October Featured Artists
Plenty to Talk About
Featuring Pam Dixon and Jean Purnell
An exhibition of the work of Benicia artists and friends Pam Dixon and Jean Purnell, who met through art. Pam's painting and sculpture boldly and playfully capture her subjects through line, paint, collage, and mixed media. Jean's paintings are inspired by the beauty of the natural landscape, captured with a painterly sense of calm and restfulness.
"We are so different, and we learn from each other. There's always plenty to talk about."
September 29th through October 30th.
An Artists Reception will be held Saturday, October 15, from 4 to 6 p.m.
Pam Dixon describes herself as a Bay Area figurative artist whose art developed during the California funk movement. She began her career in free-lance commercial and industrial art, later becoming a serious exhibiting artist in the 1980s. Born in San Francisco, she was raised in Carmel. She moved to Benicia in the 1970s, just as the art scene was beginning to flourish here. A longtime Benicia resident, she founded Gallery 621, a co-op for contemporary artists in Benicia.
The beauty of nature creates endless inspiration for Jean Purnell. She paints landscapes and nature-inspired still life. Working mainly in oils, her paintings explore the landscapes of northern California, as well as familiar scenes of Maryland and Pennsylvania.
August Featured Artists
August 18 through September 25
Reception Saturday, September 3, 4 - 6
July Featured Artists
June Featured Artists
LIMINAL SPACES
Featuring Linda Stevenson Dunlop and Tom Arie Donch
Linda Stevenson Dunlop has been an exhibiting Artist for over 40 years. Bringing color, form, and movement to the forefront of her abstractions, she works in a variety of media, including painting, drawing, monotype print, and sculpture. Dunlop shares a body of artwork that is inspired by “mourning in the process of living”. She reflects “change is amongst us all. I express this through painting emotions and the sensitivity to loss. I find this is the greatest truth one can give to the world as an Artist”.
Tom Arie Donch began his career creating relief sculptures about the socially disenfranchised and environments that oppress. At the age of 23 he started to work with communities creating public art and sculptural environments. As a founding member of the Community Built Association, his work brought people together through active participation and involvement. After 42 years and hundreds of public projects in 21 States he has returned to creating relief sculptures with political, environmental and social concerns. Sculpting liminal spaces his work also focuses on the human condition and our inner journeys.