Dawn feels like her first language was beauty. That was how her heart was stirred to art. Born and raised a missionary kid she learned to look for it in the cracks and crevices of lives much harder then her own. In college, she learned how to find her own way to express her heart through painting. Dawn’s husband is a gentle gift who likes quiet as much as she does. They have three kids and with them the quiet left. It birthed a joy found in working on what's important and striving for love in all things.
She likes to think of her work as a “glimpse of the mystery.” The metaphors of life held in branches, cloud wisps and water. There is something that compels Dawn to paint, not what is literally seen but what is felt. For her, the window into the spiritual is nature. It seems to be the image that she is invited to pass through into something much richer and deeper and full of beauty.
Her art is collected by many businesses as well as private owners. Some of which are: Dallas Theological Seminary, Dallas Eye Care Associates, Dallas Baptist University, She currently finished five original drawings for the book, “Why, O God?” published by Crossway books. She is a member of Artists of Texas. Dawn is affiliated with Mary Tomas Gallery in Dallas Design District, Smith Klein Gallery in Boulder, Colorado and currently with the summer group exhibit at White Stone Gallery in Philadelphia, PA. Her work has been in National shows including The National Weather Biennale, CIVA Contemporary Images of Mary and Ex Nihilo at Roberts Wesleyan College. Her work is available internationally through Veritasse based in London, England.
Saturday, July 19, 2014
Wednesday, July 16, 2014
Artspan Artist Spotlight with Jean Howard
When did you realize you loved art and wanted to be an artist?
I don't remember exactly when I first wanted to be an artist.
Who has been your mentor, or greatest influence to date?
My father was an architect and did some watercolor renderings of his projects. I think that I always drawing. When I was 13 he gave me some art books and about that time I knew that I wanted to be an artist. He was my greatest mentor.
Who is another living artist you admire and why?
The artists that I admire are Richard Diebenkorn and Hans Halls. I know that they are dead but I am not influenced as much by today's artists.
What is your favorite surface to create work on or to work with? Describe it if you make it yourself.
I like to work on handmade watercolor paper when I do watercolors and canvas for oils.
Do you have a favorite color palette?
Not a favorite color palette.
I don't remember exactly when I first wanted to be an artist.
Who has been your mentor, or greatest influence to date?
My father was an architect and did some watercolor renderings of his projects. I think that I always drawing. When I was 13 he gave me some art books and about that time I knew that I wanted to be an artist. He was my greatest mentor.
Who is another living artist you admire and why?
The artists that I admire are Richard Diebenkorn and Hans Halls. I know that they are dead but I am not influenced as much by today's artists.
What is your favorite surface to create work on or to work with? Describe it if you make it yourself.
I like to work on handmade watercolor paper when I do watercolors and canvas for oils.
Do you have a favorite color palette?
Not a favorite color palette.
How often do you work on your artwork? How many hours a week?
I work in chunks, solid for awhile and then NOT for awhile.
What are your inspirations for your work?
I am inspired by things that I see, sometimes unexpectedly.
What is your favorite color in your closet?
I don't have a favorite color. I thought about this question a lot. I am more interested in a relationship between colors. My closet reflects this also.
What book are you reading this week?
What book are you reading this week?
What is your favorite food?
I love lobster.
What color sheets are on your bed right now?
My sheets are beige.
Do you have a passion or hobby other than painting? What is it?
My other interests include gardening and duplicate bridge.
Who would you love to paint?
Who would you love to paint?
I love to paint the Ocean.
If you were an animal what would you be and why?
If you were an animal what would you be and why?
I would like to be a seagull to fly around the banks of the ocean.
Share something with us that few people know about you.
I am a very private person.
If you could live anywhere in the world, where would you live?
If you could live anywhere in the world, where would you live?
I would love to live in Laguna Beach.
Saturday, July 12, 2014
VL Studio Visit with William Beebe
Art has always been in my blood, but I took a circuitous route in becoming a full-time professional artist. In my junior year of college I signed up for a portrait painting class hoping to improve my GPA. Up until then my life had been all about sports. I had always been a doodler though, drawing in pencil and seeing the world in black and white. The thought of being an artist never crossed my mind until I discovered the world of oil painting. My portrait-painting teacher that semester greatly encouraged me and the seed was planted!
