assemble them in a vertical configuration. I have been exploring this technique which started in a small scale and now have a series of them varying their shapes from wall hanging installations to these vertical creations which vary in size, form and glazing techniques..
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Newborn Icharcoal on arches paperSize: 30 x 22.5This drawing ispart of a series entitled ‘In Fraught Times: Tending to Love’. I have felt besieged by unchecked hatred, biases of all kinds, racism, misogyny, an imploding climate, unabated gun violence, and truth as an endangered commodity. As an antidote, I chose to focus on the humanity and lives of those in my familial orbit, to hold them up and celebrate the goodness present in living, striving and evolving. Many of these works marvel at the magic of the moment and honor the purest of encounters with the special little humans in my life. The difficult and satisfying challenge in my portraiture is to portray some unarmed truth and in so doing to suggest our complex humanity, our shared experience. And in defiance of all the negativity and hatred peddled continually, I celebrate goodness, empathy, sincerity and caring.
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Whispers Beneath the Surfacefiber fabric artSize: 36 x 24I’m a textile artist who is inspired by the world around me, especially by nature. I look at my surroundings with inquisitive eyes and mind, with curiosity, knowing there are hidden treasures to be found and turned into art. My artistic approach is mostly intuitive with a constant awareness of color combination and contrast. The use of strong colors is a direct influence of my Brazilian heritage. Using fabric as the medium to create my art pieces was a natural choice since I have been working with it from my teenage years. My creative process can be described in two phases. The first one is the combination of inspiration and visualization of an art piece. The second phase is transforming what I visualized into actual artwork. It requires selecting fabrics as close as possible to my vision, adjusting, and sometimes, starting all over again.
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Flotsam, Light Shaft in Pinkacrylic on cradled panelSize: 36 x 36"Flotsam, Light Shaft in Pink" presents an abstract narrative describing debris and light bouncing around an enigmatic water environment. The term “flotsam” speaks to a sense of the lost and found. Residing somewhere between landscape, figuration, and narrative, I present landscape elements in terms of parts that are disembodied and ready for arrangement. I like to play with their formal relationships, to jostle any sense of fixed placement. Forms that we might recognize as either shadow or structure become at once horizontal and vertical as they share the painted plane. A leaf can be both a figure in the landscape and a signal about decay. Shape becomes the result of withheld paint as well as applied.
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Traveloil on canvas paintingSize: 17 x 22This painting represents one of my Rabbit World Series. It depicts a fleeting moment in nature, captured on canvas.
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Laced Vestencaustic, peat, gouache, string on hardened paper sculptureSize: 18.25 x 14 x 5I work with the female form, delivering her to rooms and spaces where she can "take up space" and be seen. "Laced Vest" is a contemplation on chakras--energy wheels--that spin in our bodies and contribute to our well-being.
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Lady in Grottoacrylic on canvasSize: 10 x 14I experiment with various acrylic paints, gels, fiber pastes, mica flakes, charcoal, found/recycled items, and most recently water-based oil paints. I do not use digital art as I enjoy using my hands in a painterly manner, like a gardener putting her hands in the Earth’s soil. I use these materials as most are water based and kinder to our planet. The emotional base of my work are the environmental challenges we face. My never-ending ideas come from news reports, science-based books and native culture tradition and stories.
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The GatheringDigital Photographic Print on PaperSize: 10 x 14Along storied Dune Road on Long Island I became mesmerized by these different burlap encased trees. The gray day added to the feeling of an encounter with the strangeness in an other worldly landscape. Thoughts of shrouds, bondage, the mask, the other, a chrysalis all crossed my mind. They are carefully stitched and neatly tied to protect what's unseen beneath. No ordinary wrapping here. No ordinary creatures!
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Think!monotype on BFK rives paperSize: 12 x 12The Zen circle, Enso, and the color red are recurring themes in my abstract art making. In Zen circles the Enso is a circle drawn or painted in one breath. It may represent infinity, enlightenment or MU, which in Zen means emptiness. Open or closed, if made with a concentrated mind, the resulting Enso is perfectly imperfect – wabi-sabi – and cannot be repeated. During Covid I made a lot on Ensos in many different mediums. Each Enso representing a moment in time. After Covid I began my printmaking journey and of course had to include the Enso in some of my prints. Also included in this one is a torn page from one of the books I wrote. I see this piece as uniting my many worlds and connecting with the whole universe – interconnected and breathing as One.
