Sharon B Fuller
I paint in watercolor and acrylic on paper and wood panels. I love watercolor because it combines luminosity with soft edges and unpredictable results. Painting in acrylic introduced me to many layers, textural effects and collage elements. I find the space between representational and purely abstract images most compelling. My subject matter varies based on what I find intriguing and challenging but includes many landscape settings.
Bria Edwards
Bria Edwards–a Washington, D.C. native and B.F.A. Graphic Design graduate of St. John’s University–spent over a decade scouting and scaling the visual arts circuit before finally finding her niche. Until then, she had been sure of only a few things–of these things. She needed texture. Her hands needed to bend and shape and mold divergent media, never tethered to just a computer keyboard or canvas. Edwards also needed her pallet-knife and vibrant colors to manifest her 2D portraitures–immersive and palpable opuses that both tangibly and visually debunk the monolithic myths about black people.
Neha Misra Studio
First generation immigrant Neha Misra (she/her) is a contemporary eco-folk visual artist, poet, and an award winning climate justice advocate. Neha’s Earth stewardship centered multi-disciplinary studio uses the transformative power of art to build bridges between our private, collective, and planetary healing. Neha has been recognized as a Regenerative Artivist by Design Science Studio – a partnership between the Buckminster Fuller Institute and habRitual for world’s leading planet conscious artists.

Patricia Dubroof on Great Day Washington

See more information about Patricia Dubroof on Great Day Washington
Aired on March 9, 2016:
I discuss my “Conversations” show at the Sandy Spring Museum, as well as my portraits of caregivers. During the filming of this segment, I painted a portrait of GDW host Markette Sheppard.

This clip is edited from the original segment "What's New at Sandy Spring Museum?".
Year: 2016
Subscribe to Painting