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Here is a listing of artists whose work is featured at Gallery Saint Martin.
Click on the artist's image
on the left for additional information and samples of their work.
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Robin Braun
"Rousseau’s magical dreamworld, minus the sleeping gypsy."
Robin Braun wanted to be a painter for as long as she can remember. Thinking that painting wasn’t an actual profession, she concentrated on achieving a liberal arts degree instead. When she later worked in the curatorial department at the San Francisco Museum of Art, she realized that she could, indeed, make a living focused on her creative side.
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Nic Coviello
"An auspicious reunion."
From his first exhibit at the New York World’s Fair to his current role as Lecturer in Digital Design at the University of Pennsylvania, artist Nic Coviello has been exploring the natural world – and bringing forth botanical imagery filtered through his highly personal, technology-assisted artistry.
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Matt Curtius and Gina Triplett
"You Take a Curtsy, I'll take a Bow."
...is but one example of the playfully quirky titles that Matt Curtis and Gina Triplett give to their collaborative paintings.
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Sandra C. Davis
"Modernist Sensibility-Old-World Technique"
Using turn-of-the-century film developing processes, Sandra Davis’ photographs cast her subject matter in an ethereal glow that find poignant beauty in the decay of abandoned places.
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Susan Hall
"A Joyful Journey of the Spirit."
Susan Hall's work has been the subject of numerous exhibitions in major galleries and museums throughout the United States. She has received fellowships from the Adolph and Esther Gottlieb Foundation, a Pollock-Krasner Grant and two National Endowment for the Arts awards.
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Robert Kaupelis
"Live, love, draw."
Robert Kaupelis is a legendary New York artist known for his exuberant paintings that have been called the “equivalent of Nature’s raiment.” In addition to a painting career that has produced more than 50 one-man exhibitions and seen the inclusion of his work major museums, Robert Kaupelis has also been cited as one of the outstanding teachers in the nation.
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Naomi Limont
"A chorus and dialogue of experience and creation."
"Naomi Limont is an accomplished artist who literally does it all. She is a painter, printmaker, bookbinder, and papermaker - a twentieth-century femina universale. Her art is a total, integrated process…surely a singular one."
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Art imitates art.
Leah MacDonald's considerable experience in the realms of photography, encaustic painting and mixed media have produced a significant body of artwork describing sensuous narratives of women.
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Christopher Meredith
"Giving Mid Western muscle to Middle Eastern flourishes"
Christopher Meredith credits his experience in the U.S. Navy with spurring his already strong fascination with the Middle East."Even as a child, he explains, "I would pour through National Geographic magazines at the library, fascinated by the bright, bold colors of the buildings, fabrics, the food: everything."
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Carol Rauch
"Whimsical watercolors and prints."
Carol Rauch dove headlong into watercolor painting after retiring from a successful career as a marketing consultant to design professions. At the suggestion of a friend, she decided to copy paintings by famous artists and incorporate the likeness of a Bouvier in each one.
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Barbara Schaff
“A New Dimension”
Barbara Schaff received a Certificate Degree from the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, a BA from Syracuse University, and studied ink painting at the China National Academy of Fine Art in Hangzhou, China.
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Monique Seyler
"Nature Merging With Impulse"
The New York Times art reviewer, William Zimmer, described a work from Monique Seyler's Cold Spring series as "nature merging with impulse…where colors conspire to create a genuine chill and the sensation of the ocean in winter."
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Ursula Sternberg
"A Woozy Delirium of Liberation"
Over the course of her life, Ursula Sternberg, a self-taught artist, developed a masterful visual vocabulary. Her figurative work portrays her subjects in pensive reflection, joyous reverie, or simple but profound acts of living.
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Julie Zahn
"Serenading the Moon."
Printmaker and painter Julie Zahn was born and raised in Bethesda, Maryland. After graduating from college, she spent two years in rural Japan where she drew and painted the landscape. Since the 1980’s she has resided in Philadelphia where she completed the Certificate Program at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts. Returning to Japan on a travel scholarship, Julie learned the traditional art of katazome from an antique screen restorer in Kyoto. Also called stencil dyeing, katazome is a versatile technique used in fabric design.
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