
This new (under construction)
webpage is dedicated to the local artists
whose work fills
our lives with beauty and thoughtfulness.
Beverly Hooks
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Home Studio – by apt. only 360-779-5336 Email beverly@beverlyhooks.com |
Classified as a Romantic Impressionist and a former oil painter, I now paint in the acrylic medium, as I would paint with oil. I have painted for fifteen years and have the privilege of listening and rendering the moods and wishes of my clients through commission works. I bring my love of nature and the world as seen through the eye of an observer. I have been represented by several galleries in the Northwest and juried by the US Department of Interior, National Park Services. I was awarded the prestigious Artist-in-Residence position for the month of September 2005 at Hot Springs National Park, Arkansas. A trip to Austria realized a commission of Schloss (Castle) Mittersill, seen on my website. I was fortunate to indulge in an eight-month stay and study of the English Countryside. Greatly influenced by my instructor Stanley Warburton, I obtained a new understanding of a free flowing style between expressive and impressionism and the use of value and composition to enhance the richness of movement.
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| Link To Her Gallery http://www.beverlyhooks.com/Gallery.html
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Joan Wells
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Email joan@joanwells.com |
Joan Wells is a Western Washington artist who loves using different mediums to create costume jewelry and handbags. Peacock and pheasant feathers were her first jewelry creations and are still used. Plexiglass mirror was her design choice for disco jewelry that was featured in Vogue Magazine in the 1970's and sold in 26 countries. A collection of vintage neckties created cuff bracelets with glass and metal. Her original design handbagts are made using upholstery fabric ends and embellished with glass, feathers, metal and fabric sculptures. Her current designs of Weathered Glass Jewelry are created using wine bottles and antique collectible glass. She cuts the glass, weathers it and wraps it with hammered copper and brass. Twisted cords are created using yarns and cords to match each glass piece. S shapre openers are hammered metals in the cord. Pendant earring and bracelet sets are finished with glass beads. Recycled materials are used whenever possible. As a scuba diver logging 834 dives in the Pacific Northwest, she finds inspiration above and below the water observing nature as the ultimate design. |
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Cynthia Tyrrell
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studio: 20301 Bond
Road, NE, Poulsbo Email
cynthia@hctc.com |
Formally taught and disciplined to practice, Cynthia Tyrrell has studied fine art for over 25 years. Her studies include the mediums of oil, pastel, pencil, compressed charcoal, conte’, and watercolor. She completed the course of art training offered by the New Renaissance Academy of Whidbey Island in 1983. Since, she has consistently practiced and continued to study the techniques learned, which were those used by the great Renaissance painters and Dutch masters. In 1995, Tyrrell established Avellana Fine Art, Inc. working on commission, selling prints, and showing her work in art shows and galleries in the local and Seattle areas. It was at one of these shows that she was asked to teach art in a gallery. She founded Liberty Bay Art School in February 2000, and now teaches her courses of Masterpiece Drawing and Color Theory and Practice at her school in Poulsbo. Tyrrell continues to produce masterful oil paintings and pencil drawings for sale and at the commission of her public, who appreciate the realistic and timeless quality of her work. |
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PamTempelmayr
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Studio:
18788 Viking Way NW Poulsbo, WA Email
whalebonestudio@embarqmail.com |
"Nature and Art have become synonymous in my vocabulary. I believe Nature and her creatures speak through me." Pam is an artist specializing in watercolors with a reputation for being different. Her unique images depict "pictures within pictures". The result is one that makes people smile and ponder. Her work has developed a strong following in the U.S. and CanadaPam was born in Regina, Saskatchewan, to an American mother and a Canadian father. Pam’s first trip into the wilderness was as an infant on the back of her dad, (a wildlife officer), and by the time she was ten she was more comfortable in the great outdoors than in civilization. It was here in the wilds that she learned the art of stillness, which is what she considers the source of her creativity. Pam is also a professional writer, and has been penning a syndicated garden column for going on thirteen years. Her work is enjoyed by thousands of readers each week.
A trip to the Atlantic Coast, where lobster were being harvested by the millions (everywhere the cod had been fished to near extinction), inspired a combination of these two talents. The result is a unique Fish and Whale series; within different fish and whales are woven historical and environmental tales.
A long time resident of the Pacific Northwest, Pam located to Poulsbo, Washington in the year 2000. She was a regular participant in The Pacific Rim Art Exposition at the Seattle Exhibition Center, a contributor to the Bainbridge Arts Walk and is now a regular participant in Art in the Woods Studio Tour (since 2005). She is now honored to be on The City of Poulsbo’s Artists’ Roster and runs Whalebone Gallery on her property there. |
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