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Archive

Elizabeth Rhoades

Painter | Belle Haven, Virginia

 

www.elizabethrhoades.com

Elizabeth Rhoades has painted professionally for more than 50 years. Her deep love for the natural landscape has inspired her to create work that has won over 60 awards from juried national exhibitions. She has been juried into 21 national plein air painting competitions in just the last ten years since her retirement from her 35-year art teaching career in Connecticut public schools. In 2018 she moved to Virginia’s beautiful Eastern Shore where she has found endless inspiration. Elizabeth’s work is loved for her vibrant colors and sensitivity to the natural forms and light in the landscape. There is an emotional quality to her paintings that brings peace and tranquility to the viewer.  A lifetime of plein air painting has provided her with a foundation to accurately depict the elements of the landscape. Elizabeth is a Signature Member of American Artists Professional League, Academic Artists, five national pastel societies including Pastel Society of America, and an Elected Artist in the Salmagundi Club, Rockport Art Association, North Shore Art Association, Lyme Art Association, and others. Her work has been included in over a hundred national exhibitions, including OPA, AIS, Hudson Valley Art Association,  and NOAPS. 

Trevor Swanson

Painter | Phoenix, Arizona

Acclaimed by critics and collectors alike, Trevor V. Swanson is one of the most gifted and promising wildlife artists in the world today. Coming from a long line of talented artists, Trevor is a brilliant example of inspired talent passing from one generation to another. Trevor started painting at a very young age. Almost intuitively, he acquired an appreciation for the realism, detail, and value systems essential to wildlife rendering. Through patient study, he further mastered the technical skills needed to create truly outstanding works of art.

Trevor began his professional career at the remarkable age of 20, and was quickly recognized for his artistic prowess. Within a few years, his paintings were hanging in some of the world’s most prestigious art shows, museums and private collections. By the age of 25, he had won several artistic competitions, including the coveted “Artist of the Year” award from the Foundation for North American Wild Sheep. As a result of his exceptional talent, Trevor’s reputation has soared to an early prominence in the world of fine art.

An avid outdoorsman, Trevor never goes far without a camera or sketch pad. For Trevor, the creative process begins with the insight and emotional response he gleans directly from wild animals in their natural settings. In his quest for subject matter, Trevor has traveled extensively throughout North America, Europe and Africa. His intense desire to capture rare and beautiful moments in nature has taken him to the extremes of geography. This includes the highest cliffs of Canada, the hottest deserts of Mexico, and the deepest swamplands of Africa. His enthusiasm for his subjects has, at times, brought Trevor too close for comfort. Over the years, he’s been charged by hippos, chased by crocodiles, and tossed into the air by a cape buffalo. He’s even felt the rumble of an active volcano. To Trevor, however, this kind of peril is just part of the adventure that comprises his art. “Anyone who has encountered a wolf eye-to-eye in the wilderness can tell you it’s exhilarating” says Trevor. “Nothing compares to the grandeur of an eagle perched high atop a snow-covered mountain, a sinewy leopard creeping like a shadow across a dry desert, or a magnificent bear effortlessly running across a muddy sandbar. These are the sights and sensations that inspire the most powerful images in my work.”

While Trevor begins his exploration in the wilderness he pursues a much deeper discovery in his work. On one level, his artwork celebrates the majesty of untamed wildlife and beauty of unspoiled environments. On another level, it expresses a keen sense of the drama and emotion found only in the wilderness. And on yet another level, through its intense realism, Trevor’s art captures that briefest moment in time when nature reveals her spirit. “I paint realistically, because the beauty of life is in the little things. The multi-colored moss growing on the rock where a wolf is standing, the light beaming through tree branches onto the fur of a bear; these are the details that breathe life into the painting. I try hard to portray these subtle elements of tone and mood because they complete the story being told.”

Trevor Swanson makes his home in Phoenix, Arizona with his wife, Jennifer, and family.

Rich Metzger

Carver | Bedminster, Pennsylvania

 

www.richmetzgerstudios.com

As someone with a love of nature and fishing in particular, Rich began waterfowl sculpting in 1985, often focusing on nature and the beauty that he saw while pursuing some of his favorite pastimes.

Residing in Bedminster, Pa gives him abundant oportunities to eplore all that the natural environment provides.

Fishing has always been a significant part of Rich’s life and continues to be to this day. His latest works center on recreating the beauty that Rich sees in the fish and of the days remembered pursuing them.

From concept and design to carving and coloring each piece is a labor of love.
Starting with an airbrushed base layer followed by pastels, metal powders and pigments, he creates an accurate and long lasting piece of art.

Fred Boyer

Hometown: Anaconda, MT

Fred Boyer is an internationally acclaimed artist whose impressive wildlife bronzes grace the home of President George W. Bush and General Schwarzkopf, as well as galleries and shows around the world. His awards include; Safari Club International Featured Artist 2013, the first time a sculptor has been chosen. He achieved Calgary Stampede Artist choice in 2009.

 

Growing up in Anaconda, Montana he graduated from Montana State University with a degree in Art. He taught school in Alaska, returning to Montana in 1974 where he continued to teach until he began sculpting full time. He has been an avid guide, hunter, and conservationist which continue to influence his perspective as an artist.

Rob Enders

Hometown: Mifflinburg, Pennsylvania

In 1998, I had a chance meeting with a co-worker, Ross Smoker (2023 Ward Foundation Living Legend).  He invited me to try carving at the Smoker’s North Shop in Selinsgrove, Pennsylvania.  I really enjoyed that carving experience and Ross has been my mentor ever since.  I began carving as a way to add something different to my duck hunting decoy spread.  This hobby and passion has now evolved into more than just carving hunting decoys.  

I have carved a variety of different birds over the last 25 years.  I have made owls, songbirds, shorebirds, penguins, and of course, lots and lots of waterfowl.  I have carved miniatures, contemporary antiques, gunning style decoys, and several waterfowl with more detail than any hunting decoy would ever need.

I have been fortunate, over the years, to receive many ribbons and win numerous Best of Show awards.  I enjoy competing, but also enjoy researching and creating new patterns for my carvings.  This allows me to mix styles together and make my carvings one of a kind.

Carving has been a great creative outlet and hobby for me.  I would like to thank my wife, Sue, for putting up with me painting all these years at our kitchen table in Mifflinburg, Pennsylvania. 

Sandy Alanko

Sandy Alanko has a master’s degree in art, studied Renaissance art at a school in Florence, Italy and taught art in public and private schools for over 30 years.  She has also taught at the Academy Art Museum,  several classes through the St. Michaels Art League and currently teaches and mentors watercolorists in her Tilghman, Maryland Island studio.

Sandy paints primarily in watercolor, oil and pastel in a contemporary realism style and has won numerous awards in local, regional and national shows.  These include the Waterfowl Festival, Plein Air Easton-Local Color, St. Michaels Art League shows, the Working Artists Forum and the Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum.

She is an avid conservationist, and her property is a certified Wildlife Habitat.  Sandy is also part of the Master Naturalist Program at Adkins Arboretum.  She loves to camp in wild, natural places and explore our  state’s beautiful rivers by kayak.  She hopes that her artwork inspires people to learn about, cherish and protect our precious wild heritage.

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