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Events

OPA 2013 Eastern Exhibition Winner Spotlight

Oil Painters of America · Dec 23, 2013 · 1 Comment

The OPA 2013 Eastern Exhibition was hosted at the McBride Gallery in Annapolis, Maryland and featured some of the most prominent artists of our day. We wanted to take a moment to highlight some of the award winners at this exciting exhibition.

Mary Qian
Mary Qian was awarded the Gold Medal, a $4,000 cash award funded by OPA, for “Gaze.”

mary_qian
Mary Qian

I studied painting and animation when I was in Brigham young university in Utah. My courses of study ranged from sculpture to abstract art and into the areas of realistic drawing and painting. The more I studied the masters the more I realized that although I have an appreciation of some abstract work and particularly enjoy figurative work by Lucian Freud, Egon Schiele, my strong artistic interest evolved toward realistic figurative oil painting.
I took a job in Chicago doing animation for a computer games. Shortly after settling in Chicago I discovered the historic Pallet and Chisel, its north light studio and its very full schedule of open studios with live models. My life path is changed. I was more and more wanting to paint full time, working predominately from life under natural light.
I soon became a regular at the Pallet & Chisel filling every non working hour with painting and drawing from life. I worked on my own, with fellow painters including OPA past president Zue Tu in our nu-instructed open studio sessions and took classes from P&C teachers and visiting instructors such as OPA master David Leffel.
After years in animation I finally (and nervously) took the leap to becoming a full time artist. Now past masters Rembrandt, Titian and more recent masters Mancini and Repin guide my way and inspire me as I seek to adsorb this amazing and frustrating exercise called oil painting.
What do I do different now that I am officially an artist? Nothing… just more of the same study. I spend hours and hours at the Palette & Chisel where I monitor open studio sessions and teach an occasional class. When not at the P&C I am at my studio working on paintings. I encourage all artist from beginner to accomplished to continue their study of the great painters and above all continue to work from life. Not only is a living breathing human being in front of you as work… but their spirit… their particular humanism cannot help but find it’s way into you… and from you onto your canvas.
"Gaze" by Mary Qian
“Gaze” by Mary Qian

 

I feel my art is like an open diary. It records my life, and the life around me. My paintings are my preferred way to explain myself to the world. They speak of the things I don’t know how to put into words. Painting is a process and it connects me, my sitters and the viewers.  It is a bridge between past and present. I want to paint people, because people intrigue me, especially during the process of communication in silence. I hope viewers will feel what I felt in the moments of painting. See what inspired me!

Susan E. Budash
Susan E. Budash was awarded the Silver Medal, a $1,000 cash award funded by OPA, for “A Pear Dressed For Dessert.”

Susan E. Budash
Susan E. Budash

Susan Budash was born in Chicago in 1949 and currently resides in Amherst, New York a suburb of Buffalo. At a very young age, Susan displayed a talent in visual expression, with a particular fondness for rendering images of trees. Her parents, recognizing her talent, enrolled her in three years of private instruction with Jack Simmerling, the accomplished Chicago landmark water colorist.
Majoring in art during high school resulted in Susan being awarded an Illinois State Scholastic Fine Arts Award. Following high school graduation, Susan continued oil painting, while employed in the computer industry, married and raised a daughter. In 1990 she enrolled at the State University of New York at Buffalo, earning a BFA in Printmaking. Furthering her studies, Susan graduated with an MA in Contemporary Art History in 1997.
Susan paints Landscapes, Figurative/Portraiture and Still Life genre, with her Still Life compositions comprising her signature work. Many of her pigments are hand-ground and her mediums comprise ingredients based on artist’s notes translated from 16th and 17th Century manuscripts.
"A Pear Dressed For Dessert" by Susan Budash
“A Pear Dressed For Dessert” by Susan Budash

 

My studying Modern Art History and further applying that knowledge in creating art, with conventional and non-conventional materials was stimulating and enjoyable, but it left me feeling unfulfilled and unchallenged as an artist. In less than five years I was provided an opportunity to twice visit Italy and see its magnificent art collection. The genesis of this esthetic experience instilled in me a quest not only to return to Traditional Painting, but also to actively seek out the archival methods and materials used by the Old Masters and apply them to my own creative expression. In so doing, I’ve discovered my creative voice.

