Categories
Photography

Ellen Howard

Ellen Howard – Bear Creek Creations

Ellen enjoys experimenting with photos taken as she gardens, fishes, and travels. Self-taught, Ellen loves to experiment with changing light, atmosphere, and time of day on each photo.

Born in the Berkshire Hills of western Massachusetts, Ellen is a lifelong learner.

After retiring as a Bandon High School teacher in 2016, Ellen found a new love for photography.

Since 2022, Ellen’s framed photos have been featured at Art shows at the Southern Coos Hospital in Bandon, Coos Art Museum, and Mindpower Gallery.

In addition, Ellen’s art cards are available at Mindpower Gallery and 2nd Street Gallery in Bandon.

Photography – Digital, film, black & white, and conceptual photography.

Categories
Sculpture

Gesine Kratzner

Gesine Kratzner

Gesine is a sculptor, illustrator and animator who loves to invent squiggly creatures and to dream up small worlds and stories for them to inhabit. She came to Portland from Germany, via the Royal College of Art in London, to join animation house LAIKA. She has directed and designed numerous award winning commercials and her artwork has been featured in galleries along the West Coast. Lately she has dedicated herself wholeheartedly to creating ceramic sculpture.

I have been a sculptor all my life, working in a variety of mediums- paper mache, polymer, epoxy. Only in the past few years, since I acquired a kiln of my own, have I really been diving into clay and what a brilliant journey it has been!

I am a veteran of the Portland animation scene where I did a lot of character design for stop motion. This work has carried into my personal art. I make quirky creatures with a lot of personality, conveying their small joys and dramas. At any given time there are always a lot of eyeballs looking at me in my studio.

Sculpture – Wood carving, clay, metal, stone, and mixed-media sculptures.

Categories
Photography

Katie Zolezzi

Katie Royce Photography

Katie is a native Oregonian, and was raised in the tiny town of Elkton. As a child, she loved exploration and discovery. This included digging up discarded objects in the woods in an old area that had been used as a dump. She thought she might become an archaeologist one day, but science not being her strong suit, discovered a love for photography instead. Though the two pursuits may sound dissimilar, photography still finds her out in the woods exploring and searching for treasure in the form of nature scenes, light, and lines. It provides the same sense of excitement and discovery, with no digging required.

Photography became her passion back then, and remains so today. Katie’s images focus on serenity, emotion, and connection to nature. Her fine art photography business began in 2010 and is based in Cottage Grove, Oregon.

My photographic passion is capturing images in nature. Perhaps this springs from a love of being outdoors, and the way that I feel when I’m there. During my photography process, I look to capture what speaks to me. I watch light, shape, and perspective carefully before capturing my image. I utilize patience and observation foremost, paying especially close attention to the emotion evoked. Feelings of peace, tranquility, and serenity are common for me. At times, more dramatic feelings, such as solitude or loneliness are sparked. Regardless of the specific emotion, I find that being with nature is powerful, and I hope that others feel this too when viewing my images.

Categories
Glass Art

Jason Laret

Jason Laret – Laret Glass

When Jason first saw the process of glass blowing he was intrigued and captivated in a way he never thought possible. Jason discovered the art of glass blowing over 24 years ago following in the footsteps of his great, great grandfather who created artistic glass works in Los Angeles in the 1940’s. Jason was initially introduced to soft glass or furnace glass at Palomar College in San Marcos, California.

During this college course he was introduced to borosilicate glass which is typically used to manufacture multi-colored artistic glass pieces, lab equipment, cookware, etc. He fell in love with soft glass and borosilicate glass and has continued to work with both ever since.

Many of Jason’s pieces are inspired by nature which keeps him captivated and grounded. His art can help bring this feeling of nature into any home or garden. Some people like art because of how it makes their space feel warm and inviting, some enjoy the visual dynamic that glass brings to any home, and others like the thoughts that are invoked by an art piece. He tries to capture all of these various ways of seeing the world so that everyone can find something in his artwork that speaks to them.

Categories
Woodworking

Nancy Stewart

Nancy Stewart

I grew up in Reedsport, Oregon graduating from Reedsport Union High School. I continued my education in Eugene, Oregon graduating from the University of Oregon with BS in Fine Art. My self employed career began doing leatherwork and I switched to woodwork in 1981. I live on the family property with my husband and we share 3 sons and 9 grandchildren.

My adult life has been spent making things. I began my professional craft career doing leather work and switched to woodwork in 1981. Wood is supremely versatile and so abundant here in the Pacific Northwest. It was the natural choice to use as much of the wood that grows on our property as possible. The first excitement begins when you find a tree that may contain the fascinating swirls of color that nature provides.

Scholfield Valley Wood Products is the premier wood working business on the Southern Oregon Coast. Located in Reedsport, Oregon, we create beautiful, handcrafted wood jewelry holders, cap racks, decor, and more. Please see our show schedule below for upcoming events.

Woodworking – Carving, furniture making, and decorative wood art.

Categories
Photography Woodworking

Rick Howard

Rick Howard – Bear Creek Creations

An Bandon native, Rick grew up hunting and fishing. From 1975 – 2001, Rick designed and built custom homes including cabinets and furniture.

He became a fishing guide in 1995 to share his passion for fishing salmon.

Over the years through his time on the water, Rick has captured many photos that he loves to share.