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Hopeacrylic on two switchable panels .Size: 17.5 x 11.25Given the state of our world, I wanted to paint an Icon of hope. For me in my life hope comes often from my garden, and I was thrilled when I realized that two denizens of my garden, Swallows and Artichokes, are traditionally conceived as symbolic of hope. Swallows (Hirundo Rustica) carry the spirits of deceased children giving ease to grieving parents, and the tender-hearted Artichokes have long been symbols of prosperity and hope. I wanted to show how these beings, especially the swallows, bring treasure and beauty into my garden and take what they find there back out into the world. Giving and gaining, stitching the realms together. So, I split the image into two reflections and made the painting convertible. Hung one way the Swallows are incoming and hung the opposite way they are dispersing.
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Virtual Calmdigital archival photograph sublimated to aluminumSize: 16 x 24I am passionate about photography as an art form. In a world overfull with images, ideas, and messages streaming at us at warp speed, there is profound value in the thoughtfulness, the provocation, the silent aesthetic, the power of a single image made with the vision and ever evolving techniques of fine art photography.
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Outside Caffé de la Paix, Rome Italyphotography: digitally enhancedSize: 7 x 10.5I am an artist-photographer-educator and photojournalism is paramount to my photographic work. On the street offers glimpses of life frozen in time. I favor urban environments as places that afford a hubbub of activity with people moving in their own spaces and unaware of others around them. This particular image is from a trip to Rome and made after breakfast with my son at Caffé de la Paix (Café of Peace) on Via di Tor Millina. While the chef in the café prepped and served us food, we had a great conversation with him and tips on places to visit and food to experience. We left the café and I turned around and saw this same gentleman step out for a smoke break (very common in Europe!) and I knew this was the image I wanted to capture. He framed the street activity.
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Skin to Skinink on paper (linoleum block print)Size: 14 x 11My current work is a documentary self-portrait as I go through pregnancy, childbirth, breastfeeding and postpartum. The multidisciplinary work consisting of video, glass and breastmilk sculpture, painting, and works on paper is a direct cry of motherhood pride and fragility. In my practice I dissect, peel, slice, unveil and reorganize extreme experiences to help me process their impacts. I address the taboo topics of motherhood and challenge societal perceptions, advocating for the rights and lived experiences of mothers.
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Fresh Bakedoil on panel paintingSize: 9 x 12I like painting little slices of life. I was walking down Commercial Street in Provincetown and this shop with its neon lights caught my eye.
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Woman with Child IIacrylic, fabric, grout, faux goldleaf, adhesivesSize: 24 x 18If you know you know
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Taiyoacrylic on canvasSize: 48 x 36I wanted to find a way to give people hope and the Japanese culture and Spirituality have always inspired me. The sun (Taiyo) in the Japanese culture is a symbol of life, light and the vital force that sustains all living things. It also symbolizes hope, renewal and new beginnings. I incorporated modern and ancient textile patterns to illustrate the opportunity we have to learn from our past and use that knowledge to transform our future.
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EveTerracotta SculptureSize: 14 x 12 x 13I am drawn to clay in all its forms: in the studio, the garden and the kitchen. The unctuous plasticity of the terracotta inspired me to create the sinuous forms of the feminine and reptilian.
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TrilliumsPrintmaking;Mokulito MatrixSize: 16 x 16Trillium grandiflorum are magical: three bracts that miraculously photosynthesize with three giant, white and commanding petals. Known as birthroot, trilliums midwifed three girls, that branched into another family of three. With years of patience, trilliums will gain enough energy to bloom, fleetingly, yearly; teaching my family persistence with moments of beauty and impermanence.
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Through Reading, We Seeoil on panel paintingSize: 12 x 12Books are more than vessels of knowledge—they are living landscapes. Like flowers blooming or music rising, books open new ways of seeing the world. Like a magnifying glass held to the fine script of experience, reading reveals the subtle textures of thought, history, and human emotion that might otherwise go unnoticed. With this painting I have hoped to capture the harmony between thought, beauty, and the slow, powerful rhythm of discovery.
