Michael Weiss is a Baltimore-based artist who uses traditional painting materials and methods to create contemporary images containing oblique, but not opaque content. He has exhibited widely throughout the region and his work is a part of numerous private and corporate collections.
heather joi tennant is an autodidactic, trans-disciplinary visionary artist. her work is inspired by nature, symbolism, mythology, technical research, collaboration with other gracious artists and experimentation. Hailing from the wild and wonderful hills of almost heaven west virginia but presently living in Maryland where she has exhibited and performed for approximately 15 years.
heather joi has shown in maryland business establishments, galleries, juried art exhibitions, and publications. "Filled with powerful, whirling
lines and strokes, they capture life and imaginary events
Alice Valenti is a Maryland-based artist who exhibits nationally. She has received several awards for her drawings and paintings, including an Elizabeth Greenshields Young Artist Grant and a Maryland State Arts Council Individal Artist Award. Her work is represented in collections at Johns Hopkins Hospital and SUNY Geneseo. Valenti received a BFA from the Maryland Institute College of Art, and an MFA from Towson University.
Brenda Kidera is a representational artist. Her paintings reflect a deep appreciation for the beauty of nature. Kidera captures moments in time with brushstrokes that convey the light and mood and delicate details of her subject matter. She spends hours in the field sketching, observing, and photographing, and she spends many more preparing for well-thought-out compositions from the information gathered. Her work has won many awards and has been exhibited throughout the US, including one-woman shows and major art exhibitions.
Doyle spent her early years learning from her father and graduated from the Baltimore School for the Arts and the Maryland Institute College of Art. Throughout her education she has spent time painting abroad in France, Italy, and Norway. She is currently an MFA candidate at Towson University.
Jennifer Kahn Barlow is an award winning oil painter. Her works are intimate, bold, and focus on the sweeter things in life: confectionery and nature.
Jennifer shows her work throughout the Mid-Atlantic region. Jennifer has been featured in the Washingtonian and Professional Artist magazines. Her paintings reside in the collections of The District of Columbia, Cookology Culinary School (Arlington, VA), along with numerous private collections.
Caleb Paul Kortokrax (b. 1987) received his MFA from Maryland Institute College of Art’s LeRoy E. Hoffberger School of Painting and his BSFA from Valparaiso University in Studio Art and Art Education. He has exhibited his work nationally and has lectured on his work at MICA, Towson University, Stevenson University, Anne Arundel Community College, and Valparaiso University. Recent solo exhibitions include: Carroll Community College, Westminster, MD; Stevenson University, Stevenson, MD; Brauer Museum of Art (portrait unveiling), Valparaiso, IN; and Canterbury Salon, Baltimore, MD.
Caroline Serafinas is a fine art painter working primarily with oil and watercolor. She draws inspiration from the world around her which often manifests as figurative and still life paintings. Caroline is active on social media where she documents her daily pursuit of making art while working as an engineer in the public sector. Her website name, The Colorful Engineer, is a nod to her dual interests.
Susan Due Pearcy was raised in St. Louis, MO. She studied art at Southeast Missouri
State University and graduated from New York University with a B.S. in Painting,
Graphics and Sculpture. She studied lithography at the Art Students League in New
York City, etching at Fort Mason Art Center & and reduction woodblock at Graphic Arts
Workshop in San Francisco, CA. Susan studied pastel at Montgomery College, MD.
She has participated in numerous continuing education workshops.
Susan worked in printmaking with the Graphics Workshop and the Printmaker’s