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<title>Blue Rain Gallery - Artist List</title>
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<description>The Artists from Blue Rain Gallery</description>
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			<title>Karen Abeita</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/karen_abeita/</link>
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			<title>Tony Abeyta</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/tony_abeyta/</link>
			<description>Tony Abeyta is considered one of the finest young contemporary painters today. Abeyta explores a variety of mediums including oil, charcoal, and sand.  Because he experiments with techniques and images so much, his creativity transcends any label that may be used to identify his work.  Abeyta was commissioned to create the signature image of the National Museum of the American Indian&#8216;s groundbreaking opening in Washington, DC. Many of Abeyta&#8216;s highly original works are depictions of complex Navajo beliefs; they evoke the notion that there is power in everyone and everything. Avid collectors will consider their Abeyta piece to be a gift from a higher power.</description>
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			<title>Rik Allen</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/rik_allen/</link>
			<description>These works have been in the form of space craft, rockets and scientific apparatus . In this way, art and technology share a symbiotic grace. Most of the current work is made primarily of glass and metal, which expresses a paradoxical symbiosis. The relationship between the rigid strength of metal with glass&#8216; apparent fragility creates an alluring tension. On the surface, these are interplanetary vessels &#8211; literally transportive and technologically designed to explore the rugged desolation of outer space.  Vehicles that have a rough, worn exterior, suggests use, imperfection, and history. These craft contain elements bundled within their transparent bulkheads, the center of these vessels is an exposed nucleus, or core, that may be seen to represent incarnation of energy while representing both outer and inner spheres of exploration and curiosity. This series&#8216; theme of &amp;quot;futuristic antiquity&amp;quot; reflects my interest in the literary fictional worlds of Jules Vern, H.G. Wells, Arthur C. Clark, and Isaac Asimov and their influence on the scientific world. Inspiration has also been from reading the accounts of early scientific pioneers of the nineteenth and twentieth century, such as Nicola Tesla, Robert Goddard, Wernher von Braun, and other great scientific minds.


While many of my pieces have reference to my curiosity of science, it is also important to me to convey humor, and lighthearted fun that rockets and fiction embody. Presently, I am working toward exploring simple forms that lend a sculptural venue and provide a theater of the human condition, while also making work related to natural science and its parallels in our culture and the human condition, all wrapped up in the form of a rocket. How funny is that?

~Rik Allen


RIK ALLEN
Born: Providence, Rhode Island

EDUCATION
1991			BA, Anthropology   	Franklin Pierce College, NH                 
PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE
Present             	  	Sculptor 				Mixed media                		
2009			Board Member :Glass Art Society
2008 May/August	 	Assistant Artistic Program Director    Pilchuck Glass School
2007 			Scholarship Juror, Glass Art Society
1995 to 2007 	    	Engraving &amp;amp; Cold work        	William Morris, Sculptor
1994			Teaching Assistant		Pilchuck Glass School
1995 to 2002 		Studio &amp;amp; Cold Shop Coordinator    	Pilchuck Glass School
1993 to 1994	      	Studio Assistant	            	James Watkins Glass Studio
1992 to 1994        	Studio Assistant	            	Michael Schiener Sculpture Studio
1991 to 1994	      	Studio Assistant	            	Jonathon Bonner Sculpture Studio 
1991 to 1992       		Studio Assistant			Daniel Clayman, Glass
1991			Studio apprentice, Ceramics        		Lee Segal 

SOLO EXHIBITIONS
September 2009		Traver Gallery				Tacoma, WA
2007-2008		&amp;quot;Innersphere: Sculptural Works of Rik Allen&amp;quot;
			Science Fiction Museum and Hall of Fame 
			November 16, 2007 - April 28,2008		Seattle, WA
2007			Traver Gallery &amp;quot;Innersphere&amp;quot;		Seattle, WA
2006			Thomas Riley Galleries 			Cleveland, OH		
2003			&amp;quot;Vestiges of Galactic Craft&amp;quot;, Vetri Gallery	Seattle, WA
2001  			R.Duane Reed Galleries- Solo Show	St. Louis				
2000			Foster White Gallery Solo Show		Kirkland,WA
1998                  		Foster White Gallery - Solo Show	               Kirkland, WA
	