Elizabeth S Pollie
Elizabeth S Pollie was awarded the Bronze Medal, a $1,000 cash award funded by OPA, for the oil painting entitled “Nine Days of Fog”

Elizabeth S Pollie
Elizabeth S Pollie

Elizabeth Pollie’s exposure to the arts came at an early age. Taken to museums, enrolled in classes by her parents and influenced by her father’s love and practice of art and architecture, she was always clear about her path in life. “Working within the field of visual arts never seemed like a choice, but rather a place of true belonging”. She enrolled in college art classes while still in high school and went on to receive an education at a formal Art School. She earned her B.F.A. at The College For Creative Studies where she later taught.
Pollie worked as a freelance illustrator and had her illustrations published in 3 Communication Arts Illustration Annuals as well as Booth Clibborn’s American Illustration. She left the field of editorial illustration to pursue a full time painting career.
Harboring a deep love of travel and art history, Elizabeth has combined her travels with her painting practice. The images that she creates are imbued with a sense of poetry, mood and depth. The artist paints full time and teaches from her studio, West Wind Atelier in Harbor Springs, Mi. Her paintings reside in both public and private collections here and abroad and have received much national recognition.
"Nine Days of Fog" by Elizabeth Pollie OPA
“Nine Days of Fog” by Elizabeth Pollie OPA

 

A successful representational painting transcends technique and gimmickry, eliciting from the viewer a sense of connection with the truer nature of the subject. In the best of these works we are taken, almost unwittingly, into the heart of the painting. Here we feel, down to the bone, the more intrinsic qualities of a scene_ be they lovely or disturbing, either way we are mesmerized. If we are very lucky our own hearts are broken open

Craig Tennant
Craig Tennant was awarded the Master Signature Division Gold Medal, a $3,500 cash award funded by OPA, for the oil painting entitled “Jim’s Indian”

Craig Tennant opam Photo
Craig Tennant

Craig Tennant, OPA (b. 1946) grew up in New Jersey and began his early art training in 1967 with Grey Advertising in New York. Starting in the mat room he quickly moved to mechanicals, then was made the Assistant Art Director for the Kool Aid account.
In 1970, he joined the staff of illustrators at BBD&O working on major accounts including Campbell`s Soup and Dodge Chrysler for national television ads. His magazine ad accounts consisted of Tarreyton, GE, Shaffer, and Pepsi (Generation). For the next twenty years, Tennant illustrated on a freelance basis for clients including TV Guide, Mechanics Illustrated, Sports Illustrated, Yearly Reports, Field & Stream, Diet Coke, Mountain Dew, Old Milwaukee, and IBM.
"Jim’s Indian" by Craig Tennant OPAM
“Jim’s Indian” by Craig Tennant OPAM

He was elected a member of the New York Society of Illustrators in 1980 and received their Silver Medal Award in 1981. In 1989, Tennant moved to Colorado to focus on western oil paintings. He started his own publishing business, Cheyenne Press, in 1994, to promote his work. The same year, he was voted 21st in the nation`s top print artists (by a U.S. Art Magazine survey of over 850 galleries nationwide.) In 1996 Tennant was commissioned by the Park Meadows Shopping Resort to paint a Colorado scene for the Nordstrom entrance.

2013 Summer Online Showcase Winners Spotlight

Oil Painters of America · Dec 9, 2013 · 1 Comment

Gia Elisa Stamps Holderman
Elisa Holdermen was awarded Second Place, a $1,500 cash award, made possible thanks to Dorothy Driehaus Mellin and the Richard H. Driehaus Foundation, for the oil painting entitled “Waiting”

Holdermen
Elisa Holdermen

Ever since I can remember I have liked to draw and paint, attempting to replicate images I liked. So naturally, I chose art as my major in college receiving a BFA from the local university, and then continuing on to receive a M.S. degree. Those yucky college art history classes exposed me to all kinds of art. My personal likings gravitated to style of the Dutch painters as well as impressionist painters.
Drawing is the foundation for my paintings. It is during this early period of a painting that the composition with the lights and dark shapes are explored and finalized. For many years I painted in a pointillism style, attempting to create my own style of a modern impressionism. This was created with tight singular points of color arranged in a manner which formed the lights, darks and shapes, somewhat like pixels on a television screen. The viewer’s eye will mix the individual points of color creating the expressed image. When I started working with oil several years ago, I found that it allowed some of the colors to bleed over into the neighboring color, giving the painting a different feel than if the same painting had been done in acrylic.
I worked for 20 years as a police officer in order to retire and fund my full time painting endeavor. I usually paint 4-10 hours per day, barring some interferences I can’t avoid. When I’m not painting, I spend my time vacuuming dog and cat hair and flipping a coin with my husband to see whose turn it is to prepare dinner. I usually lose and have to do dishes either way.
"Waiting" by Gia Elisa Holderman
“Waiting” by Gia Elisa Holderman

