Big skies in Naomi Brown’s newest work
Fresh off Naomi Brown’s easel is Wondrous Desert, showing a huge burst of clouds in the center of the composition. The Arizona painter, known for her paintings of Joshua trees and the Mojave Desert, has been on a hot streak with collectors as her works expands more broadly into Western art. In March, she will have new work at Cowgirl Up! Art from the Other Half of the West at Desert Caballeros Western Museum in Wickenburg, Arizona. See more of her work at www.naomibrownart.com.
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Hyrum Joe brings new figurative work to Blue Rain
Now available at Blue Rain Gallery in Santa Fe, New Mexico, is Navajo Jeweler by painter Hyrum Joe. The loosely painted figurative scene shows a jewelry artist hammering a stamp into a piece of silver. Behind him is a brightly covered Navajo weaving. Joe has shown his work at Blue Rain Gallery for many years and has continued success with his imagery of modern Native American life. See more of his work at www.blueraingallery.com.
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Bryan Haynes offers new work from his Missouri studio
Based out of Washington, Missouri, painter Bryan Haynes has several new works available in his studio, including Dug Out Canoe, a 36-inch-wide painting showing a Native American figure hunting from his canoe in a gorgeous river setting. “Developed from a small 2014 study, the finished painting remembers that earlier day at our cabin on Marble Creek, Madison County, Missouri—a beautiful and remote setting, quiet and serene—that always provokes imagining the people that came before,” the artist says. The painting will be framed and displayed in the gallery. For more information, see his work on Instagram (@artbybryanhaynes).
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Alice Leese brings new cowboy work to Western Gallery
If she’s not already there, put Alice Leese on your radar. Leese is a Texas painter who grew up on a ranch, and still lives on one today, which is how she finds herself so inspired. “My work is about place, specific locations. The work is regional to the Southwest United States, particularly the YT Ranch where I live and work. Coming from a background of ranching makes conservation and stewardship of place a priority,” she says. “Impressions on the landscape made by natural phenomenon and man are recorded in paint creating a record of the current environment as seen through the eyes of an artist. The land, [its] occupants and uses…change over regions, and my landscape paintings are a record of the effects of weather conditions, droughts, rain and events like grass fires.” This work, Glass Mountains, Alpine, Texas, is available at Western Gallery. Visit them at the website western.gallery. —
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