SELECTED GROUP EXHIBITIONS
2009			&amp;quot;Inspired by&amp;quot;, Traver Gallery		Tacoma, WA
2009			SOFA NY				New York, NY
2008			SOFA Chicago				Chicago, IL
2007			Palm Beach 3				West Palm Beach, FL
			Pratt Fine arts Center			Seattle, WA
2006  			SOFA Chicago				Chicago, IL
			Palm Beach 3			            West Palm Beach,	FL              				LewAllen Contemporary			Santa Fe, NM
2005			Thomas Riley Galleries			Cleveland, OH
			SOFA Chicago				Chicago, IL
2003			William Traver Gallery			Seattle, WA
&amp;quot;Looking North from Pilchuck&amp;quot; Group show  Camano Island,  WA
2002			Houston Center for Contemporary Craft	Houston, TX
			Goldesberry Gallery			Houston, TX
			Solomon Dubnick Gallery			Sacramento, CA
2001			Holsten Gallery				Stockbridge, MA
			Gallerie Dorita				Atlanta, GA
2000         		 Baisden Gallery- Group Show		Tampa, FL
			SOFA Chicago				Chicago
                                   	 R. Duane Reed Gallery Group Show	St. Louis/Chicago
			Gallerie Dortita! Group Exhibition 		Atlanta, GA
1999			R. Duane Reed Galleries			Chicago / St. Louis
			Holsten Gallery				Stockbridge, MA
		Gallerie Dorita!				Atlanta, GA
			Gallerie Alegria				Birmingham, AL
			Arts of Utah Gallery			Salt Lake City, UT
1998 			Port Angeles Fine Arts Center             	Port Angeles, WA
	          		Pilchuck Staff Exhibit Foster/White Gallery	Seattle, WA
1997                      	William Traver Gallery Group Show	Seattle, WA
	Poncho Juried Auction                                 	Seattle,WA
	Vetri International Glass             		Seattle, WA
1996			Jewish Federation Mennorah Show		Seattle, WA	     
		History of the World Gallery                   	Camano Is., WA
BIBILIOGRAPHY

 2009	Davison, Dave, &amp;quot;Emerging artists reveal their inspirations at Traver Gallery&amp;quot; May, Tacoma Weekly
 2008                     Simon, William. &amp;quot;Dreams Lift off at the Science Fiction Museum &amp;quot; July, Launch Magazine
 2008                     Hackett, Regina. &amp;quot;Innersphere: Sculptural Works by Rik Allen&amp;quot;; Seattle 
	Post Intelligencer; April,25 2008
2008	Glowen, Ron &amp;quot;Innersphere: sculptural works by Rik Allen&amp;quot; Review March/April 		   American Craft Magazine
2008 		Wagoneer, Shawn; &amp;quot;Innersphere, Sculptural works by Rik Allen&amp;quot;, March   
Art Glass Magazine. pp. 64-68
2008                     Cass, Robin. &amp;quot;Innersphere; Sculptural Works by Rik Allen&amp;quot;; Critical Issues; 
                               Glass Art Society News, March	
2007                    Goffredo, Theresa. &amp;quot;Blast off into a world of space imagination&amp;quot;, The Herald, Everett, WA                
2007                      Lintereur, Josh. &amp;quot;Space Sculptures-the Voyages of an Artist&amp;quot;, Skagit Valley Herald,      November 22, 2007,
2006		500 Glass Objects,  pg. 384 			 Lark Publishing 
2005		&amp;quot;Team Effort&amp;quot;Artisan Northwest Magazine  	 Spring Issue pg.24
2002		Carol Duvall Show				Aired May 23, 2002
		&amp;quot;Marriage in Glass&amp;quot; Interviewed/filmed working in glass studio	
2001		American Craft Magazine June/July		Portfolios Section p76

TEACHING EXPERIENCE
2009 July	Instructor- Sculpture			Pilchuck Glass School, Stanwood, WA
2008		Instructor -Glass 				Penland Craft Center, Penland, NC
2007		Instructor- Sculpting techniques 		Toyama Institute of Glass
Toyama, Japan
2006		Instructor &#8211; Sculpture Techniques		International Glass Festival, 
Stourbridge, England
2006 		Instructor &#8211;Surface + Sculpture		Pittsburgh Center for Glass, 

SELECTED COLLECTIONS
Boeing World Headquarters 				Chicago, IL
Toyama Institute of Glass					Toyama, Japan
Paul Allen Family Foundation Collection			Seattle, WA
Betsy  &amp;amp; Richard Ehrenberg 				Santa Fe, NM
Flying Heritage Collection					Everett, WA
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			<title>Angel  Amaya</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/angel_amaya/</link>
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			<title>Roberto  Banuelos</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/roberto_banuelos/</link>
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			<title>Harrison Begay</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/harrison_begay/</link>
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			<title>Harvey Begay</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/harvey_begay/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<title>Joe Ben Jr.</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/joe_ben_jr./</link>
			<description>Joe Ben Jr. was born and raised in Shiprock, New Mexico. He first learned the traditional Navajo art of sandpainting from his father at age twelve. 

Ben aspires to bring this art form to the wider world. He creates all of his own pigments out of materials from the earth such as Lapis from Afghanistan, Galena from Morocco and diamond from Australia to name a few. Not to mention the natural reds and browns found in the earth on the Hopi and Navajo reservations near his birthplace. An extensive traveler, Ben collects sand from each place he visits and uses that sand in his art. 