I consider myself an uninteresting person who likes to paint beautiful and/or interesting objects. I like to surround myself with beautiful objects which will become future subject matter of my paintings. I think that a detailed and intricate object creates a more interesting and exciting painting. I push myself to focus on the minute details that no one would notice, yet overall they complete the painting. The greatest complement I receive is when I am accused of submitting a photograph in lieu of a painting or Painting over a photograph. I know I’ve hit my mark at that point.

Frankie Johnson
Frankie Johnson received the third place award for “Abandoned” in the OPA Summer 2013 Online Showcase.

Frankie Johnson
Frankie Johnson

Frankie Johnson is an accomplished artist with over thirty years of teaching experience in oils and pastels.  She has owned the Mainstreet Art Centre / School of Fine Art in Lake Zurich, IL for 19 years. She conducts workshops in all subject matter throughout Illinois and Wisconsin.  Her paintings are represented by the Joan Champeau Pioneer Gallery in Sister Bay, WI.
Frankie was a finalist in Artists’s magazine competitions, had a painting featured in International Artists and won a Merit Award in an Oil Painters of America Exhibit.  She also won Best of Show in the Landscape category at the Richeson 75 International Art Competitions and had several paintings featured in their Still Life, Floral, Figure, Landscape and Small Paintings Books.
Also juried into the Easton, Maryland, Plein Air competition where she won “Best Marine Painting” and invited twice to participate in Door County’s Plein Air Competition with 40 other artists from around the country. She won 2nd place in Cedarburg, Wisconsin, Plein Air competition  last year and received several Honorable Mentions. She has been a Finalist several times for the Ray Mar on-line painting competitions.
Abandond
“Abandoned” by Frankie Johnson

Frankie currently has a painting in the Oil Painters of America 2013 Eastern Regional Juried Exhibition in Annapolis, Maryland and in the American Impressionist Society National Exhibition in Charleston, SC. She was a selected artist to exhibited in the first Juried Salon Show of Traditional Oils for the Oil Painters of America this summer in Petosky, Michigan. www.frankiejohnsonartstudio.com

2013 Summer Online Showcase Winners Spotlight – Nikolo Balkanski

Oil Painters of America · Oct 21, 2013 · Leave a Comment

Nikolo Balkanski received the First Place Award of $3,000 cash for his painting of “Sophie” entered in the OPA Summer 2013 Online Showcase.

Nikolo Balkanski with Rudy
Nikolo Balkanski with Rudy
Nikolo Balkanski’s paintings bring his European origin and training ot his art, and his post-impressionist interpretations carry a distinctive quality that easily captivates the viewer with his portrayal of the subject using sophisticated color and remarkable draftsmanship.
Balkanski, and internationally recognized portrait and landscape artist from Sofia, Bulgaria, lives and works in Colorado. Since his move to the United States in 1984, from Helsinki, Finland, his work has undergone a natural metamorphosis.
“Unfettered by self-imposed limitations, Balkanski applies his well-developed skills to subjects as disparate as landscapes, nudes, portraits, still lives and more. His style, technique and especially his use of color result in images that are more painterly than the art that most collectors may be accustomed to seeing.” – U.S.ART
“Of the many exceptional features Mr. Balkanski’s work displays, none is more commendable than his command of atmosphere. This is an elusive quality that all too many otherwise quite competent painters lack the virtuosity to achieve. Balkanski demonstrates an extraordinary understanding of light and depicts it in an altogether convincing fashion. The viewer senses at once the kind of light falling on Balkanski’s subject and is aware of the atmosphere, the weightiness of the space surrounding them.
Sophie by Nikolo Balkanski
“Sophie” by Nikolo Balkanski, 20″ x 16″
This control of atmosphere gives each of his paintings a distinctive mood, an emotional quality independent of an narrative element and even the subject matter. The subtlety this kind of painting requires is mark of uncommon facility and itself would qualify Nikolo Balkanski as a Master.”
One sees at a glance that Mr. Balkanski is schooled in the techniques of the old masters and possesses the exceptional talent to employ their methods in creating thoroughly modern paintings. It is therefore of no surprise that he is so highly regarded by his peers, museum curators, and prominent art collectors.

