Friday, March 28, 2014

Meet Artist Libby Fife, Spring Obsession Open Division Accepted Artist

Elizabeth (Libby) Fife

O-052  In Between  acrylic  10x10  $165
What I paint:
I paint landscapes and figurative works using acrylics on board and canvas. The work is realistic or representational in the sense that it comes from actual images-things that I observe-and that there is a kind of resemblance to those images. It's also abstract in a sense because it doesn't portray things in minute detail, down to the nitty-gritty. I omit and refine and simplify because that is my world view. It's how I see things in real life and so that is how I paint too.

Why I paint:
Why paint instead of say, playing an instrument or cooking or dancing? Painting seems to allow me to express, through design and content, what I think and feel about my interests and the environment around me.  With the exception of writing, painting is the only other creative outlet that gives me the freedom to explore and share with others the subjects that interest me most.

How I paint:
My technique for painting is simple and straightforward and matches my personality. Ideas for paintings begin with my own observations. I become attracted to something that I see. It could be something in my landscape or a person's gesture in a vintage photograph.  I then gather information to flesh out the question or idea.  This gathering usually involves in-the-field research. By that I mean I take my paints outside and get busy! I look at colors and the design of my idea and try to get a feel for things. If it's a conceptual figure piece, I do some online research to learn about my subject. Whether I am painting a landscape, a building, or a figure, the bottom line is that I have to be connected to my subject in some way otherwise I just can't paint it effectively.

What the work is about:
Part of my work is project driven and reflects what I am currently learning about at any given moment. My questions or interests are the starting point. I utilize vintage photographs, both my own and ones that I find, along with my writing and research to structure and support each project. The common denominator in all of this is my desire to learn about something that interests me, to paint it and to write about it, while making a strong and interesting-to-me composition to support it.

The second part of my work has more to do with what I call "structure." For painting, structure to me has to do with puzzles. How things in my environment fit together. Although I view my world as a whole, I quickly zero in on what that world is composed of. For people, it's their body parts all moving together with their environment. The gestures of their figures set against their background or interlocked with other figures. For the land, it's all of the pieces such as trees, hills, and sky acting together. To me, people and objects are not stagnant even if they are frozen in time in a photo. Shapes, colors, and light and shadow are important too but really secondary to the above. 
 



O-053  Winter Hillside  acrylic  10x10  $165
About The Faces (or Lack Thereof):  
 I currently paint my figures without facial features, relying instead on posture and gestures, color and line and shape, to express what I think. I accept that images of people in general can provoke strong reactions whether or not facial features are included. Getting a reaction by not including facial features is not my intent but it's very OK when that happens.  It's my hope that all parts of my paintings will elicit responses and get a dialogue going. I love to talk about my work and am anxious to know what others think. It's why I have gone to some length to explain what I do, how I do it, and why I do it.

Meet Artist Diana Eppler, Spring Obsession Open Division Accepted Artist

DIANA  EPPLER                                   
 www.dianaeppler.com                                                                                
                                                                                              
 
O-128 Sun on the Veil  oil  22x28  $1900

 “My painting subjects are varied as that is my nature.  I will probably be perpetually in some period of transition with my art which, I hope, is a good thing.  I try to work towards a melding of classical, contemporary and my own style; always striving to share with the viewer a means of expression which is representational without being literal or prosaic.


O-127  Courthouse, Fall Morning  oil  22x28  $1900







I used to worry where was I going with my art?  Was I a colorist, tonalist, impressionist, plein air or studio painter?  I now know my art leads me.  Each piece is individual and dictates how it should be painted.  First comes what I feel, then what I see.  When I paint it is me and it is my own.  An idea for painting frequently comes from my emotional response to color and light.  I build around that, often changing the subject matter partly or entirely until the color, light, movement and design meet to fit the mood.  This manner of creating a painting works well for the studio, which I very much enjoy, however, painting en plein air (outdoors in one sitting) is a good way to rejuvenate the very feeling that create the moods.  The California foothills offer the artist an abundance of choices to paint.”  
O-129  Vineyard Pond  oil  11x14  $450