Ben has taught sandpainting at the School of Fine Arts in Paris and the School of Fine Arts in Grenoble, and his work is exhibited worldwide.  In 1995, Ben was one of 60 artists invited to create a work in celebration of the 50th anniversary of the United Nations at their European headquarters in Geneva, Switzerland.  Sand was a fitting medium for that project, as sandpainting exemplifies the Navajo concepts of balance and order. In Joe Ben Jr.&#8216;s words sand: &amp;quot;Interprets the forces of nature as a contemporary expression of man&#8216;s place in relationship to the universe&amp;quot;.
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			<title>John Berger</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/john_berger/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<title>Mike Bird Romero</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/mike_bird_romero/</link>
			<description>Mike Bird Romero didn't start his jewelry career until his early thirties.  Prior, he served in the U.S. Marine Corps and spent several years as a salesman.   This sales experience accustomed him to talking about and explaining his work to clients, something regular Romero followers have come to relish. 
Serious collectors follow his jewelry waiting to see what he will do next.  His booth at Santa Fe's Indian Market is proof of their enthusiasm; it is often 12-people deep with buyers scrambling to see and collect his new work.
As a young boy, Romero observed other jewelers hard at work.  Ultimately however Mike Bird is a self-taught artist who possesses a mind that never ceases to absorb and process knowledge. 
His use of stones and metal, predominantly sterling silver, create simple and dramatic necklaces, earrings, bracelets, pins and other accessories.  His sketches of the dynamic petroglyphs from the canyon walls of San Juan Pueblo (where he lives) and of Barrier Canyon in Utah enhance the mysticism and magic of his jewelry.  
His work combines tradition and innovation.  With the help of his wife Allison, Romero also researches antique pieces of Native American jewelry, collects and repairs them.  Replicating styles from the past, like replicating the Masters, gives an artist the knowledge to create his own contemporary work.  
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			<title>Autumn Borts</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/autumn_borts/</link>
			<description>&quot;Developing a unique style has been challenging for Santa Clara potter Autumn Borts. As a child Borts was surrounded by the pottery making of her mother Linda Cain and grandmother Mary Cain. Her first pieces were small pots and animal figurines. Gradually, as she matured, so did her shapes and imagery.

Borts greatest influence has been that of her natural surroundings. It is not uncommon to find hummingbirds, dragonflies, and flowers captured in frozen moments like a photograph carved intricately on to her pots. Borts says, &quot;&quot;Inspiration can come from anywhere.&quot;&quot; Walking her dogs near her home may lead to new thoughts of unused imagery generated from the beautiful northern New Mexico landscapes. Borts recalls having seen an old Georgia Okeeffe poster at a train station and asking the manager if she could have it. This poster now resides in her studio and serves for inspiration for many of the floral designs that are now common on her pots.

Her use of multiple colored slips has also captured the interest of her peers and collectors. A typical red and tan vase may contain up to four or five different colors enabling her to accentuate different aspects of a design.

Over the last three years Bortss collectors have flocked to her shows in hopes of obtaining at least one piece of her outstanding pottery. All this attention is well deserved despite the fact that Borts has yet to receive any major award. Maybe in a soft, quiet way Borts is letting the public be her judge. Or maybe it is a testament of how good her work really is.&quot;</description>
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			<title>David Bradley</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/david_bradley/</link>
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			<title>Linda Cain</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/linda_cain/</link>
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			<title>Mary Cain</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/mary_cain/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<title>Joy Cain</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/joy_cain/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<title>Billy Cain</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/billy_cain/</link>
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			<title>Abel Harol Calabazo</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/abel_harol_calabazo/</link>
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			<title>Nancy  Callan</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/nancy_callan/</link>
			<description>Nancy Callan has been working as a glass artist in Seattle, Washington since receiving her BFA from the Massachusetts College of Art in 1996.  For the past twelve years, she has been a member of Lino Tagliapietra&#8216;s glassblowing team and has traveled throughout the world as his assistant.  Callan has built her skills working for many prominent glass artists including Flora Mace and Joey Kirkpatrick, Ginny Ruffner, and Josiah McElheny.  Since 2001, she has focused on developing her artistic voice as a glass sculptor. Her work embodies the skill and finesse of the Venetian tradition, but combines this pedigree with the wit and aesthetic sensibility of a contemporary artist.

Callan is highly influenced by pop culture, and references sources such as comic books (&amp;quot;Superhero Stingers&amp;quot;), children&#8216;s toys (&amp;quot;Tops&amp;quot;) and high fashion (&amp;quot;Plaid Winkles&amp;quot;) in her ongoing series.  Callan has exhibited her work nationally in major galleries and is preparing for the opening of an early-career survey at the Muskegon Museum of Art in Muskegon, Michigan February 26 &#8211; May 24, 2009.  The exhibit is titled Seventh-Inning Stretch: Glass by Nancy Callan, and will later travel to the Pittsburgh Glass Center in July 2009.  Blue Rain Gallery welcomes the artwork of Nancy Callan! 