On the Road to the OPA National Exhibition in Fredericksburg

Brenda Howell · Sep 9, 2013 · 7 Comments

South Rim Majestic by Brenda Howell
“South Rim Majestic” by Brenda Howell

Early this year one of my paintings (a large one) was juried into our Oil Painters of America National Exhibition in Fredericksburg, Texas. I knew both that it would be very expensive to crate and ship the painting and also that I wanted to attend the opening at Insight Gallery, along with the many fun events that OPA organizes around the national show. So, I decided to drive to Texas from Southern California to hand deliver the painting and make it a paint-as-you-go camping trip. I had done something similar in 2007 when I had a painting accepted in that year’s show, also in Fredericksburg. Back then I had experienced some of the awesome state parks in the area with plenty of inspiring exposed rock landscapes, and I have, at the ready, a camper van I refer to as my “paintmobile”.
This road trip would also provide a much needed break from the intense-in-every-way experience of caring for my mother in her final months of life which ended in February, along with the necessary work afterwards. Mom was an inspiring painter and art teacher, and taught privately until just a few weeks before she took her last breath at the age of eighty-six. She was certainly my first art teacher, and introduced me as a child to the concept of landscape painting and camping as one of the most worthwhile of combined endeavors.
Garden Agave by Brenda Howell
“Garden Agave” by Brenda Howell
So, in May I prepared to hit the road. I got the van loaded with the large painting, clothes for all weather, art supplies, food, wine, enough to last for an extended trip. There was so much to pack and take care of that I didn’t get on the road until very late in the afternoon, but I was so excited to finally leave that I kept driving across the burning desert and into the cool of the night. Since I was up way past my bedtime, I was singing every song I could remember at full force in order to keep awake while driving. It was 1:00 am when I made it to my art buddy’s house in Phoenix and woke her up with my arrival—a true friend.
I’m no spring chicken, so after a day of visiting and recuperation we went out painting in the Pinnacle Peak area. It was the first painting I had done since my Mom left this life. I have to tell you that I wondered if I would be able to paint—it had been a few months— the longest I had gone without painting since I started doing it full time ten years ago. But there I was, painting in a garden of cactus, agave and palo verde, and I felt so alive in the cool Arizona morning, responding to the beautiful shapes and colors before me. I had bridged the gap, I was now beginning the return into the stream, the flow, the continuum of being a painter, on the path again to creative expression.
The next morning I took off without being committed to where I would camp that night. On the way I stopped in Tucson to check out the art galleries there and then got back on the road.
One thing I love about camping in remote areas is the visibility of the night sky. The western national parks have played a big role in my art career and they almost always provide those dark night skies. I lived at the South Rim of Grand Canyon for four years and a large portion of my work is inspired by that well-known natural wonder, and other wild areas that need our protection in order to remain the essential healing balm to our modern life that they are. I also have participated in the Artist-in-Residence program at Badlands National Park, another spectacular landscape.
Digital sketch by Brenda Howell
Digital sketch by Brenda Howell
Traveling the interstate and still in Arizona I decided to take off on a small road when I saw the sign pointing the way to Chiricahua National Monument. I had always been curious about exploring that area when I had driven that section of Interstate 10 in the past. Now I had the time and I gambled that there would be a camping spot available. I was not disappointed. After some star appreciation I enjoyed the fresh tree-scented air and got a good night’s sleep. I hiked and explored for a few hours the following morning. It proved to be an awesome landscape, with dramatic rock formations carved out of volcanic rock shaped into pointed spires and odd, sometimes anthropomorphic, shapes. This is a landscape that Cochise and his band of Apaches called home. I vowed to myself that I would return when I could, and then dutifully got back on the road toward Texas.
It was getting hot and more humid and after I drove through El Paso I headed to Guadalupe Mountains National Park, also on my list of not-yet-visited National Parks of the the West. This area is located just south of Carlsbad Caverns, a national park I visited many times over the years and as a child growing up for a time in New Mexico. I saw several pronghorn antelopes grazing along the narrow highway. When I arrived the sun was low and the massive limestone mountains were illuminated with a stunning pink and gold light. I camped there with the idea of painting in the morning. Because it was so windy the next morning, I realized that work was impossible without a guaranteed upset of the entire pochade/tripod setup. Forced to get back on the road, I now had a strong understanding of how the unrelenting wind can drive people crazy.
Enchanted Rock by Brenda Howell
“Enchanted Rock” by Brenda Howell

