Noel Pabalan


Noel Pabalan is a Toronto-based artist who works with a variety of mediums (acrylic, watercolour) as well as subjects. His association with biology provide for a technical perspective in his renderings of life subjects. But his artwork goes beyond the artistic interpretation of the life sciences. With passion injected to his paintings, he would like to compel the viewer to give more than plain observation to his artwork.


Mark Pacheco


Inspired by living, I create all works from life. I find art as with life, a complicated combination of truths and artifice. I take liberties when necessary, but only to enhance the realism or the lie. Having moved from a rural area to an urban one I find it enhances my views on this and is sure to come out in my work. I live and work in Long Island City Queens.



Tatiana Pahlen


I was born, raised, and completed my education in Russia. Since my childhood I was fascinated by Russian literature, its rich prose and poetry. I developed an ear for its rhythm, and tried my hand at writing some short stories and poems. Since my arrival in New York in 1986, I started writing poetry directly in English, a language I respect and worship for its beauty. Aside of the many poems I wrote, I also dabble in non-fiction, short stories and cartoons. Currently I'm working on the book, called "Poetry and Eye".



Alfonso Palma


Nato il 19 luglio del 1943 al Pallonetto, uno dei caratteristici quartieri della Napoli povera, il maestro Alfonso Palma è il primogenito di 7 figli.
Da ragazzo intraprende studi di elettrotecnica che porta a buon termine nonostante la prematura morte del padre.

L'evento lo costringe, seppure ancora adolescente, ad un'ulteriore carico di responsabilità condizionando le sue giornate nelle quali alterna allo studio il lavoro, accompagnando talora il nonno elettricista, tal'altra impegnandosi in quel poco che la realtà locale può offrire ad un ragazzo giovane ed inesperto.
Matura in tal modo una serie di esperienze che lo avvicinano ulteriormente agli aspetti più vivi e reali dell'esistenza, sviluppando in lui quella sensibilità e quella semplicità che tuttora lo contraddistinguono.



Debbie Palmer

Over the years my painting styles have ranged through landscapes, surrealism, abstract, pop art and many other styles in various mediums. Oils have always been a favourite, but I became frustrated with the length of time oils take do dry. A better alternative is offered by modern acrylics, which behave very similarly to oils, but tend not control you with their drying times, and it is for this reason that acrylics are now my chosen medium.

My recent painting interest is study of light and its effect on various three dimensional forms, and there is none so interesting as the human face. It is this area of painting which currently constitutes the bulk of my work. Defining shape in monotone, to produce an image that is instantly recognisable, primarily in portraits, is an immense challenge, but has proved popular with everyone who views the results.



Laura Higgins Palmer

My drawings follow the Zen tradition of using simple means to represent the essences of things. I break with the quiescent tradition of Zen by using Chinese calligraphic techniques to elicit the joyful dynamism of dance.

My paintings are all about the focusing of energy, the joy of motion and the actions of forms in space. I evoke physical energy by both non-objective and figural means. Figures are revealed through linear suggestion in fields and spaces of vivid, luminous color. Through abstraction, I capture the ephemerality of life itself.

My work is a spare dynamic of suggestion, synopsis and abstraction. When I draw I am transported into the movement of the dancers I observe. It’s this transcendence that keeps me firmly committed to the subject. At this point I feel that I have at least another 20 years of work to do on the subject of dance.



Milagros Palmieri


Milagros Palmieri was born and raised in the beautiful island of Puerto Rico in 1961. She was raised in a very artistic environment where her father would play the guitar every single night and most of her bothers played all kind of musical instruments. As the youngest, her older sisters would drew paper dolls for her to play while she would participate as well by making her own stuff dolls and other art crafts like doll outfits and houses. Since very early in her childhood she had a strong sense of a special gift that she was born with and began to develop it by using her creativity and artistic talents every single day; drawing and painting with crayons, color pencils, tempera and clay. There was never a time in her life without some form of artistic expression. During her childhood some friends would inquire her services for school projects and while attending college she freelanced for print shops. Painting came naturally to her and as she grew-up her artistic expressions have been mainly through oil paintings. Today she shares the results of her artistic explorations by conducting oil painting workshops to people who approach her with the desire develop their painting skills. Milagros is not interested in expressing her talents through new color or style trends in the art world and only paints subjects that she feels touched by in her heart, allowing the inspiration and energy transmitted by the subjects to take control of the painting process itself. The final results of her compositions have been described as impressionist romanticism expressed with straight forward purity.