Born in Amador County, Diana lived at Lake Tahoe and in Nevada, Southern and Northern California before returning to the foothills in 1997.  She now resides in Jamestown.  She attended Western Nevada Community College and studied with Wellington Smith, noted artist, lecturer and teacher.  Workshops over the years included Janet Tarjan Earl, Edgardo Garcia, Jeanette LeGrue, Kathleen Dunphy and Charles Waldman although she considers herself, basically, self taught.  Past Board of Director of the Siskiyou Art Assoc., Creative Arts Guild and  Mother Lode Art Assoc. Past member of the Lithia Artists Assoc., Central Sierra Arts Council and Central Calif. Art Assoc.  Founding member of the Post Gallery and founding Director of Aloft Art Gallery, Sonora . Currently her works can be seen locally at Ventana Gallery, Sonora; Galleria Copper, Copperopolis and the Europa CafĂ©  in Sonora as well as on her web site.


She has been accepted in numerous juried shows and won many awards including Foothill Favorites in the MLAA Shows.  A finalist in California Shines Statewide Art show for the 2011 US Capitol Christmas Tree Celebration.  Her works hang in homes and businesses across the country.

Meet Artist Patty Ehlers, Ironstone Spring Obsession Art Show, Open Division accepted artist

Patty Ehlers


O-059  A Kiss  graphite  16x20  $425
I received a Bachelor of Arts in Art from San Jose State University with a concentration in Design.   Following college I worked as a free-lance illustrator which allowed me to segue into a job with Lockheed.   While at Lockheed I worked as a Cartoonist and Technical Illustrator.  Europe called and I couldn’t pass up the opportunity to work in England but had, by then, moved into the Technical Field of Computers.   Art was never out of my thoughts and I dabbled in textiles and ceramics as a hobby.  
O-058  Egg Head  graphite  14x18  $375

In 2011 I retired and relocated from the Bay Area to the Sierra Foothills.   I jumped back into the art world by taking drawing classes at a local gallery.  The focus in my drawing class was portraiture. 

I enjoyed portraiture but there seemed to be something missing for me.  Graphite is so soothing to work with and to view but my cartooning background took over.   I enjoyed skewing the reality with the quirkiness, the gray tones with the vibrant colors, and taking advantage of illustrating the abundant wildlife of the Sierras.      

Meet Artist Judy Day, Ironstone Spring Obsession Open Division accepted Artist

JUDY DAY

O-065  June Loop  wc  16x20  $225
Judy attended Art Center School of Design and Cal State Northridge, where she received a Bachelor Degree in Graphic Design and a K-12 Teaching Credential in Art Education and Math.  She recently retired from 25 + years teaching at David Starr Jordan Middle School in Burbank, California.  Judy taught Beginning art, Cultures through Art, Photography, Cartooning, Animation, and Algebra.  In April of 2010 she moved the foothills of Jackson, and began studying with several local artist and concentrating on her painting. 

O-066  Fort Bragg wc  16x20  $275
Judy’s art credits include the following: Illustrating three educational children’s books, numerous brochures, posters, paintings and cards, two cut paper banners (3 x12 feet) that hang seasonally in the First Christian Church of North Hollywood’s Sanctuary.  For the last 5 years, Judy has directed a week long children’s art camp in Studio City for 3rd thru 12th graders.  She is currently serving as the President of the Amador County Artist Association.

Her awards and honors are: 1993-94 Jordan Middle School Teacher of the Year, 1994 Burbank Woman of the Year, 1995 Outstanding teacher Award given by the LA Times and CSUN School of Education, and finally in 2002 the California League of Middle Schools Educator of the Year Nominee.