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			<title>Cecil Calnimptewa</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/cecil_calnimptewa/</link>
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			<title>George Carlson</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/george_carlson/</link>
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			<title>Deldrick and Lorenda Cellicion</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/deldrick_and_lorenda_cellicion/</link>
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			<title>Ted Charveze</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/ted_charveze/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<title>Donna Clair</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/donna_clair/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<title>Alice  Cling</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/alice_cling/</link>
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			<title>Evelyn Cly</title>
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			<description></description>
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			<title>C. Concho</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/c._concho/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<title>Rodney Coriz</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/rodney_coriz/</link>
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			<title>Nestoria  Coriz</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/nestoria_coriz/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<title>Blue Corn</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/blue_corn/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<title>Angie  Crespin</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/angie_crespin/</link>
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			<title>Erin Currier</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/erin_currier/</link>
			<description>Today’s globalized, multinational, international, multilingual, on-line, on-the-grid, for-profit, fuel-driven, free-trading world of satellite-dished-out telenovelas that force feed fast food, Kevlar, Teflon, Zoloft, Botox, Perdue Roasters, and tomato sauce, is one of increasingly fierce conflicts of interest and interest rates, between the conquerors and conquered, dominators and dominated, capitalists and workers, employers and unemployed, overdeveloped and underdeveloped, overweight and underfed, first-class and so-called Third World, oppressors and oppressed, and the blessed and the damned.  As an artist born into a system which represents the former, I consequently seek to know and to make known the plight of the ill-understood latter: the nameless, faceless, voiceless, and marginalized, who, as Eduardo Galeano so eloquently puts it (We Say No), “Make history from below and from inside rather than to continue to suffer history from above and from outside.”

As a medium for my work, I have chosen materials that are readily available: the refuse and the packaging of products produced and consumed by every nation, for every nation, and translated in every language, on the planet.  I travel the world’s streets collecting the discarded with which to portray the discarded: the women, the mothers, the martyrs,the mothers of martyrs, barrio dwellers, day laborers, forced laborers, slave-wage laborers, shoeshine boys, lady boys, schoolgirls, gang girls, cholos, guerilla poets, Sandinistas, Zapatistas, Chavistas, the indigenous, the indigent, imprisoned, objectified, nullified, vilified, unfortified, unrecognized, silent, forgotten, and ordinary.  I especially attempt to lend voice to those who fight for human rights, social change, and who resist unjust established orders.  I thus seek to discover humanity and to transform reality by humanizing it through art.

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			<title>Tony Da</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/tony_da/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<title>Neil David</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/neil_david/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<title>William C. Davis</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/william_c._davis/</link>
			<description>William Davis paints with glass, his medium cut and fused to create painterly interpretations of southwest inspired landscapes.  &amp;quot;Glass is female,&amp;quot; states Davis.  &amp;quot;It is seductive and addictive.&amp;quot;  This is precisely why the veteran ceramic and glass artist began to exclusively work with glass in 1990 after a fifteen year period of expression in both mediums.
New works coming soon.</description>
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			<title>Kimo DeCora</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/kimo_decora/</link>
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			<title>Sean Diediker</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/sean_diediker/</link>
			<description>Sean Diediker is a painter&#8216;s painter.  His sweeping, faceted brushstrokes and painterly surfaces generate works that reveal the artist&#8216;s sensitivity to his medium and attention to the act of painting itself. Diediker assembles bold colors, chiascurro and a cutting-edge sense of design to create a highly original body of work that separates him from his contemporaries. 

His imagery captures biblical allegories, narratives and concepts and renders them contemporary.  Classical iconography, in Diediker&#8216;s hands, becomes a thoroughly modern symbolic language that is fresh, visually striking, and germane to our times.  &amp;quot;To me,&amp;quot; states Diediker, &amp;quot;they seem to represent timeless ideas and situations.  I have made an attempt to take these biblical concepts and, through contemporary subject matter, bring them closer to the viewer.&amp;quot;  

What the viewer is brought closer to are portraits, still-lives, landscapes and combinations of these forms that are balanced and timeless.  All of Diediker&#8216;s works are tied together by their solid sense of form and compositional structure. Whatever he paints, the same expressive vision and reaction to subject and medium are present.  &amp;quot;I enjoy the whole creative process, taking an idea and constructing a painting around it,&amp;quot; states Diediker, whose father is a general contractor, &amp;quot;I feel paint much in the same way that my father would erect a building.  Much thought in planning, careful design, step by step and layer upon layer&#8230;until the work is done and standing on its own.&amp;quot;  

