Chris Hunt brings new work to Night of Artists
Returning to the Briscoe Western Art Museum’s annual Night of Artists exhibition is charcoal artist Chris Hunt, who creates incredible portraits of Western figures, including cowboys and Native American chiefs, warriors and children. Hunt is also an accomplished bronze artist. For the artist’s charcoal images, he works the entire piece in charcoal and will often accentuate one element using color. For his Night of Artists piece, Cooling His Heels, Hunt paints the distinctive red color of a Coke can.
See the piece at Night of Artists in March, and more work on his website www.chrishuntstudios.com.
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Tina Roy makes a huge impression in Arizona
When the tents opened in January at the annual Celebration of Fine Art in Scottsdale, Arizona, one booth that was immediately wowing collectors belonged to Western painter Tina Roy. The Arizona artist was showing desert paintings, cloudscapes and Western still lifes. Her landscapes—they are oil paintings with a delicate watercolor-like density and William Penhallow Henderson vibes—capture the intensity of the desert and also its remarkable beauty. Roy was born and raised in the Arizona desert, and it shows in the fondness she has for her subjects and her ability to capture their grandeur.
See more of her work www.tinaroystudio.com.
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Dale Terbush sends work to Blue Rain Gallery in Colorado
Arizona landscape painter Dale Terbush, whose works have been compared to Maxfield Parrish and Thomas Moran, will have new work at Blue Rain Gallery in Durango, Colorado. The Colorado location has been open for about two years and allows Blue Rain to bring its unique brand of Southwestern art into the Centennial State. The pieces Terbush will be showing include large mountain scenes, including this piece, Until Tomorrow.
See more work at www.blueraingallery.com.
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Andrew Bolam unveils new work at Mountain Trails Gallery
Another artist turning heads at the Celebration of Fine Art in Scottsdale, Arizona, was Andrew Bolam, who paints stylized and contemporary wildlife images. Many of his pieces feature a realistic depiction of wildlife that is then painted within a background of a single color, or even an abstracted background with several solid forms. For this piece, Double Trouble, he paints more elements, including aspen trees and bear cubs. Double Trouble will be available at Mountain Trails Gallery in Park City, Utah.
Follow Bolam’s work on Instagram, @andrewbolamart. —
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