Biser Ivanov Panayotov


Biser Ivanov Panayotov's richly imaginative canvasses are filled with delicate but bold shapes and colors. The images evoke organisms, landscapes, and objects with their graceful curves and elaborate detail. The subtle tones of rich red and orange, watery blue and sunlight yellow indicate a fantasy world. His work is mystical, recalling experience rather than intellectually laden and symbolic, leaving the viewers free to compose their own meaning based on sensual interpretation. He concerns himself more with the interaction of different patterns than clearly definable foreground and background to create space and depth in his paintings. Panayotov was born and continues to live and work in Rousse, Bulgaria. He studied with the famous Rousse artist Kiril Stanchev. His first work was exhibited in a Youth Show in 1988 in Rousse and has continued to exhibit work consistently since. His paintings are in private collections across Europe, Canada and the United States.


Gitta Pardoel


At any given moment, we are experiencing simultaniously an amalgam of diverse mental states like visual sensations, tactile sensations, auditory sensations, feelings and thoughts. I gather constantly these impressions, memories, happenings, experiences from which collections rise. They form the basis of my work. I organize these collections in a kind of archives which might contain video-shots, photos, text, sound fragments, drawings etc.


Claudio Parentela


I draw mostly in black and white using a lot of black indian ink on paper…the reason is that I like strong feelings ,strong contradictions …and the best contradiction,and the stronger contradiction is the contradiction and the eternal war between the black and the white… …the white sheet of the paper is my mind…or a part of my mind,my mind without thoughts ….the lines,the strong brushfuls of ink,black…are my thoughts and my feelings… I’ve not a simple soul&mind…I’ve various and many souls in my soul …many minds in my mind…so are my artworks,dark&dreaming,chaotic&anarchic,strong&hallucinated,disturbing,freak,weird,… To draw is a way…to know myself…?...I don’t know if its so…I draw&I draw all the time because…I like this strange work I’ve created for my many Claudio in myself.


Shin-Hye Park


An Artistic expression is for me an act of confirming what I have perceived, namely what I have to know while seeing, hearing, smelling, tasting, feeling endlessly in the midst of daily life. What is especially important in my work is how ...


Liz Parkinson


Liz's artwork is full of a mixture of personal imagery and scary creatures from around the forest where she lives. She uses black ink on paper to create unique drawings of figures and faces, which have an emotive edge. These works reflect an inner strength, and are packed full of meaning, which can be easily interpreted by anyone taking the time to look closely (or so she thinks!). Liz bares her soul with these detailed images from her subconscious, and they are built up with her trademark intricate pen work.


Valentin Pashkov


Valentin Pashkov is a distinguished Russian artist, a contemporary taught by Radimova Tatiana, daughter of Radimov Pavel Alexandrovich, the last chairman of Peredvizhniki Society.



Dalma Patocskai


I’m Hungarian, born in Budapest.
First I started to paint at the elementary school and took part at a local kids paint exhibition that impressed me so much.
My first collage years started to paint again just for fun hobby and to decorate my friend’s homes.
Now it is my real pleasure time, as it makes me happy and complete I know dreams can come true and make my life entire.
I believe we have to indulge all sec of our life.


Valerie Patterson


I believe that it is the artist's job to move the viewer beyond mere aesthetics, to probe beneath the surface of an action, comment, belief, or relationship, to expose a piece of its essence, no matter how disturbing or unsettling that it may be. While each artwork inevitably contains a sense of the personal, I believe that, at the same time, it is also important that it contain a social or political dimension.