After graduating from the University of Maryland with a Studio/Fine Art degree the pragmatic side of me took over. I was 23 years old, newly married and living in the suburbs of Washington, DC. I couldn’t find a job in art because I didn’t study graphic arts. I found myself working as a bookkeeper and then back at the U. of MD for my second degree in Accounting. Then I spent a year in tax accounting followed by several years as an accountant in private industry. I never felt like it was my destiny.
In the meantime, my father died suddenly from cancer as my mother was fighting her own long battle with cancer. My father was the one who had told me to do what makes me happy. My mother was the one who took me to art galleries and saved my drawings. They were giving me the gift of developing a life compass. I was now at a crossroads and that inner compass was pointing me in a new direction.
My wife, Jen, and I decided to take a much-needed vacation to Maine and it was there that I became inspired to paint! I came home from that special trip and painted a schooner docked in Boothbay Harbor. I started painting more, dreaming of living in Maine and painting as a vocation. Before long we decided to take a leap of faith.
Now I find myself looking back on 24 years of being a full-time artist. I appreciate every day of “going to work” and am extremely grateful to have been able to pursue my passion of painting for a living.
The Maine paintings I produced early on ranged from lighthouses, to working waterman scenes, to the small coastal fishing villages and islands. My work attracted the attention of Mr. Charles Cawley, an avid art collector and the CEO of MBNA, an international credit card company. He started collecting my work and eventually hired me to become the resident artist for MBNA!
For nine wonderful years I had the honor of having my paintings featured on the cover of MBNA’s quarterly reports. Along with paintings of their many office buildings around the world, they encouraged me to continue painting Maine scenes for their collection.
Over time I became more narrowly focused on capturing the beauty of the Maine Windjammer fleet. Hundreds of schooners used to work the Maine waters, hauling lumber and limestone. I was intrigued by how few of them are left and saddened by the thought that someday they will be gone. Each ship has a long history, some dating over one hundred years!
Many hours of painting in the smallest of details were spent on each ship. I wanted to pay tribute to each ship by recording an accurate interpretation of it on canvas to hopefully last for another hundred years.
My maritime paintings have been exhibited in numerous gallery and museum shows throughout the years including the Farnsworth Art Museum in Rockland, ME and at the Coos Art Museum in Coos Bay, OR, where I won a Merit award in the 12th Annual Maritime Art Exhibition. Additionally my work has been a part of several Marine Masters Exhibitions in Mystic, CT and Thomaston, ME and the 26th Annual International Marine Art Exhibition at the Maritime Gallery at Mystic Seaport.
When we moved to Virginia in 2002, I was a little concerned that I might have trouble finding that same passion for painting that I found in Maine.
Then one day I heard that the state of Virginia had built a replica of an historic wooden pilot schooner named Schooner Virginia. After doing a little research I found out that it was going to be docked in Portsmouth, VA. When I walked up the dock and saw the Virginia for the first time I was taken aback. The tall ship with its beautiful black shiny hull and gold engraved letters on the bow spelling VIRGINIA had grandeur to it. I took hundreds of detail pictures that day in Portsmouth.
I had found new inspiration and immediately started planning a series of paintings featuring the Schooner Virginia.
Every year there is a Great Chesapeake Bay Schooner Race that begins in Annapolis, MD at the Bay Bridge and continues on down the Bay. I witnessed and photographed the Virginia and the Pride of Baltimore II in a nose-to-nose race under ideal sailing conditions. It was a powerful moment for me.
During that race I also photographed the Pride of Baltimore II, the Lettie G. Howard out of New York, and other smaller schooners, which sail the waters of the Chesapeake.
My first painting of the Virginia was a large commissioned piece featuring the tall ship cutting through the dark water with speed and grace. I was honored when approached by the folks at the Schooner Virginia to have reproduction giclee prints made from this painting to help with their annual fundraiser. We worked closely with the Mariners’ Museum in Newport News, VA to produce these quality prints.
Subsequently, I completed four more Schooner Virginia paintings in competitive races with sister ships to complete my series.
I’ve discovered that like art, a need to be near the water is in my blood. Being able to combine the two callings as a maritime artist has turned out to be a dream come true!