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The Road less Traveled IVWatermedia and graphite pencil on paperSize: 12 x 12As I wander through the landscape, I look for areas less traveled so I can bring my love for nature to the viewer
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On the Eve of Apocalypse. Portrait of Great-grandmother Anna. Siberia, 1917oil on canvas paintingSize: 24 x 18This painting reflects the story of my great-grandmother. My great-grandmother and great-grandfather lived in Siberia. They were a wealthy family from the upper class. In 1917, the Russian Revolution took place and the civil war began. The communist Bolsheviks who came to power killed the rich and took away their property. My great-grandmother survived, although she lost all her property. The fate of my great-grandfather is unknown. It was impossible to talk about his disappearance. My great-grandmother's son hid his origins, because he was afraid that the new authorities would subject him to repression. Great-grandmother Anna was left alone, without money, without a husband and son and without understanding why she was punished like that. In the painting, great-grandmother Anna sits in her favorite lace blouse, with an album of family photos and forget-me-not flowers in her hands as a symbol of a request for us to remember her. On the small table on which her hand rests is a photograph of the heir to the Russian throne, Tsarevich Alexei. The photograph is a symbol of the great-grandmother's commitment to the old pre-revolutionary order. The fate of the Tsarevich is also tragic. He will be shot with the entire royal family by the Bolsheviks in 1918. The background on which the grandmother is depicted is a symbolic image of her native Siberian city as it was before Revolution, on the eve of Apocalypse.
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Calm Coastoil on cradled boardSize: 18 x 24It was the most beautiful peaceful calm day while plein air painting at the coast.
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Johndigitally manipulated photographSize: 14 x 9
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Tetheredbronze sculptureSize: 18 x 14 x 3
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The Lindbergh Oakoil on linen canvasSize: 16 x 20
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Into The Darkness We Goacrylic on canvasSize: 8 x 8
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Greenwich Village Middayacrylic on canvasSize: 20 x 20
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Playing Ball on the Streets of Casaresacrylic with sanded & tinted gesso w/ paint skinsSize: 24 x 24
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I Will Take A StandOil on Canvas Paper with Digitized PhotoSize: 16 x 19.5
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Patina No. 3litho ink on paperSize: 12 x 16
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Hinged in Harmony: Doors from Different Countries Under a Shared SkyAcrylic, photos, wood, computer parts, silk flowers,Size: 30 x 30
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Secret Societyoil paint on canvasSize: 24 x 24 x 1.5
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Anyika She Is BeautifulCouache on PaperSize: 14 x 10
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Late Afternoon Shadows in the Parkdigital photography: digitally enhanced on paperSize: 10.25 x 15.37
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Bronze Bas Relief #3bronze bas relief with crystalsSize: 13 x 9
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The InBetween Timeswatercolor on PaperSize: 8 x 20
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Still Lifecradleboard, acrylics, paper, charcoal, oil sticksSize: 16 x 16
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Study for Stress Series 19Charcoal, watercolor, ink, graphite on paperSize: 18 x 18
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Boys in the Bandacrylic, graphite and pastel on canvasSize: 48 x 32
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Autumn Splendor in the Garden, plein airoil paintingSize: 24 x 12
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Shimmer Bloommixed media sculptureSize: 24 x 12
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Interiors #3acrylic on canvas paintingSize: 24 x 24
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Get Out Of My Wayacrylic & M/M on stretched gallery wrapped canvasSize: 30 x 24
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Bow to Mother Natureacrylic with pastes in pointillism style on canvasSize: 30 x 30
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From Scratchoil painting on gallery wrapped stretched canvasSize: 20 x 20
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Rhode River in the Fallphotography on acrylicSize: 9.5 x 14
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Midsommarembroidery and feltingSize: 12 x 14
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Rendezvousacrylic/mixed media on canvasSize: 48 x 60
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Ice WaterPhotographySize: 10 x 8
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Hiddenstoneware, wood, copper wire sculptureSize: 11 x 12 x 4
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Winter Lilacwoodcut print, artist proofSize: 30 x 25
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The Undoing of Beinggraphite & colored pencil on paperSize: 48 x 27
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Small Work With A Dot On The Leftink on rice paperSize: 7.75 x 7.75
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The Whispererreclaimed wood, wire, knitted straw, metal tagSize: 28 x 28 x 3
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Emilysculpture: guitar elements woodSize: 30 x 24 x 10
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Sky Eyes Motheroil on linen paintingSize: 60 x 54
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Nkisi Geminisculpture: found objects, mixed media on woodSize: 16.5 x 13.5 x 5
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Gray Puffacrylic on wood panelSize: 24 x 30
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Discussing Turnerwatercolor on paper paintingSize: 15 x 12
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LPs on the HiFiacrylic on canvas, vintage Book & painted paperSize: 18 x 18