Judy loves the outdoors and has hiked and sketched in the high Sierras most of her life.  “My art is inspired by my backpacking trips into the Sierras, vacations around the world, majestic landscapes, historical sites and practically everything in my neighborhood.  You never know what will catch you eye and inspire you”

Judy’s art work is displayed at the Sutter Creek Gallery, at 35 Main St.  in Sutter Creek, California.

Meet Artist Geneva Davis Season, Spring Obsession Art show OPEN Division accepted artist

Geneva Davis Season
O-176 Springtime Splendor  oil  16x20  $400
  I began my painting career over 30 years ago. I am mostly self-taught. I enjoy painting all subjects and in all media. My passion for painting comes from my garden and through my travels viewing the beauty of nature that God created. I love the burst of green in the spring and the brilliant colors of fall.
O-179  Garden Entrance  oil  12x16  $400
The intensity and emotion in my paintings frlow from my love of all subjects, whether florals, gardens, figures, animals or landscapes. I want my collectors to enjoy the painting and appreciated what I saw and how I interpreted what I was seeing. I thank God everyday for giving me the ability to paint and share it with others.
O-178  Tropical Splendor  oil  14x18  $1200
My paintings may be viewed at Pinecrest Gallery, All That Matters in Twain Harte, Town Hall Gallery in Copperopolis, Ventana and Aloft Gallery in Sonora ... My home studio is open to visitor's by appointment only.  genevadis27@yahoo.com

Meet Artist Barbara Conley, Ironstone's Spring Obsession Open Division Accepted Artist

Barbara Conley

O-088 Old Homestead  wc  6x10  $495
  Barbara has been painting since 1970. Primarily self-taught her paintings are easily recognizable as her style has developed into a unique statement that reflects her personal feelings about each subject. Barbara's primary medium is acrylic, but she uses it in such a way that it is often mistaken for oil. Although her acrylic paintings are most familiar she also works in watercolor or oil.

O-089  Winter Day  wc  8x10.5  $495
Living in the foothill community of Sonora, California, she is taking advantage of the wonderful old buildings and scenes of the area, doing studies for her larger studio pieces.

O-087  Kris & Nolan at the Roundup  acrylic  16x20  $2300
Barbara has shown throughout the U.S. and her paintings are represendted in private and corporate collections. She also has won numerous awards including the Grumbacher silver medal and many Best of show. Barbara is represented by New Masters Gallery in Carmel, CA., Aloft Art gallery in Sonora, CA., Petroglyph Gallery in Mokelumne Hill, CA., and Town Hall Arts, Copperopolis, CA.


Thursday, March 27, 2014

Meet Artist Vickie Chew, Ironstone's Spring obsession Open Division accepted Artist

About Vickie Chew

 
O-0140  Along the River  oil  12x16  $275
Vickie has lived all of her adult life in Calaveras County in the mid northern Sierra's and Foothills. She has a BA in Business Administration and has been studying art for the last eighteen years. While a student at Columbia College, she was published in the annual student review for her artwork and one of her murals can be seen in the Sonora Police Department’s Dispatch Center. She has won many awards including Best of Division at professional art shows. She works continuously to broaden her painting knowledge by attending master workshops and seeking inspiration from her favorite mentors. Her paintings are mainly in oil, some acrylic, charcoal, and pastels. She especially enjoys Plein Air painting, the challenge of capturing the mood and the feel of the day before the daylight is lost, and the shadows change. Vickie accepts commissioned work, contact Vickie today.    www.vickiechew.com


O-138  Really  oil  30x20  $600

Meet Artist Patricia Cherry, Spring Obsession Open Division Accepted Artist

ABOUT THE ARTIST

Patricia Cherry
Ms. Cherry believes all of life is art.  





Her motto for a creative life:  ”Ditch your inner critic, laugh at yourown ego, pick the thing you love and work like crazy, and no matter how tough it gets practice gratitude and peace daily."