After graduating from the University of Maryland with a Studio/Fine Art degree the pragmatic side of me took over. I was 23 years old, newly married and living in the suburbs of Washington, DC. I couldn’t find a job in art because I didn’t study graphic arts. I found myself working as a bookkeeper and then back at the U. of MD for my second degree in Accounting. Then I spent a year in tax accounting followed by several years as an accountant in private industry. I never felt like it was my destiny.
In the meantime, my father died suddenly from cancer as my mother was fighting her own long battle with cancer. My father was the one who had told me to do what makes me happy. My mother was the one who took me to art galleries and saved my drawings. They were giving me the gift of developing a life compass. I was now at a crossroads and that inner compass was pointing me in a new direction.
My wife, Jen, and I decided to take a much-needed vacation to Maine and it was there that I became inspired to paint! I came home from that special trip and painted a schooner docked in Boothbay Harbor. I started painting more, dreaming of living in Maine and painting as a vocation. Before long we decided to take a leap of faith.
Now I find myself looking back on 24 years of being a full-time artist. I appreciate every day of “going to work” and am extremely grateful to have been able to pursue my passion of painting for a living.
The Maine paintings I produced early on ranged from lighthouses, to working waterman scenes, to the small coastal fishing villages and islands. My work attracted the attention of Mr. Charles Cawley, an avid art collector and the CEO of MBNA, an international credit card company. He started collecting my work and eventually hired me to become the resident artist for MBNA!
For nine wonderful years I had the honor of having my paintings featured on the cover of MBNA’s quarterly reports. Along with paintings of their many office buildings around the world, they encouraged me to continue painting Maine scenes for their collection.
Over time I became more narrowly focused on capturing the beauty of the Maine Windjammer fleet. Hundreds of schooners used to work the Maine waters, hauling lumber and limestone. I was intrigued by how few of them are left and saddened by the thought that someday they will be gone. Each ship has a long history, some dating over one hundred years!
Many hours of painting in the smallest of details were spent on each ship. I wanted to pay tribute to each ship by recording an accurate interpretation of it on canvas to hopefully last for another hundred years.
My maritime paintings have been exhibited in numerous gallery and museum shows throughout the years including the Farnsworth Art Museum in Rockland, ME and at the Coos Art Museum in Coos Bay, OR, where I won a Merit award in the 12th Annual Maritime Art Exhibition. Additionally my work has been a part of several Marine Masters Exhibitions in Mystic, CT and Thomaston, ME and the 26th Annual International Marine Art Exhibition at the Maritime Gallery at Mystic Seaport.
When we moved to Virginia in 2002, I was a little concerned that I might have trouble finding that same passion for painting that I found in Maine.
Then one day I heard that the state of Virginia had built a replica of an historic wooden pilot schooner named Schooner Virginia. After doing a little research I found out that it was going to be docked in Portsmouth, VA. When I walked up the dock and saw the Virginia for the first time I was taken aback. The tall ship with its beautiful black shiny hull and gold engraved letters on the bow spelling VIRGINIA had grandeur to it. I took hundreds of detail pictures that day in Portsmouth.
I had found new inspiration and immediately started planning a series of paintings featuring the Schooner Virginia.
Every year there is a Great Chesapeake Bay Schooner Race that begins in Annapolis, MD at the Bay Bridge and continues on down the Bay. I witnessed and photographed the Virginia and the Pride of Baltimore II in a nose-to-nose race under ideal sailing conditions. It was a powerful moment for me.
During that race I also photographed the Pride of Baltimore II, the Lettie G. Howard out of New York, and other smaller schooners, which sail the waters of the Chesapeake.
My first painting of the Virginia was a large commissioned piece featuring the tall ship cutting through the dark water with speed and grace. I was honored when approached by the folks at the Schooner Virginia to have reproduction giclee prints made from this painting to help with their annual fundraiser. We worked closely with the Mariners’ Museum in Newport News, VA to produce these quality prints.
Subsequently, I completed four more Schooner Virginia paintings in competitive races with sister ships to complete my series.
I’ve discovered that like art, a need to be near the water is in my blood. Being able to combine the two callings as a maritime artist has turned out to be a dream come true!
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