The oldest of four brothers, Diediker is originally from Newbury Park, California.  After his formal training in Fine Arts, he has lived and worked in the Rocky Mountains of Utah and has just recently returned from a year-long trek around the world. Travel and environment are important to the artist.  &amp;quot;I enjoy using subjects that are tangible to me,&amp;quot; states Diediker, &amp;quot;You might say that my work is directly affected by where I&#8216;m living,  the people, city, landscape&#8212;the things I see every day. I enjoy observing the stimulus and reaction of different human situations.  Environment should affect and artist&#8216;s work; If it doesn&#8216;t, you&#8216;re painting decorations.&amp;quot;  </description>
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			<title>Cesar  Dominguez</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/cesar_dominguez/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<title>Juanita Suazo  Dubray</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/juanita_suazo_dubray/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<title>Preston Duwyenie</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/preston_duwyenie/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<title>Christine  Eustace</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/christine_eustace/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<title>Kirk Family</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/kirk_family/</link>
			<description>&quot;From a pueblo not known for its jewelers comes a family creating a strong jewelry legacy. The heritage began 30 years ago with patriarch Andy Kirk, who studied biology at the University of New Mexico. Hoping for a hobby, he took an extracurricular jewelry course and immediately displayed great natural talent. Kirk made more money producing jewelry than anything he could do with biology so it became his vocation.

In the 1970s, the Santa Fe Indian Market had to create a new category when Kirk entered his gold jewelry in competition, instead of traditional silver. One of the first Native Americans to use gold, he has always been known for cutting-edge techniques and wants to maintain that reputation and pass it on to his descendants.

&quot;&quot;By the time I was 12, Dad made me work in his studio, whether I wanted to or not,&quot;&quot; says daughter Melanie. At 13, she won her first award. At 17, Santa Fe Indian Market bestowed on her its most promising young artist award.
Under pressure getting ready for Indian Market one year, Melanie asked her boyfriend Michael Lente for help finishing her jewelry. Like her father, Lente demonstrated such natural talent that she encouraged him to make jewelry. Soon they both attended the Gemological Institute in Santa Monica, California, where they graduated with degrees in jewelry making and got married.

Today their company continues the family legacy as M&amp;M Jewelers, often incorporating unanticipated stones like diamonds. The Kirk family wants to demonstrate to the uninformed that Native jewelry is often something totally unexpected. Made with fine workmanship and pride, Indian jewelry is labeled that because of the culture of its maker and an inherent spirituality that exists as part of all that he or she does.&quot;</description>
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			<title>Ismael Flores</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/ismael_flores/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<title>Susan Folwell</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/susan_folwell/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<title>Polly Rose Folwell</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/polly_rose_folwell/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<title>Jody Folwell</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/jody_folwell/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<title>Juanita Fraque</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/juanita_fraque/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<title>Verlin Fred</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/verlin_fred/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<title>Malcom  Fred</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/malcom_fred/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<title>Henry Fred</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/henry_fred/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<title>Jim  Fred</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/jim_fred/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<title>Aaron Fred</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/aaron_fred/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<title>Hector Gallegos</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/hector_gallegos/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<title>Tammy Garcia</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/tammy_garcia/</link>
			<description>The two-thousand-year-old tradition of southwestern ceramics has been infused with a new energy and enthusiasm that has surprised and excited collectors and artists alike. Thoughtful and demure on the outside, Tammy Garcia contains an inner fire to create pottery that crackles with a spirited vivacity original to the art form.

Anyone who sees one of Tammys works is struck by her ability to stretch the boundaries of the clay to contain her vision. A potter's art is generally limited by the size and shape of the vessel he or she designs. In Tammys case, it is as if the clay itself attempts to expand to better convey her dramatic design work. Part of that sense stems from the amazing proportions of Tammy's pots. She thrills at self-imposed challenge, and this often leads her to create pottery of almost unheard-of size. The other part, however, comes from a true symbiosis between Tammy and her medium. Pottery has been an outlet of creative personal expression for two millennia; Tammy was brought up in a family steeped in the tradition, and is both respectful of, and thankful to, the powers that allow her to share her exquisite talents. In exchange, it seems she has been rewarded with clay and ash that yearn to hold the voluptuous shapes she molds and display her intensely animated designs.

The artwork that Tammy produces is at once instantly recognizable, yet difficult to categorize. This is the mark of a true artist; her work is constantly changing and reinventing itself, pushing the envelope and altering the medium of pottery for all who follow. She took the pueblo tradition of carving bands of design into vessels and shattered the rigid format of her ancestors.

Her designs come spilling out of her in such a rush that she eagerly uses the entire surface of her pots as her canvas, as opposed to etching motifs into a single band around the circumference, as had been the custom. She adapts and redefines cultural motifs into stylized structural carvings that explode across the surface of her works.

Tammy may take a leaf pattern, reverse it, rotate it, and send it undulating along the faade of an urn until the dizzying theme covers the exterior. She might then offset this barely restrained chaos by completing her pot with an unadorned, fluted lip. This flexibility and embracing of extremes is a trademark of Tammys revolution. Her dynamic creations have set her squarely at the forefront of contemporary pottery.</description>
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			<title>Wilfred Garcia</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/wilfred_garcia/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<title>Leah Garcia</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/leah_garcia/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<title>Elaina Garcia</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/elaina_garcia/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<title>Greg Garcia</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/greg_garcia/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<title>Gustavo Victor Goler</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/gustavo_victor_goler/</link>
			<description>Gustavo Victor Goler was raised in Santa Fe, New Mexico, among a family of Latin American art conservators and restorers. Goler's early years were spent apprenticing in is family's conservation studios where he was taught to carve. This was the segue to his interest in saints. He attended the University of New Mexico and later earned a degree in Graphics and Advertising Design from the Colorado Institute of Art.