Fine Art education includes attending San Francisco State University, California College of Arts and Crafts, University of California at Berkeley, and Escuela de Belles Artes in San Miquel de Allende, Guanajauto Mexico. In addition she has taken many other art workshops from diverse and talented Artists. She did this concurrently while working as a busy CEO of a San Francisco Bay Area Staffing firm.
An award winning professional artist she has won awards at such shows as Ironstone Spring Art Show and Gallo’s Annual Art show. She has had one-person shows in San Joaquin, Calaveras, Amador and San Mateo Counties. In Northern California her art can currently be seen at Bonsack Gallery in Oakdale and at C Gallery and Fine Art in East Sonora.
Patricia was co-founder of Sonora Art Trails, a successful open art studio tour bringing tourists and art lovers to Tuolumne County. She is frequently a guest speaker for community groups on the subject of why art is important to education and society. She is known for writing a weekly column for Sierra Lodestar, “Art Matters”.  She teaches “How to Find Your Visual Voice” to a select group of artists who take their painting but not themselves seriously.

Monday, March 10, 2014

Judy Boles, Spring Obsession Open Division Accepted Artist

Judy Boles Art
O-026  Pioneer Cabin Tree  acrylic  12x16  $350

As a girl, I took many cross country road trips with my family, watching the varied landscapes go by. During those trips, my father instilled a sense of adventure and an appreciation for the beauty in all landscapes: orchards, cornfields, lakes, mountains, sea coasts and even barren deserts. Painting and drawing the things I saw became a favorite childhood pass time.  After finishing college, I taught high school English and Art in northern California for several years, but my art soon took a back seat to the joys of children and to the demands of the corporate world. Since my retirement in 2006, I have been pursuing my passion for art more fully.
O-025  Bear in Bloom  oil  12x16  $350-

My work is a visual diary of scenes that have inspired me. The close observation needed to render a scene on canvas makes me feel connected to the place. While living many years in Sonoma County, I was drawn to the coastal hills, the shoreline, and the wonderful vistas of the wine country. In 2011 my husband and I moved to Arnold, CA, in the Sierra Nevada mountains, where we live in the awesome beauty of a national forest. My new inspirations are mountain streams, alpine lakes, Sequoia trees and the constantly changing seasons.
O-027  Uneven Ripening  oil  9x12  $350

Please visit my web gallery at: rojubo.com/jbolesart
or email me at: rojubo@rojubo.com

Meet Artist Connie McLennan, Spring Obsession OPEN DIVISION accepted artist

Connie McLennan

O-112  Winter Hills, Monterey Co.  oil  24x24  $1495
2nd. Place Winner

Connie McLennan grew up in Yreka, CA, where she showed quarter horses and sometimes accompanied her father, a veterinarian, on his out-calls amid the natural beauty of Mt. Shasta and the surrounding countryside.

Connie graduated from CSU, Sacramento with a degree in journalism, then spent two years studying illustration at San Francisco's Academy of Art. She began as a freelancer, illustrating a variety of advertising, institutional and editorial projects, including thirteen children’s books. 

O-111  Spring Smorgasbord  oil  14x12  $425

She attended her first painting workshop with Craig Nelson in 1994 and continued paint with Craig for five days every winter for several years. In 2010, she turned to painting full time and was enormously influenced by a series of workshops with well-known impressionist Don Hatfield.


Connie is a two-time contributor to the Air Force Art Collection. One of her paintings currently hangs in the State Capitol, representing the 1st Senate District in California’s 2013-2014 Senate Contemporary Art collection.

O-110  Tulip Dance  oil  12x12  $350

Meet Artist Marilyn Wear, Open Division Accepted Artist & 1st. Place Award Winner!

Marilyn Wear garnered the 1st place award at Ironstone's 17th Annual Spring Obsession Art Show.


