Jeremy Dennis, "Hill Top" (2019) in Regeneration: Long Island’s History of Ecological Art and Care at the Parrish Art Museum (© Jeremy Dennis; courtesy Parrish Art Museum) My favorite thing to do in ...
Abstract thinking helps you find patterns in data and explain meaning through stories and ideas. It also supports humor, creativity, and problem-solving beyond what you can observe. Concrete thinking ...
The artist's solo show "Blue Note" at Bonner David Galleries highlights her deft rendering of atmosphere. Gail Morris, Bird of Paradise (2025). Courtesy of the artist and Bonner David Galleries. Based ...
Legendary American photographer Ansel Adams once said, “Landscape photography is the supreme test of the photographer — and often the supreme disappointment.” It is a line that sums up the quiet ...
I do not envy the judges of the Natural Landscape Photography Awards. Now in its fifth year, it's attracting some outrageously talented lenspeople, and I'm having a hard time even narrowing down which ...
Email notifications are only sent once a day, and only if there are new matching items. At 82, Marie Romero Cash still needs an outlet every day to release her buzzing creative energy. Cash has found ...
Winged Canvas is an online school for illustration and a vibrant art nerd community! Dedicated to making art education accessible, they offer free live art education streams every Saturday and Sunday, ...
We've been independently researching and testing products for over 120 years. If you buy through our links, we may earn a commission. Learn more about our review process. Getting fresh acrylic nails ...
Becoming an artist really wasn’t the plan. Jennifer Anne Bennett was 18 and jumping off the cliffs in Hawaii when she saw a woman painting the landscape and flowers around them. “I recall my amazement ...
Lindsey Fox’s watercolors transform Oregon landscapes into abstract patterns of art. Lindsey Fox is a watercolor artist and painter based out of Portland Oregon. Her work features plein air paintings ...
The earliest work in this six-decade survey of Joan Snyder’s art, Grandma Cohen’s Funeral Painting (1964), is an ambiguous picture. A body is laid out for visitation, limbs outlined in black and ochre ...