"Pedernales River Bank" Brenda Howell
“Pedernales River Bank” Brenda Howell
Did I say that Texas is a very big state? When I finally made it to Llano River State Park, about an hour away from Fredericksburg, I found a great campsite and had a whole day to just relax and do some painting. There were birds everywhere. One beautiful red one kept tapping on my window. I took that as a welcome, but there was the ominous sound of thunder in the distance. I decided to get out my digital tablet and try the new painting app I had downloaded. It turned out to be a blast after I figured out how to handle the color wheel and equate it in my mind to adding specific colors in a pile of oil paint. It became very satisfying and there were no brushes to wash. Since I worked from inside my paint-mobile I didn’t even have to suffer any insect harassment! When I was done sketching the lightning and rain started heavily and kept up so that after a while I started wondering if I was going to be trapped in the campground that was surrounded by the river. I had to deliver the painting the next day, but I didn’t get swept away. Between rain showers I made the delivery to InSight Gallery and was off for more painting and camping adventures in the area.
While waiting for the OPA scheduled activities and the opening of the show I switched back to oil paints and worked while camping at Enchanted Rock State Park and Pedernales Falls State Park. Incredibly, that little red bird, or his brother, showed up again at the Pedernales River. I highly recommend both of these parks for painting, except for the insects that can spot a plein air painter a mile away. I did try the digital tablet again but, alas, there was too much glare for the great outdoors.
Back in Fredericksburg I met many OPA artists and enjoyed the week getting to know some of them. The “paint-outs” in in the hill country around Fredericksburg were well chosen, and the entire event was smoothly organized. Artist demonstrations and presentations were alternately informative, entertaining and inspired. I was so honored to be a part of such an impressive group exhibition, and thrilled to win the Realism Award of Excellence from the internationally renowned artist Sherrie McGraw.
I had made the trip to the Oil Painters of America 22nd National Show with the idea that I was heading into the unknown and hoping I could rekindle the creative side of life after experiencing profound loss. Now I’m back in the studio and putting the finishing work to the plein air starts I have accumulated for a while now—I never seem to be satisfied with what I get in one 2 hour session. I always see much that needs refinement once I get them back into the studio.
Texas Morning by Brenda Howell
“Texas Morning” by Brenda Howell

Texas Creek by Brenda Howell
“Texas Creek” by Brenda Howell
I am glad I made this journey. It turned out to be a long one but offered a broad range of experiences that helped revive the importance of the creative path in my personal life. Returning home after the great combination of time in nature and time in community with artists was the best restoration any road trip could offer.

2013 National Exhibition Winner Spotlight

Oil Painters of America · Jul 10, 2013 · Leave a Comment

The OPA 2013 National Exhibition was an exciting event with a brilliant display of skill and oil painting mastery.
We’d like to introduce you to a few of our National Exhibition Winners. Meet Tom L. Nachreiner, winner of the Dorothy Driehaus Mellin Fellowship for Midwestern Artists; Shizhong Yan OPAM, winner of the Gold Medal Award for the Master Signature Division; and Johanna Harmon OPA, the Gold Medal Award winner in the OPA Associate/Signature division…

Tom L. Nachreiner

The Dorothy Driehaus Mellin Fellowship for Midwestern Artists

Tom Nachreiner
Tom Nachreiner
Tom Nachreiner – 2013 – Driven by a passion for excellence, Tom spent his earlier years as a nationally known figurative illustrator. More recent years has afforded him the privilege of a fine art rebirth, painting from his heart “en plein air” and conducting year round workshops. Among many other recognitions, recently Tom has won “Best Of Show” at the 2006 & 2011 Cedarburg Plein Air Painting Competition. He won “Best Of Show” at Milwaukee’s Plein Air Event in 2008, and “First Place” at 2008 Door County Plein Air Festival, and “Second Place” at the same event in 2009, and Third Place in 2011. He was accepted into Oil Painters of America National Show in 2009, OPA’s Eastern Regional Show in 2010 and OPA’s National Exhibition in 2012. In 2013 he was accepted into OPA’s National Exhibition in Texas & into OPA’s 2013 Salon Show in Michigan. In 2010 He was published in “Best Oil Painters of America”. This July 2013 will be Tom’s seventh year at the Door County Plein Air Festival of 40 national and international invited artists. In May of 2013 Tom received “The Dorothy Driehaus Mellin Fellowship Award” of $20,000 for his painting “Stretching” at the 22nd National Juried Oil painter’s of America Exhibition.