Lou Patrou


Patrou is a visionary artist who has the ability to dance colour with imagination. He fuses the past, present and future, turns dreams into reality and creates images that are powerful, thought provoking and laced with magic.


Santiago Paulós

Santiago Paulos paintings. Contemporary artist painter.


Olga Pavlova

Paintings of Olga Pavlova.Originals and posters .Figurative and abstract. Expressionism.



James Pearson

James Pearson's modern paintings celebrate hope and optimism with a joyful mix of color, texture and flowing line. His work can be viewed at galleries in Kentucky and Tennessee, in private collections worldwide, and as the cover art of Blick Studios Artist Catalog 2005.



Jonna Pedersen

At first sight Jonna Pedersen's paintings may appear to convey a conscious clear style. Nevertheless, they tease you all the time by containing strong spontaneous elements. She balances often on a line between the controlled and the spontaneous. To put it in her own words her paintings arise in the borderline between the conscious and the unconscious: "If you plan your painting too much, something important will be lost", she once said. That is why she dares to admit that "unpredictable occurrences" play an important part in her painting. These occurrences she seizes with a precise sense of timing - and she incorporates these in her works, creating an inner tension resulting in fascinating paintings. It is as if she catches the final expression in "an unguarded moment". It is clear that each painting is the result of a dialogue between artist and the final work. It shows. As the paintings are never too perfect even though they can be beautiful. They show a certain nervous, vibrating energy - and it suits them. Jonna Pedersen moves as a curious flaneur in the throbbing universe of the city. She makes striking paintings of what she sees and she works on her motives with originality and nerve.



Joel Pelerin


Joel Pelerin was born in Lyon (France) in 1949. He is a professional photographer in Reunion Island, in the Indian Ocean, where he lives since 1987, with his wife Alice both of them earn their living being medical doctors.

Previously, Joel was an engineer and professor at the Antananarivo University, Madagascar. As a photographer, he only shoots portraiture and Female Nudes. None of his models (more than one hundred) are professional, most of them are students or working in the city. 70% live in a area 2 km around : there is a great density of wonderful women in Reunion Island !...

Surprisingly, Joel never plans ahead his shoots, depending of his model personality and her mood, his work varies from Classic Nude to Erotic. He first tries to enhance her self-image. He doesn’t set a pose, they work together, trying to create something, accordingly with the inspiration of both of them. His greatest satisfaction is when the model sees her pictures, and radiantly happy asks him to be his model again!

Joel hopes to show the beauty of women in Reunion Island through his work, for the world to see. He featured on the cover of the December 2005 special edition of "Pictures" devoted to the masters of Nude Photography, together with Douglas Kirkland who photographed Marilyn Monroe nude.
He was invited to present the Beauty of Réunionese metissage at the Durban Film Festival in South Africa, and as a curtain raiser to the prestigious Cannes Film Festival in May 2007.

The exhibition "Une histoire des Femmes" travelled to Johannesburg South Africa in December 2007, and in an abridged version called "Reunion Island Women", in Calgary (Canada) in February 2009, showing the grace, the beauty, the diversity and the warmth of the women of Reunion Island. Together with his wife writing poems on his pictures, they wrote a page in “The Last Book” of Luis Camnitzer opened in the National Library of Argentina, Buenos Aires.



Oscar Penalber


Paintings by award-winning artist Oscar Penalber. Oscar is an Argentinean artist who has been residing in Miami for more than 25 years. His favorite media is acrylic on canvas, but he also uses other surfaces such as paper, glass, tile and wood.



Qi Peng


As an artist, I feel that my work encompasses a broad range of emotional and philosophical concerns. It is my duty as an alchemist and/or shaman to convert everyday objects and materials from my studio, home, or discarded artifacts into the magic of a new type of transfiguration which bridges the traditional framework of genres such as still life or portrait or landscape with new and exciting radical interpretations and experiments with abstraction.

My latest series of abstract paintings reflects the convergence of painting and photography, the merging of NASCAR and quantum mechanics, the meeting between planes of colored light dancing upon the canvas to reflect a heightened awareness of conceptual awareness in the post-digital era.