Marilyn Wear NWS, WW, CWA
www.marilynwear.com


O-069 Storm Along the Canal  watercolor  11x16 $800
1st. Place Winner, Open Division

Biography

Marilyn was born and raised in the San Francisco Bay area, where she graduated from San Jose State University with a Bachelor of Arts in Graphic Design. She worked as an advertising artist/illustrator until 2003, then left her last job in commercial art to pursue her dream of becoming a full time fine artist. Her work won immediate recognition, winning awards in juried shows around the country. In 2005 she was selected as a signature member of the National Watercolor Society. She has since been selected for signature membership in Watercolor West, and California Watercolor Association.

Although she also paints with oil and acrylics, her favorite medium is transparent watercolor, where she uses a technique of layering many glazes of watercolor to create richness and depth, while retaining a glowing vibrancy. She finds some of her best subject matter close to home in her garden and in the Sierra Nevada mountains, particularly the dramatic landscapes of Yosemite National Park. She has a special interest in painting birds and wildlife, both local to home and to wherever she travels. Her style in realistic with an emphasis on capturing the light, color and mood of her chosen subject.

O-068  Nut Snatcher  watercolor  11x16  $800

She is currently represented by First Street Gallery in Turlock, CA
http://www.firststreetgalleries.com
and Cedar Street Gallery in Honolulu, Hawaii
http://www.cedarstreetgalleries.com

Marily can be contacted by email and marilynwear@aol.com or through her website: http://www.marilynwear.com




Wednesday, February 12, 2014

Meet Artist Ditas Katague, Spring Obsession OPEN DIVISION accepted artist

O-120  Roots Before Branches  acrylic  60x48  $7500

Artist Stephanie Benedict, Spring Obsession OPEN DIVISION accepted artist

Stephanie Benedict  
O-134  Malakoff Diggins  oil  6x12  $250

Stephanie Benedict paints landscapes in oil, acrylic, and gouache.  She came to painting one evening in the middle of her life, while wandering through an art supply store.  She was looking at racks of stretched canvas - small ones, big ones, square and long ones - all empty, white, and standing in rows against the wall. Suddenly, Stephanie started seeing paintings on them: cityscapes, mountains, views through windows. She decided that night to study painting, and she's never looked back.
O-135  Mustard and Goldfields  oil  12x24  $495

Stephanie earned a BA with honors from the University of California, Santa Cruz, in History/Theatre Arts. Since that night at the art supply store, she's studied painting and drawing with Kathleen Dunphy, Scott Christensen, Terry Miura, Susan Sarback, and Dan Samborski.

Stephanie is a native Californian, born in Burbank and raised in Sacramento. After sampling life in Eugene and Boston, Stephanie returned to California. She now resides in Orangevale, near Sacramento.
O-133  Heading North  oil  24x36  $1500

You can find Stephanie's work on her website, sbenedictstudio.com.  She writes about painting, nature and painting nature on her blog, sbenedictblog.com.

Meet Artist Timothy Mulligan, Spring Obsession OPEN DIVISION accepted artist

            Timothy Mulligan
 A Contemporary Northern California painter

O-131  View from Tower Bridge  acrylic 24x20  $1800


I attended Sacramento City College and received a degree in Fine Art from CSU, Sacramento. I studied under notable artists as Greg Kondos, Gerald Walburg, Peter VandenBerge, Laureen Landau, Larry Welden, Jack Ogden, and Steve Kaltenbach.
After I graduated, I worked as a printmaker creating etchings and prints, and produced several watercolors, pastels, and large pencil drawings.  I exhibited my earlier works at the Crocker Art Museum, the Haggin Museum, the California State Fair, and several local art galleries. 
In 2011, after taking a long break to teach my two children at home, grades K-12, I returned to art to pursue my passion to paint on canvas. I painted multiple landscapes, cityscapes, and waterscapes which include the local farmlands, coastal beaches, and quiet neighborhoods.