Currently, he researches the works, techniques and history of New Mexican, European and Latin American carvers but devotes much of his time to exploring his own artistic pursuits. Victor's work is considered to be progressive and his increasing knowledge of iconography and religious themes as well as his growing ability to manipulate his medium have made him a popular sculptor. In addition to bultos and retablos, Goler has mastered other media including lithographs. His skills as a wood carver have elevated him to an award winning artist - including numerous First Place awards and two Grand Prize awards at Spanish Market in Santa Fe, NM. Goler has also consulted on and lectured about Santero techniques and history at notable venues including the Smithsonian Institution. His work can be found in publications, museum collections and churches across the country.

Victor resides in Talpa, NM, with his wife Whitney and young daughters Margot and Grace.</description>
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			<title>Fernando Gonzales</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/fernando_gonzales/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<title>Octavio Gonzales</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/octavio_gonzales/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<title>Gabriel  Gonzales</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/gabriel_gonzales/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<title>Cavan Gonzales</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/cavan_gonzales/</link>
			<description>Cavan Gonzales, &quot;Tse-whang&quot;, or &quot;Eagle Tail&quot;, is a leader in the polychrome revival at San Idelfonso Pueblo. He comes from a long line of distinguished Native American potters starting with his great-great grandmother, Maria Martinez. 

	Polychrome pottery requires the application of three or more colors of clay slip to the bowls to create one's design. Cavan's specialty is large sized bowls with finely painted motifs. He works in traditional methods though his designs are inspired by both past and present day life, including technology such as solar energy.

 Each pot by Cavan is a striving force in continuing the family tradition of making the very finest in pueblo pottery. Cavan's talents in the &quot;graphic arts&quot; are self-evident. Aside from Blue Rain Gallery, his art has been exhibited at the Kennedy Center in Washington, D. C. and at the New Mexico State Capital, to name a few places.

</description>
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			<title>R. C. Gorman</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/r._c._gorman/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<title>Agnes Gray</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/agnes_gray/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<title>Margaret &amp;amp; Luther Gutierrez</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/margaret_&amp;amp;_luther_gutierrez/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<title>Helen Hardin</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/helen_hardin/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<title>Debra Harvey</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/debra_harvey/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<title>Arturo  Hernandez</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/arturo_hernandez/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<title>Elsie Holiday</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/elsie_holiday/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<title>Arthur Holmes Jr</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/arthur_holmes_jr/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<title>Arthur Holmes Sr. (Huminimptewa)</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/arthur_holmes_sr._(huminimptewa)/</link>
			<description></description>
	  <pubDate></pubDate>
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			<title>Aaron  Honanie</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/aaron_honanie/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<title>Ronald Honyouti</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/ronald_honyouti/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<title>Brian Honyouti</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/brian_honyouti/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<title>Stetson Honyumptewa</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/stetson_honyumptewa/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<title>Norma Howard</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/norma_howard/</link>
			<description>Self-taught watercolorist Norma Howard touches the heart with poignant stories of her Choctaw and Chickasaw ancestors in Oklahoma. She transports you to an earlier time by capturing moments of everyday life - a grandmother stitching a star quilt on a porch, or a boy fishing with a cane pole at a cypress-filled lake. Her style recalls the pointillism of the Impressionists, but instead of dots, she painstakingly layers tiny, basket-weave brush strokes to produce a vibrant depth of color rarely seen with watercolors. Howard, who started by painting miniatures, has moved to larger canvases that demand countless strokes to achieve her trademark richness of color and detail.

