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William DeBilzan

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DeBilzan considers
an eight-hour session of painting, play personified
just about half his "working day." Exceptional galleries
and active collectors, domestic and abroad, reinforce
this artist's playful obsession and massive number of
logged studio hours.
A love of color,
a passion for paint, and an instinct for structure. With
these simple tools, William DeBilzan builds his
pictorial world. It is an unfettered world, free of
superfluous details and hackneyed specifics, free of
commitment to a single style, a world where chance and
choice take turns at bat. In this painterly realm, only
two rules apply: For the artist, "Do what you please."
For the viewer, "See what you wish." |
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Anna Good


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Good's paintings
are described as "a marriage between art and dance".
Small broken patterns of rich vivid colors created by
brisk strokes of the palette knife, give Good's
paintings an illusionary sense of motion.
Anna uses the
impasto wet on wet technique with thick oil paint. This
layering method allows her to create paintings that are
uniquely rich in texture and arouse the need to touch. |
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Jorge Sicre


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A
native of Cuba,
Sicre (born 1958) received his B.A. in art history from
the University of California, Santa Barbara.
The artist
characterizes himself as a "New-Symbolist" painter with
many of his visually dense images presenting mythology
and fantasy as a means of exploring the human psyche.
Sicre believes that increasingly as science proves the
inadequacy of the written word to describe the nature of
the universe and our place in it, the artist will fill
the gap with the beautiful reality we call art. |
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