Today’s featured artist is Greg Kapka, an absolutely fantastic painter from Nottingham, UK. I’ve been keeping track of Kapka's work for a while now, as he’s been posting daily paintings on his blog. Usually the paintings are of vegetables or fruits; the one below is titled Spring Onions.
This week's featured artist is Robert Sandidge, a painter from the heart of California gold country whose paintings reflect his love of California. Full of subtle hues overlaid with vivid splashes of color, Robert Sandidge paints in an impressionist style to capture the true feeling of the land.
Don Dahlke's art is meant to evoke a certain feeling - that of warm summer days and ocean breezes. Those emotions, however, are created by Don's use of strong light and shadow, and the way he defines a sense of space and structure within his paintings. Continue reading. . .
For Scottish artist John Stoa, snow is never boring. Instead, he depicts beauty in every wintry landscape, using bright colors...
How much color can one artist cram into a painting? Charles Sovek is a painter whose art almost seems to consist of pure color, loosely held together by familiar shapes and settings. Charles Sovek's art spans several mediums, but with every type of paint his work vibrates with intensity.
This week's review is on J Matt Miller, a Seattle artist who began his daily painting blog in July of 2006. The thing that drew me to his art was its great visual texture and his use of strong dark shadows to clearly create three dimensional objects.
David Simons is an outdoors painter whose work I recently came across while online at WetCanvas. Simons' paintings are loose and confident, and painted primarily from life which I think helps him to capture the light and colors that are so vivid in the following scenes.
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