&amp;quot;These subjects about how people survived in hard times and in everyday life that every tribe can relate to, wherever they lived. People tell me it&#8216;s the details that draw them into my paintings and capture their feelings. My inspiration will always be to tell my ancestors&#8216; story and honor the way they lived.&amp;quot; Sys Howard. </description>
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			<title>Sukey  Hughes</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/sukey_hughes/</link>
			<description>Sukey Hughes was born in 1945 and grew up in the Chicago area. She studied are at the Junior School of the Art Institue of Chicago and Pamona College, and in 1985 recieved a self-created degreee in Book Arts from Antioch University. In 1969 Ms. Hughes moved to Japan and began an apprenticeship in papermaking, which eventually resulted in her book, Washi: The World of Japanese Paper - considereed a classic in the field. Since 1980 Ms. Hughes has written, taught and lectured extensively on the subject of Japanese paper making. In 1986 she began her present work in which she manipulates handmade paper to resemble leather, creating ancient-looking gaments, shields and pouches. This has been a synthesis of two strong lifelong interests: Japanese papermaking and art of traditional peoples, specifically Nativer American art. Ms. Hughes currently resides in northern New Mexico. </description>
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			<title>Rondina  Huma</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/rondina_huma/</link>
			<description></description>
	  <pubDate></pubDate>
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			<title>David Jensen</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/david_jensen/</link>
			<description></description>
	  <pubDate></pubDate>
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			<title>Hyrum Joe</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/hyrum_joe/</link>
			<description></description>
	  <pubDate></pubDate>
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			<title>Charlie John</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/charlie_john/</link>
			<description></description>
	  <pubDate></pubDate>
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			<title>Andy Lee Kirk</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/andy_lee_kirk/</link>
			<description></description>
	  <pubDate></pubDate>
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			<title>Gene  Kloss</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/gene_kloss/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<title>Randall LaGro</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/randall_lagro/</link>
			<description>&quot;Down an ordinary alley off one of the busier streets in Taos is a shabby door in need of paint. Open it, and one enters a room full of fantastical paintings, monotypes, and panels, all awash in the clear northern light falling from a wall of windows. The work seem visions from Gothic fairytale, or half-remembered images from a haunting childhood fever dream. This is the studio of Randall LaGro, an artist and printmaker graced with the unusual talent of creating works that are often equal parts of the conscious and subconscious world. Hanging from every wall, leaning in corners, set on easels, and stacked on tables, LaGros pieces resonate with mystery and beauty.  His works are peopled by the common and the extraordinary, the transcendent and the loathsome.  As a viewer, one feels the images are disturbingly familiar.   It is as if LaGro is able to paint the dreamscapes and nightmares of humanity, and they are all gathered together in this high-ceilinged Cathedral of the Soul.

LaGro works most often with paintings and monotypes, two distinctly different methods that allow him great freedom in attempting his goals. &quot;&quot;I want to speak to the poets, artists, and philosophers, but I dont want to lose the guy on the tractor.  Art has always been language to me - thats its power.&quot;&quot;  The power inherent in the paintings of LaGro is overwhelming.  Using predominantly rich and somber tones on large-scale canvasses or wood panels, LaGro introduces viewers to figures of uncommon translucence, unsettling anguish, and uncertain perspective.  There is a musician seen through a rain-washed window; the dim androgynous shape in a blurred field leaning toward a bright, clear cluster of flowers; the blind artist working in his dark room, only vaguely aware of the demon lurking behind him. Much of the power of these works is in the ethereal atmosphere surrounding even the most mundane of subjects. LaGro also plays with reflective surfaces, such as glass and water, at times forcing the viewer to re-evaluate what his eyes may be seeing. 

LaGros monotypes are arguably his most unique creations. First covering a Plexiglas plate with sepia-toned ink, he has four to six hours to swab, wipe and scratch at the surface, slowly removing ink to reveal shapes and images of each work.  He then transfers the creation to paper by running the plate through an etching press.  These works, more than LaGros others, are drawn from the subconscious.  These are the monochromatic pieces that seem snippets of dreams, featuring the bare backs of women sprouting wings, pools of water thick with snakes, and strange reverse writing obscuring Venetian archways.  There is great depth to these monotypes.  Images are dynamic, coming into and sinking back out of focus as if momentarily bobbing to the surface.  One of these monotypes was entered in the prestigious 16th National Biennial of the Los Angeles Printmaking Society. From a field of fourteen hundred entries, only seventy-five works were chosen for the show. LaGro won an award for excellence in the medium.&quot;</description>
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			<item>
			<title>Jeremy Lepisto</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/jeremy_lepisto/</link>
			<description>Portland based glass artist, Jeremy Lepisto, utilizes cast glass to &amp;quot;highlight the simple components and ordinary workings of everyday situations to capture the complex in the common.&amp;quot;  His planar forms are minimal and imbued with renderings of architectural structures, landscapes and people.  Some of these works will focus on what the artist calls, &amp;quot;a detailed idea in juxtaposition to its general surrounding.&amp;quot;

Born		Fort Belvoir, VA 1974
Currently	Independent studio artist and co-owner of Studio Ramp LLC, Portland, OR	
	
	
EDUCATION

1993-1997	BFA with Honors (Majoring in Metals and Glass), New York College of Ceramics at Alfred University,
		Minors in Education and Art History, Alfred, NY

1996		Participant, Stephen Paul Day, Hot Glass Casting, Pilchuck Glass School, Stanwood, WA


EXPERIENCE

2009	Member of the Board of Diretors, Glass Art Society, USA

Guest Lecturer, Edinburgh College of Art, Edinburgh, Scotland, UK

Instructor, &amp;quot;Lines and Layers&amp;quot; Master class, Warm Glass UK, Wrington, England, UK

2008	Member of the Board of Directors, Glass Art Society, USA

	Co-Chair for &amp;quot;Forming Frontiers&amp;quot;, Glass Art Society Conference, Portland, OR

