Art & Style

Art & Style

Three contemporary Spanish masters in Austin

March 12-13

For one weekend only, the Russell Collection Fine Art Gallery in downtown Austin will host three world renowned Spanish artists: Ramon Vilanova, Josep Domenech, and M. D. Rubio.

Salon International Show at Greenhouse Gallery

April 10-30

San Antonio’s Greenhouse Gallery of Fine Art will showcase winners of Salon International 2010, the ninth annual juried exhibition sponsored by the International Museum of Contemporary Masters of Fine Art.  The event kicks off with an Open House for artists, collectors and press on April 10, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. A “Meet the Artists” event also will be on April 10, from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. The exhibit runs from April 10 through April 30.

Artist spotlight on Daniel Keys and Cesar Santos

Self portrait by Cesar SantosMarch 2-19
San Antonio’s Greenhouse Gallery will showcase the works of two rising young artists: Daniel Keys and Cesar Santos.
Daniel Keys is a self-taught artist who has developed his own style painting still life and landscapes. Cesar Santos immigrated to the U.S. from Cuba and has studied in Miami and Italy. His work includes numerous commissions, including portraits and posters. Greenhouse Gallery will host an all-day Open House in their honor on Saturday, March 6.

GO LONGHORNS

Confidence—it’s the spirit that radiates from Teresa Elliott’s personality and her artwork. It’s also a trait that manifested itself early in her life. “One day in kindergarten, we were each asked to draw a bird,” she recalls. “My drawing amazed everyone, including me. Even though I was very young, I knew right then, deep down, that I would become an artist.”

SpiritusToday, that same self-assurance, combined with well-honed talent, is ideally suited to her current subject of choice—the Texas Longhorn. Elliott’s bold interpretations of this rare breed have won applause from collectors and art critics alike, and her paintings hang in corporate offices as well as the homes of celebrities. Baseball legend Nolan Ryan and singer Toni Tennille (of The Captain and Tennille) are among recent collectors of her work. “Men and women seem to love the Longhorns equally,” Elliott says. Her work has also been displayed in prestigious venues, such as the National Cowgirl Museum and Hall of Fame, the Briscoe Western Museum, and the Coors Western Art Exhibit.

GO LONGHORNS

Confidence—it’s the spirit that radiates from Teresa Elliott’s personality and her artwork. It’s also a trait that manifested itself early in her life. “One day in kindergarten, we were each asked to draw a bird,” she recalls. “My drawing amazed everyone, including me. Even though I was very young, I knew right then, deep down, that I would become an artist.”

SpiritusToday, that same self-assurance, combined with well-honed talent, is ideally suited to her current subject of choice—the Texas Longhorn. Elliott’s bold interpretations of this rare breed have won applause from collectors and art critics alike, and her paintings hang in corporate offices as well as the homes of celebrities. Baseball legend Nolan Ryan and singer Toni Tennille (of The Captain and Tennille) are among recent collectors of her work. “Men and women seem to love the Longhorns equally,” Elliott says. Her work has also been displayed in prestigious venues, such as the National Cowgirl Museum and Hall of Fame, the Briscoe Western Museum, and the Coors Western Art Exhibit.

"The Petite Picasso"

The Russell Collection will host a special appearance and art show by the popular artist prodigy Alexandra Nechita at their downtown Austin gallery in January 2010. Nechita, now 24, began drawing at the age of two and by seven was painting with oils and acrylics. Her first exhibit was a one-woman (child) show when she was eight years old.

From Dream to Reality

Janet Eager Krueger can testify to the truth of the saying “art imitates life.” Her paintings and drawings chronicle the daily lives of South Texans in an original style that is distinctive and believable. Whether she is painting a workday on the family ranch, a family holiday gathering or a festive community event, her down-to-earth artistic style is rooted in reality. It is also a calling that began as a dream.

A Talent for Giving

Talk about optimism. Landscape artist Milbie Benge should bottle some of hers and sell it. “I’m looking forward to my 70s,” she says cheerfully. “So many artists do their best work later in life. I’m sure it will be my best decade yet.” This positive outlook, combined with a giving spirit, does much more than describe Benge’s personality.

An Unpredictable Beauty

 “Magical and addictive.” That is how artist Robert Rynearson describes his romance with the ancient art form of glass blowing. Having been under its bewitching spell for more than fifteen years, he explains simply, “It gets into your soul.”   

An Unpredictable Beauty

 “Magical and addictive.” That is how artist Robert Rynearson describes his romance with the ancient art form of glass blowing. Having been under its bewitching spell for more than fifteen years, he explains simply, “It gets into your soul.”   

