GateWay Community College provides the tools to explore your creativity in a nearly 4,000 square foot, full-service art studio.
Ceramics
Students have access to two electric kilns for firing ceramics, as well as a large programmable low fire gas kiln with a 6’x6’x6’ interior space. A pugmill for grinding and compressing clay for reuse, saving you clay and reducing waste, is available. Artists also may use the entire studio for throwing, hand building, drying, glazing, and firing vessels and ceramic sculptures.
Painting and Drawing
The indoor space is equipped with up lighting, down lighting and spot lighting. Large adjustable easels, a band saw, a drill press, and two roll up garage doors with access to natural light. We also have window covers for life drawing. The art studio is well ventilated, has four large sinks and plenty of storage space available.
Casting and Metal Working
The outdoor studio is secure with access via a large gate and consists of two cranes with 5,000 pound capacity, speedy melt furnace, foundry set up with pouring pit, and large gas fired burnout kiln, gas fired forge, big blue 50 trip hammer, several anvils, vices, a large sand muller, electric pugmill, electric and pneumatic power hand tools, MIG, TIG, Oxy Acetylene welders, plasma cutter, and two large professional welding tables.
Learn more: gatewaycc.edu
Local Architect also talented fine artist. Bronze, Water Color, Oil, Pencil and Ink, Mixed Media, Renderings and Jewelry.
Is an artist and designer who has worked in a variety of mediums ranging from ceramics to neon. His work focuses on Functional Art and Art Furniture, concentrated in three areas: highly colorful Art Pedestals for displaying objets d’art, Occasional Tables and Lamps. Every room needs a conversation piece that promotes inquiry and discussion; an intriguing point-of-interest towards which those in the room will instinctively gravitate.
Functional Art captivates the attention of everyone who enters that room. Because the everyday furniture it emulates is seen from an altered perspective. Although Art Furniture seems utilitarian at first glance – it’s recognizably something other – something different. On second glance, it’s not simply furniture but also an art object. Although an art object is usually ornamental, Functional Art has the unlikely quality of practical purpose as well. What should be one or the other has become a hybrid – an anomaly – a fascinating exception that no longer neatly “fits” into the everyday world of the ordinary that surrounds it. It’s that surreal quality which issues from this juxtaposition of ornamentation and utility that fascinates me. That’s why I do Functional Art!
In a more general sense, much of my work revolves around the juxtaposition and combination of opposites. Functional Art, by its very nature, is like that. It's an exercise in caprice that results in the whimsical. The curvature of organic flow that merges into the structured lines of geometrical forms. The rigid structure of a steel lamp outfitted with a shade of soft, flexible fabric. This is my art.
A lamp can often be as decorative as it is utilitarian. Moreover, a floor lamp can easily function as a stand-alone piece of sculpture in places where a sculpture might seem overly ostentatious or out of place. In these instances, the presence of an art lamp is given a “pass” because of its usefulness. Even so, the functional nature of my lamps is always subordinate to its sculptural and decorative qualities.
My lamps are crafted from Steel. Out of the various mediums in which I’ve worked, Steel is by far my favorite medium. Add a little heat and a rigid piece of steel becomes as pliable as clay. Add a little more heat and you can instantly join the pieces together. Within minutes, after it cools, you have a finished piece of work as durable as anything on the planet!
The base of each lamp may be any one of an ever-changing selection of original shapes and innovative configurations that help to define the character of the lamp which it supports.
Lampshades are an important component of all my lamps. Every shade is an intrinsic part of each lamp. These shades are often flat, adjustable platens which may be moved up or down, often working like flaps which pivot from side to side. In many ways the shades (also crafted from steel) are the most unique parts of each lamp. A shade or group of shades may consist of a set of geometric forms or define a variety of other objects such as: shells, feathers, flames, clouds, etc. A lamp itself may be inspired by and depict a variety of themes, songs, a concept, or a seemingly endless array of abstract forms.
In addition to my art and design work which has been featured in numerous juried shows, I'm also an accomplished Cóctelier and author of the book: The Fundamentals of Mixology: a textbook focused on the creation of original designer cocktails.
I did extensive classwork at ASU in Steel and Structural Sculpture, with an emphasis on Neon & Argon Sculpture and hold advanced degrees in History and Theology from Fresno Pacific University and The Catholic University of America. I also taught courses in World Religions and Critical Reading at Mesa Community College level for twenty years.
Gallery Andrea is owned by international artist Andrea de Kerpely-Zak and is located in the heart of Old Town Scottsdale’s Gallery District. Gallery Andrea offers not only Andrea de Kerpely-Zak’s artwork, but also pieces by several prominent artists from around the world.
Come visit us at 7019 E. Main Street in Scottsdale. We are open six days a week (closed Sunday) from 11am to 5pm. On Thursday evenings, the gallery hosts a special evening showing from 7pm to 9pm.
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.
Scottsdale artist and designer of steel sculpture, lighting, structures, and more.
Use the search box above to find local phoenix artists by name.