“I want to say just enough with paint to evoke the imagination.”

Tom paints for the love of dynamic composition, the celebration of color, and the tactile feel of applying juicy, wet paint to the canvas, at the same time having fun, enjoying the sounds and feelings of being outdoors, talking to others, doing what he loves, and trying to learn as much as he can before the end of each day.”
Tom is represented by Edgewood Orchard Galleries in Fish Creek WI, at Katie Gingrass Gallery in Milwaukee WI, and online at www.tomnachreiner.com

Shizhong Yan OPAM

Master Division: Gold Medal Award

Shizhong Yan
Shizhong Yan OPAM
Shizhong Yan OPAM was born and raised in the coastal city of Qingdao, China. Influenced by his father who was an architect, Shizhong fell in love with art at a young age. He studied under various well-known local artists and at the age of sixteen, he was accepted by Central Academy of Fine Arts Affiliated School, often referred as the cradle of fine artists, where he studied for four years. When culture revolution swept China, Shizhong never gave up on his artistic dream. He was exiled worked manual labors in the countryside, but still took every minute he could to paint the world around him. When Cultural Revolution ended, he was one of the first students that were accepted by China Academy of Fine Arts’ graduate program. He continued his study under one of the most well-known artists in China, Mr. Quan Shanshi. Shizhong studied in-depth the styles and techniques of Russian, European as well as American Impressionist masters and was influenced by artists like Rechin, Degas, Cezanne, Sargent, etc.
In 1998, Shizhong and his family moved to the United States where he began a new chapter of his life as well as artistic career. Shizhong now resides in Illinois. He has four collections of artworks published and was published by countless magazines and newspapers. Shizhong has had many solo and group exhibitions in China, United States, Japan, France, Australia, Canada, Taiwan and Hong Kong. He has received many awards and his paintings are collected and loved by collectors all over the world. www.szyan.net

Johanna Harmon OPA

Associate/Signature Division: Gold Medal Award

Johanna Harmon
Johanna Harmon OPA

Johanna Harmon OPA was born in 1968 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, but spent most of her childhood in Tempe, Arizona. Johanna began designing and recording visual observations at the age of seven, but it wasn’t until almost two decades later that she was introduced to the traditional language of art at the Scottsdale Artists’ School in Scottsdale, Arizona, the Fechin Art Institute in Taos, NM, and the Art Students League of Denver in Denver, Colorado. There, she studied painting alongside prominent figure artists with varied artistic philosophies and approaches such as Carolyn Anderson, John Asaro, Scott Burdick, Mark Daily, Daniel Gerhartz, Quang Ho, and C.W. Mundy.
Her work has been exhibited with the Art Renewal Center, The Artist’s Magazine, California Art Club Gold Medal Exhibition, Oil Painters of America (OPA), Portrait Society of America, and Scottsdale Artists’ School. She has received numerous prestigious awards throughout the years. Most recently she was honored with the OPA Signature Member designation, and acceptance into the 2013 Oil Painters of America’s 22nd National Juried Exhibition— her eighth National Juried Exhibition— where she received her second Gold Medal Award, becoming the first artist to receive two OPA National Exhibition Gold Medal Awards in the organization’s history. Her first Gold Medal was awarded in 2007.
Over the past decade, her work has been presented in numerous solo, group and juried exhibitions, and is collected internationally. Her work has been published inSouthwest Art, Artbook of the New West, and Focus Santa Fe.
Harmon has taught workshops at North River Arts Society in Marshfield Hills, MA, and the Coppini Academy of Art in San Antonio, TX. Currently, she teaches at The Art Student’s League of Denver. Her emphasis is the clarification of visual intention, while nurturing the overall painted subject. This pivotal understanding defines her work today. She credits Cecilia Beaux, Nicolai Fechin, John Singer Sargent, Joaquin Sorolla and Anders Zorn as inspiration.
Johanna now resides in beautiful Highlands Ranch, Colorado, with her husband, Steven, of 16 years. www.johannaharmon.com

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