My paintings have been exhibited throughout the Central Valley and in the Bay Area, and in 2013 I received over a dozen awards in national and regional art competitions, including First Place in the 2013 KVIE PBS Art Auction. My work has also been recently recognized in two national art magazines, The Artist’s Magazine and Southwest Art Magazine.
View Under Tower Bridge  acrylic  24x20  $1600
I paint with acrylics on site and in my studio using a variety of paint knives and brushes.  My earlier works are mostly representational; often combining impressionistic and expressionistic painting styles.  My later works are exclusively expressionistic inspired by the painting style of the Bay Area Figurative Movement; synthesizing forms with dynamic raw colors and using aggressive paint strokes. 
What inspires me to paint is seeing a subject from a fresh and unique perspective. I try to minimize the details and focus on the light, shadows, colors, and shapes.  I make a new color palette for each painting and try not to follow conventional methods. Oftentimes, I allow the texture of the painted surface to help create form and movement. To separate and energize the shapes I use colorful seams, marbleized flattened planes, and lines scratched into the paint.   I’m beginning to explore combining multiple perspectives of a subject into a single cohesive image.
My recent paintings can be sorted into three groups: The Raw, The Real, and The Inventive: 
The Raw paintings are made up of basic forms, which are quick and organic.  They strive for an honesty built from intense color and light, in an open and exposed way.

The Real paintings seek to take the raw style to a strange, heightened level of reality.

The Inventive paintings embrace abstract form and restrict the raw style.  These paintings flatten shapes, heighten color, and avoid a sense of realness.


www.timothymulliganfineart.com/

Tuesday, February 11, 2014

Meet Artist Connie Carson - Romano, Spring Obsession Theme Division accepted Artist

Connie Carson-Romano                

                                           
           Art is an expression of the way the Artist views the world in which he lives.  Through my paintings, I try to communicate the emotions that made the subject something I wanted to share with others whether it is joy, serenity, or the excitement of the beauty of nature.  I know I have succeeded at my Art when someone looks at a painting or drawing and says, “That painting makes me feel….”           

            Expressing myself through art has always been a form of meditation and relaxation for me.  Acrylic paint is my favored medium; I love the way it works and forms on the canvas.  Recently I have discovered a new joy in oil paints; the viscosity of the medium that allows for extended outdoor work whether it is on a windy beach or a dry desert landscape.
         The colors that are present in nature are phenomenal and I love trying to create the same shades.  Having been raised in the mountains of New Mexico I found myself immersed from an early age in the amazing palate of nature and the challenge of trying to recreate that on canvas.  Now as a resident of Northern California, I am awed at the diversity of landscapes we live in and the unlimited array of challenges awaiting my brushes.

          Two Artists looking at the same object or same landscape will create completely different expressions of what they see.  I find it is amazing and exciting that so many different interpretations of the world around us are available through the eyes of Artists.  I love visiting galleries and museums to view the varied presentations of life as expressed by different individuals.  It is my pleasure that I am able to add my own personal expressions to this collection.

Meet Artist Linda Erickson, Spring Obsession OPEN DIVISION accepted Artist

Artist Linda Erickson
O-167 Sacred Ground at Chinese Camp  watercolor  21x14 $525

ARTIST'S STATEMENT

I have always been attracted to all design--whether it's interior 

decorating, textile design, or working with shapes and colors.  

Curiosity ignites my creativity--unusual shapes, shadows, and 

colors awaken my emotions, and that's what I want to impart 

through my art.

Watercolors are my favorite medium.  They are spontaneous, 

challenging and unforgiving, but when I watch the water and 

colorful paints begin to mingle and spread, it's exciting and once 

again I forgive their uniqueness and begin a new journey.  I also 

love the tactile softness and quietude of graphite and then there's 

the romance I have with mixed media.  I guess I love it all.