Raphael Perez


Realistic Paintings. The early period of the artists work is characterized by a clear division of his paintings by topics such as woman, man, man and woman, two women, and two men. The techniques that were applied are characterized as sharp and meticulous, with smooth color placement, expressiveness and materialism, which symbolize the restraint experienced by the artist during this period in his life. It was during this period that the artist had been involved in relationships with women.

Naive paintings. Perez`s creations deal with the subject of homosexuality. He puts a strong emphasis on single-sex families, pride parades, soldiers, male birth giving, portraits, male nudity, as well as male, female and heterosexual couples. , while characterizing gay relationships and love as they are expressed in everyday life.



Samantha Pernoski


Married with two young, busy children, Samantha a fully self-taught artist stays true to her passion of painting, always keeping her brush close to her side. Samantha is known internationally for creating beautiful, original art, putting her soul into each piece using wonderful colors and images. The majority of her work is expressionism styled artwork. You'll see everything from animals to nature and landscape scenes to the many different female interpretations she brings to life.



Darby Perrin


I am a self taught artist with the skill to paint any subject. I specialize in aviation art, both military and civilian with an emphesis on realism and drama. The overwhelming power of any aircraft is almost tangible. It's technology and elegance combined in a way that allows man to soar with the birds. How could you tell the tales of such three dimensional machines in a two dimensional work of art? I hope I've done them justice.



Mariano Petit de Murrat


Painter, Digital Artist and Graphic Designer born in Mexico City. Has applied his experience of more than 15 years as a painter and designer to his latest work based exclusively in the surprising and huge possibilities a computer can offer to a creative soul like his. Often considered as a visionary artist, creator of fabulous realities, transporting you to the borders of other worlds, surrealist, parallel, archaic or futuristic. The used technique is the "infographics" or digital art, that offers infinite possibilities for the creation of different realities. Artistic expressions that emerge from the exploration of the being, taking the submersion in the inner depths of the unconscious as a symbol for it. Refinement like weapon and eroticism as method, descending to the complexity of the creative mind, finding a reflection in the divine simplicity of the mineral kingdom, before overcoming a trip to the infinite and wonderful festival called universe.


Ole E. Petterson


Webgallery: Imaginative realism, still lifes, portraits and collage paintings.


Ilyas Phaizulline


Ilyas Phaizulline, painter of the Tatarstan Republic (Russia), was born in Tetyushi city on Volga in 1950. In 1970 Ilyas Phaizulline ended a musical-art-pedagogical secondary school in Leninigorsk and started to work in a painting, sculpture and architecture Institute, in St. Petersburg. Ilyas painter and draftsman, has been living and working in Kazan city, the capital of the Tatarstan Republic, from 2001. Actually he's also member of the Artists' Union of Russia and Tatarstan. Ilyas is a master painter of the mystical realism, and always he focuses his attention on subjects such as Ancient Greece, mythology and the history of the Tatar People.



Mark Phelan


My work explores what it is like to live in the spaces between; between the way it feels to have the wind knocked out of you by a punch in the gut and the way frozen air fills your lungs on a winter day, between disappointment and regret, between memory and forgetfulness, between sin and redemption, between truth and invented reality.



Susan Phillips


As an artist, my self-expression manifests through the artforms of photography and mixed media collage, working differently within each medium.

When I photograph, I choose the elements that I wish to freeze in time. I respond to a whole, which can be seen within the camera’s viewfinder. It is a conscious decision to arrange or capture natural lines, graphically appealing patterns, or the particular interplay of texture, light and shadow. I search for aesthetic possibilities in areas that the eye often overlooks. These may be found in the random placement of objects, in a pile of discarded junk, or on pieces of building facades that have been cast away in demolition. In the darkroom, the composition may be altered or other changes made.

