My paintings are not only to decorate a wall. I want them to immerse the viewer in waves of clear detail with sharp edges and perspective leading the eyes to infinit
Featured Artist Craig Cossey
Beauty is not my goal, making my art interesting is. Many people overlook small details and instead look for things with known impact. For example, advertising is about impact. My art is about small everyday discoveries found in everyday life.
Featured Artist Kitty Harvill
My deepest desire is to elicit an emotional response that motivates others to act on behalf of our beautiful planet, in support of conservation efforts.
Featured Artist Debra Spence
My work is known for being emotive. I like to create pieces that move the viewer, stir some emotional response, and hopefully create empathy and awareness.
Featured Artist Jo Ann Tomaselli
As artists, we all have goals for the work we create and share. I regard each image a success when it brings even the smallest measure of wonder and joy to those who see it.
Featured Artist Brian Tisdall
I will try to paint what my intuition feels, and not be overly influenced by the desires of others. It is the journey that is important, and it is time to test my true potential as an artist.
Featured Artist Carol Moore
I like that the craft (printmaking) is very physical; inking plates, operating presses, and rolling up slabs of ink are all a labor of love that bring me closer to my work.
Featured Artist Carol Harrison
Taking time to get to know my subject includes noticing the interplay of light and shadow over the areas, including what is in shadow, giving me a pretty good idea of the complete painting before I pick up a brush. It has to feel right.
Featured Artist Ashba Zulfiqar
Another goal I hope to achieve with each piece I create is to make it memorable–something powerful enough to leave a permanent impression. That once someone sees it they won’t ever forget it. As an artist, that is the most rewarding thing.
Featured Artist Teshia
One day, I had a captivating vision that would forever change my life. It was a moose, but not just a brown, awkward, ordinary one. This moose was radiating color and energy and dribbling prismatic streaks of color…That vision evolved into my first TeshiaArt masterpiece and marked the turning point in my career.
Featured Artist Nick Payne
I love the immediacy and brilliance of pastels! The bulk of my paintings are made with this beautiful medium. Painting with professional pastels is as close as an artist can get to painting with pure pigment.
Featured Artist Norma Greenwood
My paintings are structured around the relationship between shadow, light, composition and scale. Even as a very young artist, I was fascinated by the effects of shadow and light on objects and experimented with a variety of reflective surfaces to alter spatial perception.
Featured Artist Kari Feuer
(The) abstracted versions of what I was feeling outdoors…these are gestural paintings with lots of movement, slathering and layering. I particularly like the surprise mixtures of colors that sometimes just happen in the moment..
Featured Artist Becky Joy
Eventually, I looked to the skies for more color in the Southwest’s beautiful sunsets. I spent a lot of hours watching the changes in the sky and recording those colors on canvas. Now, much of my work is focused on sunsets–an endless colorful subject.