What I paint is a gift of myself and I hope the viewer appreciates 

the journey I traveled for each piece of my work.

ellesworld@att.net 

ASSOCIATIONS                                                   
Mendocino Art Center
O-166  Coquille Lighthouse  wc 14x21  $525
Alliance of California Artists
Clovis Art Guild

EDUCATION
4C's Business College
Fresno City College
               Art History, Textiles, Art Appreciation
CSUF Extended Education
               Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain
Clovis Adult School
               Advanced Drawing - 5 years
Workshops upcoming:  Michael Reardon at Mendocino Art Center
Studied with:  Birgit O'Connor, Dale Laitinen, Jerome Grimmer, Nancy Collins, Susan Adams

SKILLS
Watercolor, mixed media, and graphite artist
Gallery curator
Fresno Art Museum Docent



AWARDS
2003 - 2004 Certificates of Recognition from the California State Assembly for participation in the Community ArtReach Program
2008 Big Fresno Fair - 1st place Advanced Watercolor
2008 Selected by the Fresno Arts Council for a special show at Fresno City Hall
Alliance of California Artists - Best of Show 2008, 1st place (drawing) 2010, 3rd place 2011
Clovis Art Guild - 1st place 2009,  2012, 2013, 2nd place 2012, 3rd place 2008, 2010
2012 Painting selected by Gallery Curator to hang in Mendocino Art Center's main gallery
2013  Juried into exhibit judged by Birgit O'Connor at Mendocino Art Center
2014 Juried into Ironstone Vineyards, Spring Obsession 2014 Competition

 PROFESSIONAL
Retired administrative aide from State Center Community College District

Current Gallery Associations:  Fresno Art Hub and Alliance of California Artists @ Sorensen's

Wednesday, February 5, 2014

Meet Artist Judie Cain, Spring Obsession Theme Division accepted Artist

Judie Cain - Oil Painter

Symphony of Spring oil  20x16  $900


A Colorist's Impressions of Life

Judie Cain works her magic with practiced skills in oil paints. Several of her works are in print, Giclee and on home products. Working from live models, on location, and/or from photo references from her travels, she strives to capture the light, liveliness, and the mood of the moment through quick strokes of vibrant colors, using brush and/or painting knife. At home with a variety of subjects, she finds excitement in even the most ordinary things such as the nostalgia of a Victorian porch, a bouquet of her treasured roses and scenes from her gardens, expansive landscapes, animals, or children on the beach.

To Cain, painting is something you have in your heart. She sees herself as an "Impressionistic Colorist" painter but others have told her that she has an "Expressionistic" flair. "It's whatever attracts me at the time; I express my feelings, so I'm a little of both, " says Ms. Cain. "If the light hits a certain way, I think "if I could only capture that." It's humbling trying to capture what Mother Nature has perfected, she acknowledges.

A native of Burlingame, CA, Judie Cain studied at California College of Arts & Crafts, in Oakland, CA after high school. "I felt very intimidated by the talent there at the time," (Her early art attempts went from doodles on scratch pads and work in modeling clay to decorating for school dances and events.) She has taken inspiration from many great artists, particularly John Singer Sargent's memorable portraits, Joaquin Sorolla's Magnificent renderings of people and animals at oceanside, as well as Monet's ability to capture atmosphere.

Family responsibilities behind her, in 1987, Cain took early retirement to return to painting by attending college, numerous workshops, and taking private lessons. She also opened "The Art Gallery," near Murphys. She has studied with such noted artists as Ted Goerschner, Ann Templeton, and Susan Sarback.

Since becoming a full-time artist, Cain has taught oil painting fundamentals and "Color Demystified" workshops in several places, including her spacious studio in Forest Meadows, near Murphys, in the California Sierra Mountains. (she and her husband, Lou Papais, recently built a home in Murphys, which includes a smaller studio). "It seemed that a lot of the fundamentals weren't being taught any longer so I designed the workshops to address those needs."

FEATURED SHOWS: Haggin Museum, 5//99 Stockton, CA; Main Street Gallery, Murphys 6/00, 9/2000: San Joaquin County Arts Council 7/93, 8/95, group invitational 5/96, Stockton, CA; Lasting Impressions Gallery, Carmel, CA 2002; Iron Door Gallery, Murphys, 2008; Townhall Arts 8/2011; Ventana Gallery 4/2012 (selected solo).