This process is inverted in my collage work. Instead of a whole, I start with two or three components, proceeding to manipulate them until an interesting unity begins to evolve. Creating something visually exciting from unrelated preexisting objects, each with its own texture and dimensionality, is the challenge. Torn papers, scraps of metal, transferred images, layered paints, pieces of nature and bits of watercolor may all be used until each piece finds its own unique harmony. The subconscious gently guides while the eye and hand freely play.

Although the works are often abstract or seemingly without a subject, they may still reflect emotional states, suggest the passage of time, hint at landscape or even trigger the recall of forgotten dreams or memories. The process is not predefined but open and serendipitous. The element of surprise is always energizing and joyful, even if it takes months to find the one last element or the final few brushstrokes necessary to render a piece finished.


Janyt Piercy


My images come from allowing myself to connect to that deeper place where the true self lives. From that place comes primal imagery, sacred symbols, and a tender palette that speaks of balance and wholeness that goes beyond words. This language of art speaks from color and form; and it's energy and story asks us to see in a different way.



Marc Pierrard


In 2002, I bought some oil paint by mistake (convinced to just have aquired some basic acrylic paint to use on some road indication signs for a festival which we organised with the band at that time). I loved the smell of it, the way the colours mixed, the textures the paint would create,....well I fell in love.

......four years and almost 400 paintings later.



Christopher Pierro


It is my intent to show that graffiti is an art form, which has not only helped create an American subculture but has influenced the world as a whole. Its influence has left the subway cars of New York and entered mainstream society. I would like to prove that this is a thriving artistic outlet, which equals all other art genres. Its tools and methods are not taught in traditional art classes, but that does not take away from the creative process needed to create in this method. Most people have not taken the time to recognize that all of the basic elements of art are needed in order for a piece to be created. Color, form, and line are just some of the basic themes needed in order to shape a piece of graffiti art. It can be created with a variety of mediums, using a range of techniques, just as all respected art forms are.


Karen Pike


Karen Pike is pleased to share a new series of paintings with admirers of her art. She is using a fresh pallet with lustrous earth tones .The new paintings while reminiscent of her earlier works are every bit as charming as the more recent and fun loving TROPICAL TASTE OF LIFE Series.



Siva Pillay


My artwork is a visual correspondence to the people who influence me expressively and emotionally. Through my paintings an unusual place is created. The surrounding thrives on emotion which then in return searches for courtship. The brush, pencil, pen markings work together creating the right important mood, effect or texture. Certain colors are helpful: They shape and enhance the mood. Scoring into the paint represents emotions. My works are sometimes are like two forces (Love and anger). These two words definitely describe my Art Work and themes. My visual setting(s) range from vacant stages, chairs, empty rooms, or a viaduct. This represents being in solitude, misplaced, or the desire to be coupled. My images are also sometimes doors ways: they may resemble body parts, Cathedrals, or a place of solitude. I work best when I have found the right muse or a social topic that affects me.



Aleta Pippin


Aleta Pippin’s curiosity about the natural and spiritual worlds becomes obvious in her paintings. A student of metaphysics, at one time wanting to be a Unity minister, she is inspired by the process of creation. “I’m interested in the consciousness that actually molds itself into form. This coalescing of matter is the very process by which we came into being. As we learn more about that consciousness or source energy, we will reconnect with our spiritual selves.



Ada Piolti


I was born in 1966 in Salerno where I live and work. I began to draw when I was very young. I was self-taught, with my dear father's help. In my works there are both my positive and negative emotions : there's my love, my sadness, my joy, my pain ... my life. Each particular moment of my life is in the colours of my paint. I have taken part in many manifestation and personal exhibition such as: - Art exhibition at Modigliani Gallery in Milano (2001); - Art exhibition at Concert Hall "Alberto Napolitano " in Salerno (2001); - Permanent personal art exhibition in the virtual gallery of "Arte & Arte", a cultural association on the web site ARTONWEB (www.artonweb.it) I take part also to any competitions whit the win of any prize. My works are published in the following catalogues : - "Arte Italiana dal Novecento ad Oggi" (publishers "L'Altro modo di volare") - "Aspetti storici dell'arte contemporanea" - international edition - (publishers "Leadership Group")



Christina Maria Pistone Latsch


New York artist



Richard Pitts


The sculptural direction in my work establish and reflect a felt environment and evoke a staged space. Like columns in a temple or cathedral, they make space for a kind of thought. My totems reflect space. They are about making viable the invisible that surround them.

