This painting is part of my new series "Luminous Dimensions"
If you can suggest an idea rather than fully explain it from a customary perspective, what you have is more poetic.
"A poem was a box for your soul. that was the point. It was the place where you could save bits of yourself, and shake out your darkest feelings. While I was writing, I would forget myself and everyone else: poetry made me feel part of something noble and beautiful and bigger than me. All the images and rhymes wrestled into place, then they would surprise me by surging through me, like songs I knew by heart."
Andrea Ashworth, Once in a House on Fire
Framed in a gold floater frame; ready to hang.
This painting is part of my series "Luminous Dimensions"
Through a window of time we glimpse the setting sun. A coolness descends as we take in the last bit light. It is a tender moment to be savored.
24"x24"x1.5" Acrylic on Cradled Panel
This painting is part of my new series "Luminous Dimensions"
Considering this image, which evolved over a couple days in the studio, I wrote: "Sometimes it seems there are multiple dimensions to every moment. As I focus on one aspect, I know there is so much more available... if I could just tune in."
I also believe that if a painting communicates something to someone, the feelings, the stories and the messages received, will be as diverse as is my audience.
Framed in a gold floater frame.
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In 1976, I took the only painting class Texas A and M. offered. It was in the home economics department, and fortunately, it was taught by a very interesting instructor with strong credentials.
One of our projects involved abstracting subject matter, much like Picasso and Braque in their Cubistic era. I designed several large paintings with vertical implied lines that shifted value and color and created an uplifting element connecting the top and bottom. Like a shaft of sunlight fragmenting the horizon or the solidity of a skyscraper, I’m still fascinated by imposing these disruptions.
24"x24x.75" Acrylic on Cradled Panel/Available Click HERE for purchase info.
This acrylic painting on paper is laminated onto a cradled panel board and framed in a gold floater frame.
13.9"x19.5"x1.25" Acrylic on Paper, on panel-framed
To the extent I am able to “let go” and to allow images to
come through me, the more powerful the message.
My images provide different messages for each person.
They are cryptic, dreamlike, opportunities to find your
own story.
Steering clear of extremes. In Chan Buddhism the Middle Way describes the realization of being free of the one-sidedness of perspective that takes the extremes of any polarity as objective reality.
24"x24"x.75" Acrylic on Cradled Panel-Available ClickHERE for purchase info.
"I like nonsense, it wakes up the brain cells. Fantasy is a necessary ingredient in living. It is a way of looking at life through the wrong end of a telescope, which is what I do. And that enables you to laugh at life's realities."
Dr Seuss
18"x18"x.75 Mixed Media on Cradled Panel-Available
“Making art deepens my spiritual connection and reveals multiple worlds previously unknown. While fulfilling my hunger for connection, painting simultaneously stimulates more appetite.”
J. Fullerton
24"x24"x.75' Acrylic on Cradled Panel-Available Click HERE for purchase info.