The Making of "Top Dogs and Their Pets"

Bob Wade grins for the camera as Lone Star, his bearded dragon, perches on his head. “Sully” Sullenberger puts his captain’s hat on Twinkle, his Labrador retriever. Kinky Friedman sits beside Alice, his favorite pig, as she ignores the camera. Nigel Marven lets White Snake curl around his neck like a living necklace.

Fashion's Night Out San Antonio

KSosa Handbags

$199-299 | KSosa Handbags
These one-of-a-kind handbags and accessories are created from memo fabric samples—some costing $200-300 per yard—that would otherwise be discarded in a landfill. "I've never met a woman who didn't want something no one else has or ever will have," says San Antonio-based designer Kathy Sosa.
www.cinco-estrellas.net

Jewelry With A Twist

$30-200 | Jewelry With A Twist
Houston-based designer Cheryl Shirzadi creates unique jewelry using sterling silver and semi-precious stones, Swarovski crystals or Czech glass, and beads she has collected in her travels around the world, including the Middle East, India, Italy and Turkey. Custom-designed pieces available upon request.
www.TWISTdesigns.etsy.com

Potters on Cotter

$10-28 | Potters on Cotter
Relive memories of summer at the beach with handmade, wheel thrown pottery by husband and wife team, Ken & Brenda Barnett, known as the “windsurfer potters” of Port Aransas. (Beachy-weechy glaze shown.) Raku pottery, jewelry and photo card line also available.

413 E. Cotter
Port Aransas, TX 78373
316-749-7712

Material Man

As unique as a fingerprint, George Sabra’s sculpted creations are one of a kind, each a true original. Seeing limitless possibilities in materials that others would abandon or discard, Sabra artistically recyles. When others would destroy, Sabra creates.

Sharing the Gift

Dennis Eagle Horse had an unusual upbringing. At a time when most young men were fascinated with the race into space, he was fascinated with Native American history.

Enjoying A Structured Life

Ironically, Janet Campbell’s interest in painting architectural masterpieces had a humble beginning.

Brenham’s Got the Scoop

The sweet smell in the air around Brenham comes not only from bluebell wildflowers in the summer, but from Blue Bell Creameries year-round.

17th Annual Texas Clay Festival

What: 17th Annual Texas Clay Festival

Where: On the grounds of Buck Pottery in
Gruene Historic District - New Braunfels, Texas

When: 10 am - 6 pm Saturday and 10 am - 5 pm Sunday - October 24-25, 2009
 

Meadows Musuem Acquires Monumental Sculpture

Announcing its greatest aquisition of a living artist since 2001, the Meadows Museum at Southern Methodist University plans a November 12, 2009, lecture about the artist's life and works. In addition, Sho will hold an honored permanant place in the renovated entrance plaza, opening Fall 2009.

Galveston Adds Another Landmark to its Roster

For one hundred years a furniture store, now the building at 2125 Church Street is a landmark in Downtown Galveston!

 

 

 

Cristina Sosa Noriega

Brighten any table setting with Mi Loteria housewares featuring San Antonio artist Noriega’s modern take on an old classic. www.cristinasosanoriega.com or www.SandyUSADirect.com

Sarah Williams Custom Jewelry

Austin designer Williams can custom design your dream piece of jewelry or re-design an existing piece. www.austincustomfinejewelry.com

Susan Statser Handbags

Handcrafted, one-of-a-kind handbags by Amarillo designer Statser are made from recycled mink coats and embellished with a variety of trimmings. www.susanstatser.com

A Wild Soap Bar

Luxuriate in the feel of the Hanus family’s premium handcrafted natural soap made from cold-pressed olive oil and organically-grown botanicals. Custom soaps can be created at your request. A portion of the profits is donated to the Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center and the United Plant Savers. www.awildsoapbar.com
 

The Business Sense Behind a Box Office Boom

Business Sense Behind a Box Office BoomKirk Feldman had his first brush with the business side of entertainment when he became the de facto manager of his college band. But he had no idea that the lessons he learned while trying to negotiate pay with fraternities and bar owners, coupled with his passion for performing, were paving the way for a successful career in theater.

W.H. Stark House

The lone survivor in what was once a genteel residential neighborhood in Orange, TX, the W.H. Stark house (www.whstarkhouse.org), with its distinctive turret, was built in 1894 for philanthropists William Henry (W.H.) and Miriam Lutcher Stark.

Making a Splash!

Spontaneous and free flowing” are descriptives that easily apply to the artistic style of watercolorist Mary Shepard. Her exciting use of a multitude of transparent watercolor hues separates her work from the humdrum, and she delights in using what she refers to as “unexpected color.” She asks, “Who says a prickly pear has to be green?