A single fragment of sculpture like a single Greek column makes visible the wonder of a whole building. This wonder is the space, the building block of scared thoughts not just about making visable the invisible but emphasizing that which is not seen as most important and without boundaries.



John Plunkett


Artist



Kevin J Pocock


I am fascinated by the thoughts, memories and dreams we carry with us each day. The ones that make us tick. I present these ideas in a semi-abstract, defined architectural space, often using common symbols and elements. I like to incorporate the universal to represent the very personal. Private thoughts made public. The internal made external.

My work consists of paintings, drawings and digital media. Each piece starts as a very small, rough, spontaneous sketch. I jot an idea down wherever I might be and later select from these to make small, precise, coloured pencil drawings. I choose from these to create a larger piece. Usually this is an acrylic painting on canvas but it could be a digital animation. The final work is very close in spirit to the original sketch.

I like to contrast smooth paint with rougher, textured areas. I enjoy playing with symmetry and asymmetry, and mixing different architectural representations of space - perspective, elevation and 3D projections such as axonometric and isometric.

I was brought up in Dorset, on the south coast of England, where my memories of that landscape and coastline has helped shape my work. My work has also grown out of my studies as an architect at Cambridge University and my later occupation as a web designer. I love creating new spaces and mixing the artistic with the technical.


Dianna Ponting


Dianna Ponting is an international artist and instructor whose main aim in life is to introduce and convert the planet to the “chocolate” of the painting mediums, soft pastel. It is a major undertaking but not a difficult one as whom among us does not like chocolate.

Though Dianna’s style is entrenched in realism, her choice of subject matter is to say the least, eclectic. With a collection of top honours bestowed upon her from four prestigious art organizations, it has been noted that she has more letters trailing her name than can be found in it but she suffers this stoically and with much grace. Visitors are always welcome to her site and her studio.



Cyndee Poole


Artist Cyndee Poole is creating a new direction in the Abstract Impressionistic Movement through her exuberant use of color and complex depth. Bold washes and vibrant colors leap off her canvases, while her images explode in an energetic and wildly unique style.

Cyndee's paintings and vivid images are a reflection of her tropical roots and her active lifestyle. Her positive, creative attitude and passionate expression represent an optimistic view of the world. Her works are inspired by the abstract impressionistic movement as well as from her own inner creativity. Seasoned by traveling the world to study art and cultures, Cyndee has a passion for Modern Art, Abstract Impressionistic Art, Symbolism and Surrealism, as well as a love for the tropics. These influences combined can be seen in much of her work, where traditional styles compete with energetic impressions of the past 25 years.


Natalia Popova


Artist from Russia


Aurora Pope


I PAINT BECAUSE I AM COMPELLED TO EXPRESS A SENSE OF TIME. MY INSPIRATION COMES FROM DUSTY ARTIFACTS, LOST TRADITIONS, ANCIENT MATERIALS, AND ABANDONED SPACES. TO ME, THE LAYING ON AND SCRAPING OFF OF PAINT IS A BIT LIKE REMOVING THE VEILS OF TIME, ALLOWING THAT WHICH WAS FORGOTTEN TO BE FORGOTTEN NO MORE.


Jacob Porat


Jacob Porat is distinguished by his search for different, various forms of expression. The exhibitions he has held throughout the years expose the constant and changing elements of his works in all possible aspects: techniques, compositions, and themes. Although evident in his work, his literary education does not make his paintings an illustration of literary writings. Rather, it serves as the driving force of the painting, an enabler of deeper expression and intricacy of the visual statement.


