Portrait sculpture.
Images in Depth (Gullwing Lifecasting) produces exact sculptured portraits of people (no animals, please) through the technique of Lifecasting. We specialize in faces, hands, and torsos, and can make these fine art pieces in a wide range of prices, dependent entirely on the materials and finishes chosen by the client. Please see the website for examples of our work.
A brief bio of Jack Adams
The art career of Jack Adams is a testimony to the survival of a right-brained person in our left-brained word! Jack inherited the gift of drawing from his Grandfather. And his parents supported the talent as a hobby, not a career. His father was in the Army and hoped for Jack to graduate from West Point. But in his senior year in High School , Jack discovered the annual competition held by Fisher Body for aspiring young car designers. He submitted a sleek, black , high-finned model... and won! General Motors advised Jack to study at the Art Center College of Design in LA. He applied there, and dutifully , he also applied to West Point...the United States Military Academy. He was accepted to both. He went to West Point. Upon graduation however, he asked for an assignment in Air Defense Artillery (the sole purpose of which was to be assigned to a Nike Missile base in
Los Angeles, in order to attend Art Center at night-school). And he found his purpose in the "Grand Scheme" of things.... Design.
Some hurdles still existed. After two years in Los Angeles he was due for re-assignment and chose to switch branches in the Army to that field which George Carlan referred to as an oxymoron...
("Certain things are mutually exclusive, like "Giant Shrimp" and "Military Intelligence", said George.)
But this gave Jack a chance to go to Washington DC , ..."spook-school" by day, and the Corcoran Gallery School of Art in the evening. Then Vietnam. Combined Intelligence Center-Siagon, where Jack as a Strategic Analyst documented the folly of that war and said as much repeatedly...
When finally his military commitment was over he returned to Art Center to complete his degree in Design. But by graduation
he had changed his major from Transportation (car design) to Environmental Design (architecture and interior design).
Then the universe opened an opportunity for a job in an Interior Design firm in Hawaii ...where Jack had spent his last year in the Army. After five years in , Jack opened his own practice in Commercial Interior Design under the name Adams Design, specializing in Hotel and Restaurant Design. This practice prospered and Jack was listed for 4 years in the top 50
Interior Designers in the USA in the annual survey conducted by Interior Design Magazine.
Then came the tragic occurrence of 9/11 and business in Hawaii came to a screeching halt. So in 2002 Jack and Dana moved to her family home in Greenwich Village and Jack started free-lancing his drawing and design ability around the world ,
via the Inter-net. This resulted in opportunity for travel to Hong Kong, Taiwan, Shanghai, Beijing, Qatar, Dubai, Doha, Abu Dhabi,
Cairo, Beirut , Bali, Singapore, Berlin, Romania and Santa Fe and Los Angeles..... all opportunities made possible by Jack's ability to "draw at the speed of thought"...(to paraphrase Bill Gates).
Some years ago the AIA (American Institute of Architects) dictated that the test for acceptance as a licensed Architect in the US could only be done on CAD (Computer Assisted Design).... never again with paper and pencil. Charles Gwathmy of Gwathmy/Siegal Architects in New York bemoaned this loss to Charley Rose in an interview as:
"...the loss of the additive and deductive process of graphite and eraser on vellum".
More to the point , the great architect of the Ground Zero Master Plan, Daniel Liebskin, observed in his biography,
"Breaking Ground", that he could not find Architects to hire anymore who were artists as well. He summed up this
void as the loss of the creative process:
"... from the heart , thru the finger-tips".
Jack likes to make the analogy of "Etch & Sketch", a plastic toy pallet children use to draw on a plastic view screen.
Two knobs ,one on each side, allows drawing a line left-right and up-down which approaches and approximates , but is never quite ,a true curve. And is most definitely not ..."from the heart thru the finger tips".
As in architecture, so it has been going academically through-out America with the discouragement of the "Right-Brained" students in our schools. Think about it. Any test for academic performance whether S.A.T, I.Q., or semester-end tests , only validate and reward "Left-Brain" questions and answers. The word "Talent" or "Conceptual" or "Imagination" would not apply to such tests, and these inherent traits are not encouraged or rewarded .
And so it is that Jack finds himself in a world where Architects and Designers can no longer draw. They no longer can face a blank piece of paper and armed only with graphite pencil, produce an illustration of a new design, a new concept, a new imaginative solution to a problem which is thus instantly communicated to any viewer.... no matter their ability to "read drawings", or indeed, to speak the same language. The loss of this ability in our next generations should be of considerable concern in our society and should motivate those amongst us that have the gift, the skill, and the artistic ability,
to draw, to make every effort to keep this ability alive and somehow pass it on.
See: http://www.JackEdsonAdams.info
http://www.JackEdsonAdamsArts.info
http://www.AdamsDesignGallery.com
My wife and I recently opened a tattoo studio in uptown Phoenix and named it Ink Body Art.
Our motto is “A Better Body Art Experience”.
We want everyone to have an amazing and comfortable experience getting a tattoo at our studio!
Find us on Instagram here: https://www.instagram.com/jacobjink/.
I'm a visual artist. I'm probably best known for hiding my paintings throughout the state of Arizona with the hope that you might find them.
As an artist working in oils, I paint landscapes in plein air whenever possible. I love to incorporate nature and being in the moment into an artistic expression. Painting in nature forces me to paint quickly, capture the moment and try to produce a painting that answers the emotional response that drew me to the scene. I paint in a traditional manner, laying in the darks first and working toward the lights.
Jared Aubel is a contemporary painter who mixes classic painting techniques with elements of Pop Surrealism, Lowbrow, and street-art. Educated at Arizona State University, Aubel graduated with a bachelor degree in fine arts, with specialty in sculpture. The unique diversified course study at ASU allowed Aubel to experiment with multiple artistic mediums and techniques, leading to his skillful mash-up style of old and new, high and low. His content is usually inspired by lived experiences, night life, and eccentricities of modern society. Clever jokes and visual puns are created by layering elements of nostalgic pop culture, symbolic icons of religion and war and modern fears of the American lifestyle. Aubel has exhibited work in the gallery setting, sticker art on the street, and gained an international following for his prints through his website.
Jason Cheeseman-Meyer
Artist and illustrator, author of "Vanishing Point: Perspective for Comic Books from the Ground Up." Available for commissions, including murals and portraits.
THE WEBSITE- jasonleedavis.com
THE GALLERY-
713 E Palo Verde Dr, Phoenix, AZ 85014
Use the search box above to find local phoenix artists by name.