Contemporary Art

Gallery Members

Guest Artists

Norma Fisk Kathy Shanahan
Utahna Hancock Katherine Ellinger Smith
Sarah Riley Richard Cravens
Lynn Robey  
Rochelle Steffen  
James Thurman  
Jake Wells  

Fountain Street Gallery Members

Norma Fisk > Portfolio

Work 1  
"I wanted to try my hand at a Zen-like approach to watercolor."

Utahna Hancock > Portfolio

Work 1
"Since my earliest days as a student of art, I have been interested in the sculptural female form."

Sarah Riley > Portfolio

Work 1
"Poetry through a collage of images is the goal."

Lynn Robey > Portfolio

Work 1
"I am expressing my life, which is filled with many emotions - mostly good, but some are not."

Rochelle Steffen > Portfolio

Work 1
"I am a creator and do what my artistic nature leads me to do."

James Thurman > Portfolio

Work 1
"I like to imagine my canvas as a scrap piece of paper from which to express my feelings to whoever views it.  The bright colors and lines depict something that is going on in my life at the time.  I take my little characters and cut them up, twist them, and morph them to my liking.  They tell my story for me."
 

Jake Wells > Portfolio

Work 1
"Flux is the nature of life, therefore my paintings too reflect this phenomenon... Thus my paintings are about the inspiration of nature on man; to create and to appreciate the beauty in our surroundings and our shared world."

Guest Artists

Kathy Shanahan > Portfolio

Work 1  
Works by Kathy Shanahan

Katherine Ellinger Smith > Portfolio

Work 1  
"The direct connection of human to environment is the constant in my imagery."

Richard Cravens > Portfolio

 
"Video artists can create a vision, exchange their works online, remix and redistribute them almost as fast as they can be created. If collage was the true art form of the last century, improvised collaborative montage may be its successor in this one, created in public, delivered at the speed of light... The promise of live musical improvisation, dynamic cinema, video synthesis and global communications have yet to be fully explored, much less realized..."