Tatiana E. Pouzanova-Galatch


Born in Russia, and educated in Saint Petersburg, Pouzanova-Galatch has been living in Hungary since 1991. She is a member of the Association of Hungarian Creative Artists and of Summer School for Visual Art in Mártély. Pouzanova-Galatch has worked in book illustration and industry design, computer graphics, and animation. Her paintings and graphics can be found in personal collections in Russia, Ukraine, England, France, Germany, Austria, Greece, Cyprus, Israel, Bulgaria, Poland, USA, Holland, Spain, Italy, Luxemburg and Hungary.


John Powell


John's paintings expresses to the viewer the real and the imagined images.He explores the depth of the intent of his subjects.He expresses the passages of time in his paintings.*Received International recognition,as Who's Who in the World of Arts-15th,16th,17th & 20th, Editions by Marquis Who's Who Publication Board *Consultant Editor-Contemporary Who's Who,American Biographical Institute *Outstanding Scholars of the 21st Century*Outstanding People of the 20th Century,1st& 2nd Editions,*Outstanding Interlectuals of the 20th Century *Inducted in the book,"Living Legends",International Biographical,(IBC) Publications.


David Poxon


Brilliant fine art watercolours by the English artist David Poxon.



Antonio Puri


My art is my means of identifying with the universe. Therefore, I use circles as a timeless symbol to express my need for universality. My inspiration comes from the unity between the microscopic and the macrocosmic.

My painting process is also designed to bridge the gap between the known and the unknown. By using wax as a resist (modified batik technique), I am able to reveal several layers of paint which would ordinarily get covered up. Introducing a hybrid of techniques, symbols and various mediums, I am hoping to create Oneness.


Karen Preston


There is such an excitement that comes with creating something from nothing. One moment you have a blank space, and the next, there's a new world in front of you. When I finish a piece, and I like it, it's an incredible high. I can't sleep the night I finish a piece. It takes between a week and forever to complete a piece. Some come easily, while others take much longer. Like many artists, I feel the ones that come easy are sent to me from somewhere else. Wherever that is, I am grateful for the glimpse inside.



Agnes Preszler


Agnes Preszler is a selftaught digital artist. She is Hungarian and lives since 1990 in Italy, . She has never painted since elementary school, recently discovered a passion for handpainted digital art. Favourite themes: digital portraits of famous people, tasteful nudes, animals.



Ton Pret


Ton Pret, an inspired artist Through his work you see a distinct preference for the use of bright colors; Ton Pret says to express himself like this, gives him a warm-hearted and positive feeling. According to Ton the inner child he never suppressed, comes out on daily bases and especially in his artwork. For him this is enrichment in his life. As soon as Ton starts to paint his brain opens up and takes over to wield the paint brush in a way you can not imagine. For him this is a constant source of inspiration and the chief consideration goes out to get struck by a brilliant idea and create a fabulous painting. Take a look at the art and you might experience the positive vibration Ton Pret used in his work.



Cecilia Price


Cecilia Price is an artist who does it all, almost! Computer graphics, oils, watercolors, acrylics, murals, faux finishes, and probably there will be more before all is said and done! She has even squeezed out joint compound through a cake decorating bag with tips to create 3D work on her wall! She resides in a rural community in Alabama and spends all her time painting something. The joke around her place is that one had better not stand still too long for fear of getting paint on one's clothes! She calls herself an impressionist and enjoys painting all kinds of subjects from landscapes to portraiture. She is also the author of a watercolor workbook, "Adventures in Beginning Watercolor" which she markets from her site at artmaker.com.



Private Dog


Draging around the corpse once called art. Witness the bumpy road publishing artist Private Dog has to travell in order to find his save haven...




Djordje Prudnikoff


Yugoslavian artist Djordje Prudnikoff presents his fine portrait paintings, plus; figure painting, still life painting, landscapes and sky scapes, all done in a masterful style of elegance and grace.




Olena Pryduvalova


Born 1960 in Kyiv, Ukraine. Graduated 1986 from the Kyiv State Institute of Art.




Scott Pynn


I paint in acrylics, using alot of color and painting scenes only from my mind, I don't know where this stuff comes from but I love painting it and will until the day I die.

 

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