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Helen Jennings Helen Jennings' diverse portfolio includes realistic wildlife drawings and impressionist landscape paintings. Intimate portraits of giraffes, peacocks and a four-horned sheep unveil the artist's focus and fascination with eyes. "To me, the eyes speak volumes, revealing an emotional truth that comes through in my paintings." Her detailed landscapes of floral gardens, quiet paths and crooked streams capture the hue of every leaf and petal in her view. Jennings has received awards for her colored-pencil drawings and has exhibited her work in Arizona. |
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Ron Kellen The human figure allows for endless interpretation. Ron Kellen's portfolio of sophisticated nude studies proves our unending infatuation with this age-old subject. "The nude is immediately available for interpretation; it is loaded with connotations. In almost any realistic artwork (at least one of quality) there is an inherent subject matter." Kellen received his MFA from the State University of New York at Stonybrook and has exhibited his work throughout New York and Washington.
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Alexandra Rozenman Alexandra Rozenman incorporates the story-telling tradition of her heritage in her new watercolors. With their bright colors and endearing childlike technique, each painting is a symbolic tale of everyday life. "Theatricality, translation, concepts of movie-making, story-telling and fake documentation are my nostalgic reflections and main tools for new painting." Rozenman studied at the Museum School in Boston and has exhibited her work in the Kresge Art Museum, the Fuller Art Museum and the Moscow Center of Contemporary Art.
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Marine French painter Marine presents two series of work in her portfolio: Images from Vietnam and a series that focuses on the penguin. Impressionist in style, the young artist's work interprets aspects of the cultures of Southeast Asian societies and the expressive bodies of animals through light and color. "Painting and drawing are a way for me to give a very personal touch to what I see, something that simple photography could not achieve." Marine studied at the Versailles Landscaping School and at the Martenot School in France.
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