It all started 50 years ago when I was given permission to cut Myrtle wood trees ahead of a logging operation up the Elk River. Last year I began working the unique slabs into coffee and console tables which are currently available at Mindpower Gallery, Second Street Gallery in Bandon, and Hawthorne Gallery in Port Orford.

Rick’s photography was recently in the Biennial Show at the Coos Art Museum and is currently displayed at Art by the Sea and Southern Coos Hospital in Bandon.

Woodworking – Carving, furniture making, and decorative wood art.

Photography

Categories
Painting

Cindy Ingram

Cindy Ingram

For the past four years I have been “The Flower Farmer/ Abstract Painter.” Now that my flower farm, in the small town of Cottage Grove, Oregon has closed down due, in part, to the harsh impacts of climate change, who am I? As a result, I have embarked on the new quest to find my artistic direction. I am a prolific painter who is actively creating new works almost everyday. When I wasn’t down the hill working on the farm, I was inside splashing fluorescent and highly contrasting colors onto canvas.

Over the last few years I have been actively showing my work across the Pacific Northwest., was voted 3rd place “Best Local Artist” by the readers of the Eugene Weekly, and have been receiving lots of positive feedback and encouragement. What an exciting time of transition!

My artistic expression is a vibrant celebration of color and form, inviting viewers into a strange world where abstraction meets the untold stories of nature. With a playful splash of fluorescent hues and bold contrasts, I create flower-like shapes and trippy landscapes. Each whimsical piece emerges from a spontaneous emotional impulse,

translating feelings into visual experiences that inspire wonder and introspection.

Although my practice is fun and silly and messy, I honor it as a meditation and a conduit for connection to the world around me. I thrive on the physicality of my practice, relishing the freedom of movement while getting my hands dirty and fully immersing

myself in the creative process. I love to use my whole body to unleash energy onto the canvas. I dance with paint in an uninhibited celebration of joy. What starts with an emptiness of mind clear from self editing, bursts into erratic decisions that make themselves. Refinement happens later when I analyze, focus on balance, composition and detail. Markers, tempera and oil sticks love to make marks and outlines.

Viewers of my work often use words such as vibrant, happy and bold to describe it. I watch smiles and giggles wash over them. In a world of such conflict and concern, it’s a nice escape to witness a little burst of color.

Categories
Uncategorized

Victoria Kwasinski

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The point of using dummy text for your paragraph is that it has a more-or-less normal distribution of letters. making it look like readable English.

The point of using dummy text for your paragraph is that it has a more-or-less normal distribution of letters. making it look like readable English.

Categories
Painting

Richard Quigley

Richard Quigley – Art of Quig

Richard Quigley’s artistic career is documented through individual and group exhibitions throughout the United States and Mexico. His art works are in galleries and collections worldwide. Quigley’s paintings and drawings have been exhibited at colleges and universities throughout the U.S., including but not limited to the Seattle Art Museum, Portland Art Museum and in the permanent collection at Maryhill Museum of Art .

Richard’s experiences seeking images and meanings for his art have taken him throughout the U.S., Central America, Mexico, South America, Egypt, Turkey and Europe. Quigley is a member of the Watercolor Society of Oregon and a Signature Member of the Color Pencil Society of America. He lives on Planet Earth and resides in Eugene, Oregon!

In the world of art, my paintings and drawings have been described as having a contemporary, surreal narrative and visionary attitude. My imagery continues to evoke the relationship between elements surrounding mankind’s spiritual and physical being in a

symbiotic coexistence between the past, present and future.

Painting – Oil, acrylic, watercolor, gouache, and fresco.

Categories
Painting

Gabriella Soraci

Gabriella Soraci

Gabriella is a painter living in Oregon’s Willamette Valley. She holds a BFA degree from the University of Oregon (UO) and an MFA from the University of California Davis (UCD). At the UO Gabriella studied for a summer in Siena, Italy, and minored in Art History. At UCD she was a teaching assistant to the American painter Wayne Thiebaud and received the Fay Nelson Award from the combined visual arts faculty. Since then her paintings have been exhibited nationwide, including juried shows at First Street Gallery, Prince Street Gallery, and the Bowery Gallery (all in New York, NY), and in invitational exhibitions such as “Everyday Inspiration: A Still Life Invitational” at Maude Kerns Gallery in Eugene OR (2021), and “Painting the Familiar and the Ordinary: Contemporary Still Life” at Western Illinois University (2014). Artist residency awards include the Millay Colony for the Arts (2010), the Ucross Foundation (2009), the Hambidge Center for the Arts (2008), and the Vermont Studio Center (2008). Gabriella has taught college art courses in painting, drawing, and color design, as well as workshops and private lessons. She is married to Michael Soraci, an architect, and together they have a daughter, Francesca, and twin sons, Anthony and Ari.

Using subjects such as plastic flowers, lace, paper, wood, books, and windows, I weave perception and invention together to create images that feel both keenly observed and intentionally constructed. A search for beauty, order, and balance is ever present in the way I encounter life, intuitively guiding my selection of objects and color combinations. Inspiration comes from art history, geometry, literature, memory, nature, and found objects, resulting in a mixture of contemporary and classical motifs. Recurring elements include circles, piles, and boxes, with an inclination towards symmetry in the overall design. Beginning with red, blue, yellow, and white, I mix my palette paying close attention to how specific color combinations effect mood, space, and light. The resulting paintings are often described as contemplative visual spaces where the commonplace is imbued with hints of metaphor and mysticism.

Painting – Oil, acrylic, watercolor, gouache, and fresco.