Carla D’aguanno – Figurative Nostalgia, Horses
In her hometown of North Providence, R.I., Carla D’aguanno realized she was meant to be an artist at a very young age. She recalls her high school teachers commissioning her to paint their children and grandchildren in high school. After graduating from Otis/Parsons School of Design with a Bachelor’s Degree in Fine Art, she began her career as a movie poster artist, illustrating posters for movie advertisement companies in Los Angeles. She eventually returned to her native New England and began illustrating young adult and romance covers for New York publishing companies including Bantam, Doubleday, Pocket Books and Harper Collins.
After Carla was married she soon realized that she needed to paint from the heart and the subjects of her affection. Thus, she turned to fine art and began painting children, animals and Western genre. Her love for the Pioneer days of the West as well as children and horses is evident in her work. She describes her technique as expressive representational art. She claims her greatest challenge is bringing the beauty of her subjects to life on a canvas. Her greatest source of inspiration comes from her faith in God who has given her the skill and ambition to paint since childhood. She often reflects on life back in the Little House on the Prairie which was one of her favorite shows as a child. The simple way of life when people actually enjoyed the simple pleasures is what she wants to convey to her viewers. Her challenge lies in capturing the innocence and beauty of her subjects to glorify the Creator, who in her opinion is the greatest artist of all.
Carla was awarded the 1st Place Gallery Choice Award from Art Trends magazine and the 2nd Place People’s Choice Award at the Florida Invitational. Carla’s Keeper Of The Flock painting took third place in the Women Artists Of The West East; Meets West Show, judged by Nancy Guzic . Carla also received the Horses In Art magazine’s Advertising and Editorial Award for Back From The Dusty Trail. Carla was named the recipient of the John Steven Jones Purchase Award at the 21st Bosque Conservatory Art Classic. The juried show was judged by acclaimed artist, Martin Grelle. Carla’s piece titled Sabino Gold won the coveted top award in the show and is now part of the Bosque Conservatory’s private collection. Sunshine & Sweet Melon recently won the second place award in the Oil Painters of America on-line showcase competition for Spring 2013.
Carla is a member of Oil Painters of America and Western Artists of America (WAA). In March of 2012 she was awarded the Gold Award and Best Presentation Award in the WAA 8th Annual Show at the Pearce Museum. Now a member of the Artists of the American West (AAW) she looks forward to working with this talented group of artists preparing for their Annual Show at the prestigious Pearce Museum in Corsicana, Texas.
Carla’s originals appear in many private collections and a museum in Texas. Galleries showing and selling Carla’s work include Saks Gallery, Colorado, Altermann Galleries in Santa Fe, and Fredericksburg Art Gallery in Texas.
Several of her images are now being licensed on puzzles, greeting cards, prints, calendars and other products being sold in the U.S. and Europe. Canvas or paper prints of her work can be purchased through Great Big Canvas.
GUY COMBES (AFC, SAA) was born in Kenya in 1971, the son of renowned wildlife artist,
Nancy Dunlop Cawdrey lives in a world of color. And she likes to paint that way as well. Growing up quite literally around the world, Cawdrey found early inspiration in patterns and colors from places she has lived as a child and teenager, ranging anywhere from Syria to Germany. Studying studio art in Paris for two years as a college student, Nancy became attuned to Old Master techniques and found her voice through painting. After living for some years abroad in England and Europe with her husband Steve, eventually they found themselves returning to the United States and settling down in Montana.
Canadian Audrey Casey began painting full time in 1980, after a 14-year career as a teacher. She was selected as one of a group of 19 wildlife artists from across Canada to participate in an exhibit at the Royal Ontario Museum celebrating Canadian wildlife. This led to her artwork being included in The Art of Survival, a book commemorating the show. Her work has appeared on the cover of Montana, in Artist Impressions and in a film titled “Brush with the Polar Bear.”
Paul Calle (1928-2010) was an artist whose work reflects the dramatic era of America’s Western heritage as well as the one in which he lived. For Calle, the dimensions of art can be as vast as the wild, wind-swept plains of the West, as infinite as outer space and as small as the historic scenes he captures on postage stamps for the United States Postal Service.
Luke Buck, a native “Hoosier”, grew up in Indiana with a love for life, art, and nature that is evident in his nostalgic paintings of Americana landscapes and American wildlife. He was raised in a family of artists; his father, mother, one sister, and three brothers, all of whom were blessed with artistic talents from fine art, to music, and poetry.
With over 30 years as an artist, naturalist and author, Carel Brest van Kempen’s artistic mission has always been to deepen awareness of the natural world and how it functions. His work has been exhibited worldwide in such venues as The Smithsonian, The American Museum of Natural History, The British Museum and The National Museum of Taiwan. He was named one of 100 “Most Honored Artists of Utah” (2002) and one of 14 “Master Signature Members” of the Society of Animal Artists (2008), who have awarded him their highest honor, the Award of Excellence, seven times. Artists for Conservation awarded him their Medal of Excellence in 2009. He has illustrated over a dozen books, including Dinosaurs of Utah (1998), Biology of the Gila Monsters and Beaded Lizards (2005), Biology of the Boas and Pythons (2007), Urban Herpetology (2008), and Conservation of Mesoamerican Amphibians and Reptiles (2010) and authored the popular coffee-table book, Rigor Vitae: Life Unyielding (2006). In addition to painting, he actively writes and blogs about natural history and conservation themes and serves on the board of Science Art-Nature, a Stanford-based non-profit devoted to “raising the prominence of Science Art and the benefits of combining the accuracy of science with the evocative power of art.”
Belgian artist Carl Brenders is an internationally recognized wildlife painter known for his exceptionally faithful and powerful rendition of nature.
“A house isn’t a home until it has a dog and cat.” Dogs, cats, chickens, lambs, pigs and birds provide a never-ending parade of life at Amy’s home in Northern Colorado on the old family ranch. Her love of animals started at a very early age. At the age of 9, her parents gave her an orphan German Shepherd that she raised and showed in a 4H dog obedience competition, happily winning Champion! Later, she continued in that endeavor and was the 4H lead for dog obedience club where her daughter competed. Amy and her husband Lars continue to train German Shepherds. The very realistic, German Steiff animal toys were always on the Christmas list in the Brackenbury home. “It’s so funny that after all these years of admiring and collecting these toys and now I am a designer. I remember trying to carve an Ivory soap lion and just didn’t have the skill and now here I am, carving the prototypes for Fiddler’s Elbow. I finally have the hang of it!”
Dave Barnhouse has never forgotten the values learned in his youth. He is a self-described ‘country-boy’ who grew up in small-town Richmond, Ohio, and Dave has no intention of leaving that environment either physically or emotionally. “I want my art to make people feel as though they were back home on a Friday evening experiencing the warmth of a cozy fire and smelling the homemade bread and cookies coming from the oven”. Dave’s paintings are snapshots of life the way he remembers it from the 1950’ and 60’s.