It has been a very successful show at the Nan Miller Gallery in Rochester, NY. A major work “Yellow Barn Seneca” seen below sold the opening night to well known collectors of contemporary art in the New York area. The following encaustic work is a featured piece and is new in a series of crossover works combining encaustic with oil painting on linen. If you are in the area check out the exhibit. The invitation card is shown below and the show has been extended to November 3, 2015.
Yellow Barn Seneca, oil on linen, 54 X 64″ Read more about the creation of Yellow Barn Seneca and other works at the “All About Paint Blog”
Cross over Series: Encaustic and oil on panel and linen. 37 X 49″ at the Nan Miller Gallery
Exhibit extended through November 2, 2015
New work on view at the Nan Miller Gallery October 2015
Linda Bigness is an internationally exhibited artist who maintains a gallery/studio in Syracuse, New York. Her work has been exhibited in several prestigious solo and group shows that have involved notable jurors such as art critic Clement Greenberg, Ivan Karp, director of OK Harris Gallery in NYC, and Tom Piche, director of the Daum Museum of Contemporary Art. In addition, Bigness’ large scale paintings are often selected and commissioned for corporate and residential clients, including the Turning Stone Resort, Merrill Lynch Corporation, Haylor, Freyer and Coon, and Bausch and Lomb. She continues to exhibit professionally at several venues with artwork featured frequently at the Nan Miller Gallery in Rochester, NY.
Presently she is working on her latest book and exhibition about abstract art and the contemporary processes used by working artists today. Part of the research for this book is taken from the workshops she teaches and her oil painting and mixed media collage experience. For over 30 years Bigness has used her expertise to share with others the unique beauty and processes of her chosen medium through writing, teaching and professional exhibits.
Her first book “Paint It, Tear It, Create It” offered the reader insight into visual abstract thinking through the process of collage into painting. She continues to explore the abstract through surface manipulation using encaustics and oil and is currently working on a new series, the “Journey Stones Revisited,” a reflection upon her extensive travels throughout the United States and Europe.
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