PUBLISHED: US Art Magazine 2/98 and "Woman To Watch" 1997, 98, 99; Sierra Heritage Magazine, spring, 1998; Get Up & Go (lifestyles) interview 11/98, collage of her works on the cover of "Gold Country Magaine" 2003; artwork used in "Faith & Family" winter 2004/05, cover 2006 catalog Catholic Heritage Curricula and textbooks; "Valley Views Magazine" interview, summer 2006.

Judie Cain's works are found in collections around the world.

www.cainart.com

Meet Artist Barbara Young, Spring Obsession Theme Division accepted Artist

Barbara (Barb) Young
Artist's Statement
T-022  Simply Daffodills  11x14  wc  $150


My early days in art were spent trying to copy cartoons from comic books and doing paint-by-number paintings. For several years my drawings were usually sad and/or gloomy. In my last year of high school I won an Art Scholarship to Sacramento City College. There I took the basic classes in art and learned many good principals that have grown and enlarged in my work since. My parents lacked the resources to help pay for further art studies which meant I had to work and an art career did not materialize. Yet my art continued to grow and expand in quality and a "lightness" overcame the gloom of my very early art.  I feel that my art is a God given talent. I have learned some techniques and enhancements for my art from watching other and just by trying something and making mistakes.

Landscapes and old buildings have been my primary source of inspiration. I like to sketch with ultra'fine Sharpie pens while on location. I have worked in oil, acrylic, and now my medium of choice is watercolor. I try to capture in my drawings and paintings the memory of a place by setting down textures, feelings, characteristics; the uniqueness and special quality of that place.

My painting & drawing style is alive with color and realism. Painting and drawing are a source of joy and fulfillment for me. Each artwork I complete brings me satisfaction and wonder. "I actually did that!". I have also been commissioned to do some special paintings, paintings with unique problems and challenges but with God's help, I was able to complete the painting which proved to be a delight to the recipient as well as to myself.  I have done two large murals for two different churches in the Sacramento area.

Meet Artist Ruth Morrow, Spring Obsession Theme Division Artist

Ruth Morrow

Wild Garden wc 26x20  $500
This image is refusing to rotate left... it is a beautiful piece, too! You just have to come see the original on March 1 with the show opens!  Meet Ruth then as well, she will be here with an Art in Action booth!


Embracing art since childhood, Ruth Morrow has spent the last twenty eight years painting and photographing the beauty of the Mother Lode. Ruth's loose and fanciful painting style is visible in her watercolors, acrylics, oils and mixed media pieces many of which contain recycled objects.

The past two years have been busy and gratifying for her artistic endeavors. At Sacramento Fine Arts Gallery Ruth was presented with an award of excellence for her watercolor "A Close-Knit Village" and the Olive Schmid Memorial Award for her piece "Spring at the Old Homestead."  She received multiple awards at the 2013 Frog Jump Professional art show and a second and third at October's Mother Lode Art Show. She won a bronze plaque from Windsor-Newton Co. in N.Y. for her excellence in watercolor and the Florence Ferraro Award for her watercolor "The Tea Party". 

The artist was the first to win the Ironstone Obsession poster contest twice with "A Romp in the Dills" and "Truckin Dills".  And, her pieces have appeared in the KVIE Art Auction nine years running.

Ruth is a member of ALOFT Co-p Gallery in Sonora, Art On Main in Murphys, Calaveras Arts Council, The Golden Palette, Arts  of Bear Valley, Sacramento Fine Arts Gallery, Watercolor Artists of Sacramento Horizons, and Northern CA Artists.

Her work may also be seen at Townhall Arts in Copperopolis, Murphy's Grill, The Window Gallery in Arnold and her Arnold Studio.