Aaron Troyer
“Fractured Biome”
Watercolor, Inkwash, Gouache
16” x 20” framed
2015
http://flatcolor.com/products/aaron-troyer-fractured-biome
View full article →Celeste Byers
“Light Years Away, Sitting Next to Me”
Gouache, colored pencil, nail polish, and bindis on paper
10" x 14" (12.5" x 17" glitter blue frame)
2015
http://flatcolor.com/products/celeste-byers-light-years
View full article →Lindsay Stripling
“Followed by a Foggy Beginning”
Watercolor on paper
12" x 16" (framed)
2015
http://flatcolor.com/products/lindsay-stripling-followed-by-a-foggy-beginning
View full article →Joe Hengst
“Grandmother’s Backyard”
Acrylic on wood panel
11"x14"
2015
http://flatcolor.com/products/joe-hengst-grandmothers-backyard
View full article →Last day of #journeyintotheother
Adam Friedman
“Never Still Life”
Acrylic on Panel
24"x18"
2013
http://flatcolor.com/products/adam-friedman-never-still-life
View full article →Last day of #journeyintotheother
Peter Staley
“Head”
Gouache on paper
14” x 18”
2014
http://flatcolor.com/products/peter-staley-head
View full article →Angela Fox
“Serpent God—in Limbo”
Gouache and marker on bristol paper
9" x 12" (framed)
2015
http://flatcolor.com/products/angela-fox-serpent-god-in-limbo
View full article →View full article →San Francisco based artist Joe Hengst presents his idea of the future world in imaginative, acrylic landscape paintings. At the core of his work is his belief in man’s increasing separation from the natural world. Since the beginning of our time, nature has supplied us with the things we need most for survival, such as food, water, clothing, and shelter. With the introduction of modern day society came a change in how we supply our every day needs. Hengst represents our withdrawal from nature by painting ethereal pieces that experiments with abstraction.
See more on Hi-Fructose.
View full article →Celeste Byers and I new Mating Dance Fertility mural in San Diego!!! From left to right dancing for the ladies, it’s a male bird-of-paradise, a crane, and a sage grouse.
View full article →Ney Farm Oakland, with faces and hands by Celeste Byers.