Gallery

Jacqueline Cho

Jacqueline Cho

10/29/2009

Throes of childbirth change a woman's perspective on herself, the world, and life. I was no exception to the rule. It may be a cliché, but truth all the same; my life changed, or transformed rather, after I had given birth to my daughter. I got to be able to see all different manifestations of paradox: seeing something in nothing, hearing the sound of silence, muteness, louder than the sound of stridence; Reading between the lines, so to speak.
I have come to terms with my own self and become more authentic, doing something not because it is something I am supposed to do but because it is something that I have made my own. Yes, authenticity has been my mantra all my life, elusive until my child was born.
My works here are expressions, or impressions, to be precise, of my views on life, felt deeply within me in my pursuit of authenticity. They may be cute, whimsical, or even evil, what have you, but there is one common thread running through all of them: they are mine, springing from my sense of authenticity.
If you are interested in more information about this artist email: info@threeravensgallery.com and enter Cho in the subject line. We will respond with details and tell you how you can purchase her work.
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David Cornelius

David Cornelius

11/01/2009

A Scottish artist of distinction
If you are interested in more information about this artist email: info@threeravensgallery.com and enter Cornelius in the subject line. We will respond with details and tell you how you can purchase his work.
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Bertrand Eberhard

Bertrand Eberhard

02/08/2010

I was born in 1952 in Paris. My first passions were music and movies, then sailing and many years later  painting. I still love playing music and going to see movies.


I got into painting while staying on the island of Itaparica in Brazil after three months of ocean crossing from France on a small sailing boat. On my way back to France a few months later, this material served as the basis for my first exhibition in a gallery in Antibes, on the south coast of France.


From then on I was less on boats and more and more into the visual arts. In the 80's I started to work as a freelance computer graphist specialising in interactive applications. I worked on graphic content for French museums and institutional clients. In the 90's I joined the French American advertising agency CLM BBDO and I am still with them 15 years  later.  During all that time I kept an almost daily practice of non digital drawing and painting.  I needed the feeling of the brush and the paper versus the many hours I was spending behind a screen with Photoshop and the like.


My work and styles are often quite unpredictable. When I set to work and I grab the brush soaked in Indian ink, I have most of the time no clues about what I am about to do--it might be a tree, a nude or something totally abstract.  I try to let it go from my hand rather than with a preconceived image I would have in mind. At times I like to play small games like doing a serial of inks with my eyes closed--if you never did that, I would advise you to try it, it's great fun!


For the last 15 years I attended a weekly live model drawing session. It gives one not only a sense of shapes and volumes, it is also a very relaxing and peaceful practice, close to a meditation in more than one way. This is probably how the female shape gradually invaded my creative world.  I often end up drawing a line that becomes a silhouette and 99% of the time it is a female one. Maybe I'm biased...,  at times I draw cats and trees too.


People have asked me the reason why I was often using the pages of old books or newspapers as a support for my inks. I have forgotten how that started, it was more than a decade ago. Maybe I did not have any more white pages that day to draw my nudes and I grabbed the newspaper, I don't recall too well but I liked how the printed words or photographs showed up through the black ink, adding an other dimension and an interesting text-ure to the visual. Now and then I get friends to offer me old accounting books--they know I will make good use of them.

If you are interested in more information about this artist email: info@threeravensgallery.com and enter Bertrand in the subject line. We will respond with details and tell you how you can purchase her work.
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Olga Gerke

Olga Gerke

10/03/2009

Olga was born in Leningrad (now St Petersburg), former USSR, and is currently living in Manchester, England.
She studied Art at one of the top art schools in the country and also has a degree in Law from St Petersburg State University. She has started to paint again quite recently and already participated in two exhibitions of Everyman gallery in Manchester.
Her influences include Emile Nolde, Japanese artists, Egon Schiele and many others.
Olga also writes fiction, short stories about everyday life, and she hopes one day her stories and an autobiographic short novel will be translated into English.
I like to reflect in my paintings the ideas of birth and growth, illness and health, density and transparency, spontaneity and randomness, austerity and abundance. My pictures are often colorful, but I also like muted colors and monochrome.
My preference of watercolor as a medium is aimed at reflecting the idea of ever-changing transparent world that we live in. I paint still lives, portraits and figurative art, and have recently started painting landscapes as well. I believe one never paints what one sees – instead one paints something that one can see beyond the visible. I try to reflect the ideas of strength or fragility or calm, and I pass the energy. “You don’t look for anything… You don’t look at anything. You look with” (Lisa Dierbeck, “One pill makes you smaller”).
If you are interested in more information about this artist email: info@threeravensgallery.com and enter Olga in the subject line. We will respond with details and tell you how you can purchase her work.
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Jason Lincoln Jeffers

Jason Lincoln Jeffers

11/27/2009

The ancients believed that art in all forms; music, song, dance, poetry, theatre, architecture, sculpting, painting and literature had the ability to heal--not just the physical body, but the mental and emotional bodies as well. The symbols and imagery that were inculcated into the artwork on pottery, mosaics, cylinder seals, temples and structures from ancient Sumerian, Egyptian, Mayan, Aboriginal, Indian, Chinese, Minoan, Druid, Greek and other cultures were much more correlative than most people realize. In fact, they are timeless and archetypal.
Like quantum physicists, I believe in parallel universes and in multiple dimensions. Through my Transformational Art, I have illustrated the esoteric, subtly infusing a variety of elements carrying a common thread between ancient mysticism and modern science. This multidimensional art is not bound to a particular style or technique but is fashioned with the conscious intention to have a metamorphic effect on the viewer.
The ancients believed that art was multidimensional and could initiate healing and transformation. Perhaps it is time to look past this world and into the unknown. Something is trying to form.
If you are interested in more information about this artist email: info@threeravensgallery.com and enter Jeffers in the subject line. We will respond with details and tell you how you can purchase his work.
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Rudi Keimel

Rudi Keimel

07/28/2009

Born in Austria, I completed my studies in Architecture in Vienna; a self-employed architect over many years, winner of many competitions, Member of the Art Society in Vienna, started already 1987 intensively with watercolours.
After experiencing great influences through Professor Rudolf Eisenmenger, University in Vienna, I started in a realistic style, extended my work in oil and acrylic, painted landscapes and interesting city motives up to the new millennium.
Since I lived in Australia my desire to work abstract intensified through influences of native art.
Over the years, I had the opportunity to exhibit in Brisbane, Gold Coast, Kuala Lumpur, Austria, Stuttgart-Germany and recently in Slovakia.
My artistic tendency in the last years led me through many artistic experiences and developments to a very diversified style. This allows me to use variable approaches to varied themes in different medias.
My intensive work represents and expresses my Australian influences and environment.
My desire is to share my work with art enthusiasts.
If you are interested in more information about this artist email: info@threeravensgallery.com and enter Rudi in the subject line. We will respond with details and tell you how you can purchase his work.
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