
Beth Ames Swartz has had over 70 one-person art exhibitions including a solo show at The Jewish Museum in New York as well as three major traveling museum exhibitions. She received the Governor's Individual Artist Award in 2001 in Arizona, and a retrospective of her work was mounted in 2002 at The Phoenix Art Museum, with a monograph about her work co-published by The Phoenix Art Museum and Hudson Hills Press. Swartz was honored in New York in 2003 by the Veteran Feminists of America for her outstanding contribution to the Arts nationally.
As a self-taught acrylics artist, Beth has achieved International recognition. Locally, Beth’s success comes in the form of exhibition, commissions, sales, and development grants.
Beth's art is viewed as a creative journey or process. Ordinary and extra-ordinary, visionary and modern, her art engaging every step along the way.
I enjoy photographing architecture, nature, and people, including fine art nudes. I love taking pictures in urban environments as well, especially old buildings and dilapidated industrial scenes. Shooting street scenes and candid people photos are also among my favorites. My eye is more drawn toward subjects that are darker and grittier, rather than traditionally beautiful and colorful imagery. Much of my work tends to be more abstract.
For many years I had my own darkroom and worked exclusively with black and white film. Even for nature photography, I find black and white to be the ideal medium. One can never capture nature as the eye sees it anyway, and black and white is an abstraction of reality by default. Now that I have switched to digital photography, I do color photography more than in the past but I still enjoy black and white.
In addition to my website, BillNatkinPhotography.com, my work can be seen at https://www.deviantart.com/billnatkin.
The Blink Gallery and Art Studio is located in a charming courtyard in the heart of the Scottsdale Arts District on Main and Marshall Way.
Blink specializes in art jewelry, wearable sculpture, and metalsmithing classes that embrace ancient techniques with modern designs. A destination for unique and one of a kind pieces.
I create fused & kiln formed glass Judaica and Art Objects. Pieces
that are more than just fused glass, but glass that is infused with
vibrant color and life. For the twenty years that I have lived in Arizona, I have described myself as Colorful as the Desert Sky at Dusk. Now I create art that evokes those same emotions.
Two of my great passions in life are travel and photography. Though my photography I seek to document my own personal experiences. Photography is the medium of choice for my creative expression. I am still excited about the power and magic of photography and its ability to capture my own unique selective perception of the moment in a form that I can share with others.
Bonnie Cheney paints with acrylic, oil, pastel and watercolor. She reside in Phoenix AZ.
Brian Schader takes a distinctly contemporary form and conveys to the viewer a sense of elevation of the soul. Primarily choosing to create Additive or Assembled works, Schader’s pieces rely heavily on geometric forms, creating a connection to the viewer through the simplicity and the intricacies of mathematics.
Somewhat of a minimalist at heart, Schader chooses balance and symmetry to play an integral role, while the use of organic material like stone gives the viewer a familiar and very tactile association.
Interaction with a piece creates a more fundamental understanding of art and through this context Schader engages his viewers with not only the movement of form, but that of function as well. Many of Brian’s popular “Twist of Life” series works have a motorized base that allows an elegant, slow rotation of the helix form.
Schader’s early works explored the nature of art by drawing the viewers into a familiar place, allowing them to associate the tangible experiences of their everyday lives, living in the American Southwest. Decades of painting desert vistas, tranquil canyons and endless mountain ranges have now become muted and transformed into the sheer power and physical presence of Brian’s sculptural expression.
The vast majority of Schader's sculptural works are monumental in nature. Only the occasional social commentary piece is available under 10' tall.
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