Beauty and the Beast

When Rebecca Weatherford speaks, it is with measured deliberation and a careful parsing of her thoughts and words. Perhaps this characteristic comes with her unique talent. As an artist whose primary medium is fused glass, she has learned the absolute necessity of working slowly and methodically. “Glass fusion is a beautiful art, but it is an art that is unforgiving of mistakes,” she explains.

Spreading it on Thick

Few of us would find one self-development workshop life changing. For artist Derenda Keating, however, it was just such an event that altered the course of her life. In 1992, as a field executive for an insurance company, she participated in one where participants were asked to write down three things they would most like to change about themselves.

Drawn to the Light

When it comes to painting plein-aire, most artists either love it or hate it.

 

 

 

Shining Through

Known for softly polished tonal paintings of traditional Texas landscapes and sunsets,

 

 

The Cowgirl Way

Donna Howell-Sickles may have grown up on a ranch, but living the life of a cowgirl was never one of her goals.

 

 

Angel of Hope Pin/Pendant

Angel of Hope Pin/Pendant, Designer Sandy Forrest-Hartman’s delightful jewelry is fashioned from dominoes, tiny images, crosses and wire-wrapped beads. Each piece is as affordable as it is lovely to behold. No wonder regional papers and HGTV have featured her artwork. This particular pin is designed to remind wearers of the importance of breast exams—and the urgent need for a breast cancer cure. When ordering online, reference Country Lifestyle and 25% of your purchase will be allocated to cancer research. Mystic Angel Creations;
www.mysticangelcreations.com.

 

 

 

 

A Touch of the Old World

When Rebecca Wingler and her husband set out to design their dream house, the couple wanted to draw upon treasured life and travel experiences. Consequently, Mediterranean architectural elements and art figure prominently in their new Central Texas home.

Tributes to the West

“I must have been the only person in my high school who wore cowboy boots,” recalls sculptor John Bennett.  “I was always really impressed with cowboys and western life.”

Bennett grew up in the 1950s and early ’60s, when the golden era of television brought a steady stream of Hollywood heroes into homes across America: Roy Rogers, Maverick, Cheyenne and The Lone Ranger. The iconic cowboys in these programs sparked Bennett’s early interest in the folklore, heritage and mystique of the west. They also laid the foundation for his future career as a sculptor of western art.  

Vision of the Future

Graham Toms true gift as an artist lies in applying old-fashioned hard work and exceptional talent to the most modern of mediums: video imaging. As a 3D education specialist for NewTek, a San Antonio-based software company, Toms has contributed his artistic animation skills to the company’s cutting edge visual imaging programs, such as LightWave 3D, Aura and TriCaster.

Finding the Perfect Balance

In love with life, oil painter Ann Hardy is a woman of many interests.  In fact, the word ‘overachiever’ might be an understatement.  Ann herself freely admits that even as late as midlife, she was still asking herself, “What will I become when I grow up?”  Of course by then she had already graduated cum laude from Southwestern University where she had pondered life as a missionary, but afterward married instead, and had four children.  Settling into marriage, motherhood and community life, Hardy was elected president of the Chamber of Commerce, in Colleyville, Texas and even become a real estate broker and land developer.  Purchasing 20 dream acres in the country, she put in a road, fence, and barn – creating an Arabian horse farm where she broke, trained, and showed the animals. It was a passion funded, coincidentally, with money made from painting approximately 20 canvases a week and attending “starving artists” shows where she would sell out.

Galveston’s Bishop’s Palace

Among the many coastal landmarks to survive Hurricane Ike is Galveston’s Bishop’s Palace. Having sustained only minimal damage, the island’s oldest and arguably most beloved building was open again for tours by late October.

From River Walk to the Radio

Jim Cullum, Jr., doesn’t understand why some people bemoan winter’s shorter days. From the perspective of the acclaimed cornetist, night couldn’t come soon enough. “I believe that the beautiful things in life happen after dark. The candlelight, beautiful music, a glass of wine, the romance, a great dinner, all of those things that I would rather do,” he says.

A Ballad of Texas Chocolates

If you’ve got a taste for chocolate in central Texas, you’re in luck: A dozen chocolatiers populate the dessert scene in and around Austin alone.

Artisanal Vodka from Artesian Springs

Gary Kelleher picks up a hint of chocolate in the finish of a sip of Dripping Springs Vodka. There are notes of vanilla there, too—on that many tasters agree. Not everyone gets the chocolate. But Kelleher knew what he wanted this vodka to taste like even before he set out to create it.


“Our great-great-grandfather made vodka for the czar of Russia,” says Kelleher, one of three brothers born and raised in Dallas. “My grandfather came here from Russia. His great-grandfather was actually hired by Catherine the Great of Russia to make vodka. I grew up thinking that was the coolest thing.”

