Here's another update on the project I'm working on for Ace Hotel, New Orleans.
This is a set of Armoire panels.
Scenic Louisiana, Manchac area where people have fishing camps and go boating.
Here's another update on the project I'm working on for Ace Hotel, New Orleans.
This is a set of Armoire panels.
Scenic Louisiana, Manchac area where people have fishing camps and go boating.
Here's another update on the project I'm working on for Ace Hotel, New Orleans.
This is a set of Armoire panels.
Scenic Louisiana bayou.
Here's another update on the project I'm working on for Ace Hotel, New Orleans.
This is a set of Armoire panels.
Scenic Louisiana.
Here's another update on the project I'm working on for Ace Hotel, New Orleans.
This is a set of Armoire panels.
Scenic Louisiana.
Here's another update on the project I'm working on for Ace Hotel, New Orleans.
This is a set of Armoire panels.
Scenic Louisiana.
Here's another update on the project I'm working on for Ace Hotel, New Orleans.
This is a set of Armoire panels.
Scenic Louisiana.
Here's another update on the project I'm working on for Ace Hotel, New Orleans.
This is a set of Armoire panels.
Scenic Louisiana.
I received this email from a lady:
"Hello, I've seen the painting you did of the buggy driver with two mules... As a fun side note, the driver in your painting is my husband, Dave and the "white" mule" is Blue. Dave and Blue are training a new mule here, and together they have trained over 50 mules within a 5 year time span. Dave is also the first driver of a team rig within the city of New Orleans since the 1940's. You have captured a very special moment in your art and I want to thank you for it. When Dave first saw this, he was as a complete loss for words. And as a tour guide for over 15 years, I can tell you THAT rarely happens!"
"Orange, Red, Yellow" is a 1961 color field painting by Mark Rothko.It sold at Christies for $86,882,500 on May 8, 2012. Dominique de Menil (the patron of his last mural painting) once said that Rothko's paintings evoke the tragic mystery of our perishable condition. The silence of God. the unbearable Silence of God."
This is an anamorphic painting
The view of it changes when seen from an angle.
The word anamorphic is from the Greek ana (again) and morphe (form).
anamorphic: producing, relating to, or marked by intentional distortion (as by unequal magnification along perpendicular axes) of an image