Posts

Showing posts with the label artwork

Oil Painting: Anna Hineman Roberts -- Flowers in Vase (Still Life)

Image
Oil Painting: Anna Hineman Roberts Flowers in Vase (Still Life) 14 x 18 inches (unframed) 16 x 20 inches (framed) ________________ Oil Painting: Anna Hineman Roberts Flowers in Vase (Still Life) 14 x 18 inches (unframed) 16 x 20 inches (framed) ________________ Oil Painting: Anna Hineman Roberts (Signature) Flowers in Vase (Still Life) 14 x 18 inches (unframed) 16 x 20 inches (framed) ________________ Anna Hineman Roberts (1915 -2013) ________________ Oil Painting: Anna Hineman Roberts (1915 - 2013) Resume ________________ Anita Siegel (1915 - 2006) also painted in bright colors ___________________ Title : Flowers in Vase (Still life) Artist : Anna Hineman Roberts Size : 14 x 18 inches (Without frame) Size : 16 x 20 (With frame) Where acquired : Shrewsbury Goodwill Date acquired : December 21, 2019 Paid : $4.00 (Not for sale) Ms. Roberts’ style reminds me of my late mother-in-law’s (Anita Siegel) work. The colors are so vibrant an

The Kaleidoscope Bowl

Image
The Kaleidoscope Bowl (top) ___________________ The Kaleidoscope Bowl (side) ___________________ The Kaleidoscope Bowl (bottom) ___________________ “The aim of art is to represent not the outward appearance of things, but their inward significance.” – Aristotle _________________ Occasionally one picks up an item that doesn’t have much monetary value, and yet it feels as though it has vast psychic value. While on vacation in Sioux City, Iowa, I picked up such an item: a ceramic/pottery bowl at a thrift store that absolutely carries some kind of positive power – what,  I don’t know, just that I “feel” something coming from it. It’s very weird because I usually only feel such spirituality from rocks and mineral specimens (and people, of course). It was obviously done at the hand of child or a childlike person. While the young artist has a fine sense of color, the piece itself is not a wowzers in terms of its physical attributes and form. In fact, it’s a bit

Memoir Madness: Driven to Involuntary Commitment