Staff Picks: Our Valentine Wish List

Vintage Valentine postcard

In honor of our fabulous February issue, our magazine staff brainstormed inspired options for Cupid's list. We came up with terrific food, fantastic getaway options and, of course, jewelry!

 

Editor's Picks: Kendra Scott Jewelry

Gorgeous wide golden bangle by Kendra ScottAustinite Kendra Scott has nurtured her jewelry company from a small to a global operation within the last seven years. Her accounts now include Nordstrom’s, Bloomingdales and hundreds of private shops worldwide. Her designs have been featured in InStyle, Redbook and Allure. Impressive credentials, no? Yet it’s her collection of semi-precious jewelry and bold bangles that make us swoon.

Steeple Chase

“You enter the door and immediately leave space and time, visually, in every which way, because you kind of enter into another world,” says Father Bob Knippinberg, pastor of SS Cyril and Methodious Catholic Church, of Shiner, Texas.

A Painting a Day

If an apple a day is good for the body, what will renew an artist’s spirit every day? Artist Virginia Vaughan, known professionally as “V.... Vaughan,” has found an answer that works for her. Each and every day, with rare exceptions, she creates an entirely new work of art. 

The idea of a daily painting came to her several years ago when a farm that had been in her husband’s family for four generation was scheduled to be sold to developers. Says Vaughan, “I had thought that the farm would always be there but I suddenly realized we were going to have to leave. That’s when I decided to take my memories with me, by painting one scene every day, en plein air, during our last year there.” 

A Monumental Success

Long before his hands touch the clay, sculptor Seth Vandable’s mind is hard at work. “It takes a really well thought out idea to make any work of art stand apart as distinctive,” he explains. Indeed, it is his gift for thoughtful design that has led to his receiving commissions to create some of the largest figurative monuments in the country.

For instance, his tribute to baseball, called “For the Love of the Game,” stands at Whataburger Stadium in Corpus Christi, Texas. The 25-foot-high bronze illustrates Vandable’s ability to hit a home run when it comes to having the winning idea. “To integrate that project into its locale in a historic part of the city, I clothed the player in a vintage baseball era cotton uniform,” he says. What excited the Whataburger executives most, however, was the subtle message Vandable built right into the player’s pose. With the wooden bat resting ever so casually across the player’s rock-solid shoulders, the athelete’s forearms form an unmistakable “W,” which also happens to be the Whataburger logo. 
 

Close Encounters

“Animals are like people,” says , “in that no two are alike.” 
He insists, for example, that while two whitetail deer grazing together in a field may appear to be nearly identical, close observation highlights subtle differences— not only in their physical characteristics, but also in their personalities. “One might have a different tilt to its nose, perhaps a longer ear or a different glint in its eye,” he notes. 

Such observations set Grimm’s work as a wildlife artist apart. “I realized early on that if I wanted to paint wildlife, I would need to paint landscapes, because they go hand in hand,” he says. “So I found myself becoming increasingly interested in the animal’s relationship with its environment. What I have learned is that wildlife is the final complement to the landscape.” Grimm’s ability to convey the harmonious relationship between the animals and their environment gives viewers of his work the sense of a real wildlife encounter.
 

Fashion Forward

When Texas fashion designer Pat Dahnk was first starting out, she sewed on an old machine that started to skip a stitch. That’s when her creativity and determination kicked in. She began to cut out little leather leaves to stitch over the seams of the collars, and this design element became her signature.

Faced with an obstacle, her determination and creativity helped her overcome it. That’s really the story of her life—from small glitches on a sewing machine to the devastating loss of her son. When cancer claimed her 2-year-old, Kent, in 1985, Dahnke pushed through grief by focusing on what meant the most to her—her daughter, Tara, just 8 years old at the time, a love of horses and an ability to help women feel beautiful.

George and Company

Twinkle, Twinkle Pretty Tree

 

Many a cheerful soul has sought to "haul out the holly" in early December only to have their spirit fall upon spying that tangle of light cords lurking in the attic. This year, we offer a little advice on both how to light the perfect tree and organize your lights for next Christmas. 

Exclusive Signature Austin Charm Bracelet

Working From Home

Classic TV shows often featured dads such as Ward Cleaver, Darrin Stephens or Mike Brady in home offices—then called a study or den. Today, as gas prices soar and technology grows more sophisticated, many workers—male and female—work at home. But, home offices aren’t just for work anymore.

Water, Water Everywhere

Texas Artist Al Barnes captures images of coastal living-from sparkling streams of water to migratory birds hunting for their prey.

With an Appreciative Eye

This month's Texas artist, Larry Prellop brings his passion for landscapes, seascapes and skyscapes to the canvas.

Seeing Life as a Painting

Inspired by the beauty surrounding her, this month's Texas artist, Sidney Sinclair gives us a look at the world through her eyes.

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