Category: featured artist
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Sarah Mary Taylor and Pearlie Posey, Mother/Daughter Quilting Extraordinaires
Sarah Mary Taylor learned quilting from her mother Pearlie Posey, using the designs and patterns she taught her throughout her entire life.
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Esteban Whiteside’s “Apartide (Yellow & Orange”, Available for Purchase
Esteban Whiteside is a self-taught painter whose work is based on the intersectionality of street art and politics.
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Noel Hatfield’s “War Is Hell”, Available for Purchase
NOEL HATFIELD Willie’s Weed (c. 2023-2024) // Oil paint on archival dibond aluminum and sealed with gamvar gloss varnish, framed with wire hanger and dust cover on back
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Sarah Lee’s “Girl who lived inside a bird”, Available for Purchase
SARAH LEE Have you ever heard about that girl who lived inside a bird? (2023) // Acrylic on canvas
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Esteban Whiteside’s “Bank of Amerikkka”, Available for Purchase
Esteban Whiteside is a self-taught painter whose work is based on the intersectionality of street art and politics.
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Same Ol’ Funding of War Crimes by the USA = New Works by Esteban Whiteside
Esteban Whiteside, a self-taught artist, draws inspiration from the street art and politics — see his new “Apartide” artworks.
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FolkArtwork of The Week: Christopher Bame’s “Untitled” Mixed Media Artwork
Christopher Bame started using art at a young age as a way to communicate with his peers, convey his needs, and tell stories about his day. His narrative paintings and drawings often capture autobiographical storytelling through whimsy and vulnerability.
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Jackie Bradshaw On How Painting Helps Keep The “Demons at Bay”
Canadian folk artist Jackie Bradshaw sees a lot of similarities between herself and Maud Lewis. The big one, beautiful artwork that will make you smile.
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Jordan Sullivan’s “Devotional Art” is Now Devoted to “The Underbelly”
Self-taught artist Jordan Sullivan talks about why he makes the art he makes and why he feels at home with “the underbelly”.
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Norval Morrisseau is the ‘Picasso of The North’, Learn More on DailyArtMagazine.com
Whatever you’d like to call him, Norval Morrisseau’s work transcended time and opened the door for contemporary Indigenous artists throughout Canada. Ultimately he became the grandfather of Indigenous contemporary art.