	Presenter, Ausglass &amp;quot;Open House&amp;quot; Conference, Canberra, Australia

	Co-Instructor, Post Ausglass Conference Kilnforming Workshop, Canberra Glassworks, Canberra, Australia

2007	Member of the Board of Directors, Glass Art Society, USA

Co-Instructor, &amp;quot;Constructing Concepts&amp;quot;, Session 4, Pilchuck Glass School, Stanwood, WA

Guest Lecturer, Rochester Institute of Technology, Rochester, NY

	Teaching Assistant for Silvia Levinson, Northlands Creative Glass, Lybster, Scotland

2006	Member of the Board of Directors, Glass Art Society, USA

	Guest Lecturer, Rochester Institute of Technology, Rochester, NY

	Guest Lecturer, Illinois State University, Bloomington, IL

	Guest Lecturer, Illinois Wesleyan University, IL

	Juror, &amp;quot;Emerge 2006&amp;quot;, Bullseye Glass Resource Center, Portland, OR

	Instructor, &amp;quot;Imagery in Kiln formed Glass&amp;quot;, Urban Glass, Brooklyn, NY
	
	Juror, &amp;quot;Working Glass: Employee Show&amp;quot;, Bullseye Glass Resource Center, Portland, OR
	
	Guest Lecturer, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale, IL












2005	Member of the Board of Directors, Glass Art Society, USA

	Guest Lecturer, California College of Art, Oakland, CA

	Co-Instructor, &amp;quot;Concept to Construction&amp;quot;, Session 4, Pilchuck Glass School, Stanwood, WA

	Invited Juror, &amp;quot;Pilchuck 27th Annual Auction, Pilchuck Glass School, Stanwood, WA

	Instructor, &amp;quot;In Depth Imagery&amp;quot;, Bullseye Conference 2005, Portland, OR

	Guest Presenter, Bullseye Conference 2005, Portland, OR

	Instructor, &amp;quot;Imagery in Kiln formed Glass&amp;quot;, Urban Glass, Brooklyn, NY

2004	Guest Lecturer, Personal Works, Lowe Art Museum, Miami, FL

	Instructor, &amp;quot;Basic Kilnforming Techniques&amp;quot;, University of Miami, Miami, FL

	Studio Coordinator Session Four, Pilchuck Glass School, Stanwood, WA

Guest Lecturer, &amp;quot;Kilnforming; Exploration of Firing Techniques&amp;quot;, Technical Resource Center, Glass Arts Society, New Orleans, LA

	Teaching Assistant for Deborah Horrell, Pilchuck Glass School, Stanwood, WA

	Instructor, &amp;quot;Kilnforming with Mel George and Jeremy Lepisto&amp;quot;, Canberra School of Art Summer School, Canberra, Australia

2003	Instructor, &amp;quot;Kilnforming Techniques&amp;quot;, Rochester Institute of Technology, Rochester, NY

Guest Presenter, &amp;quot;Artworks by Jeremy Lepisto&amp;quot;, Los Angeles Glass Alliance, Los Angeles, CA

Guest Presenter, &amp;quot;Painting with Light and Dark&amp;quot;, Oregon Glass Guild, Eugene, OR

Instructor, &amp;quot;In Depth Imagery&amp;quot; and &amp;quot;Slumping Demo&amp;quot; and &amp;quot;Coldworking Demo&amp;quot;, Bullseye Conference, Portland, OR

	Studio Coordinator Session Three, Pilchuck Glass School, Stanwood, WA

	Guest Presenter, &amp;quot;Thinking Outside the Glass Box-Panel Discussion&amp;quot;, Oregon Glass Guild, Portland, OR

2002	Instructor, &amp;quot;Working Deeper and Thicker&amp;quot; and &amp;quot;Painting with Light&amp;quot;, Warmglass.com Conference, Portland, OR

	Instructor, &amp;quot;Hot Glass Casting&amp;quot;, Firehouse 12, Vancouver, WA

	Flatshop Coordinator Session Five, Pilchuck Glass School, Stanwood, WA

	Campus Technician Session Two, Pilchuck Glass School, Stanwood, WA

	Teaching Assistant for Steve Klein and Johnathan Schmuck, Firehouse 12, Vancouver, WA

	Instructor, Hot Glass Casting, Contemporary Glass Makers of Ireland, Fermanaugh, Ireland

	Guest Presenter, &amp;quot;Fusing with Bullseye Glass&amp;quot;,Contemporary Glass Makers of Ireland, Dublin, Ireland
	      
	Visiting Instructor, &amp;quot;Kilnforming Techniques&amp;quot;, National College of Art and Design, Dublin, Ireland

2001	Co-Founder of Studio Ramp LLC, Portland, OR
		
	Lead Furnace Builder, Bullseye Glass Company, Portland, OR
			
	Teaching Assistant for Kelly McLain and Cathy Chase, Pilchuck Glass School, Stanwood, WA

	Teaching Assistant for Henry Halem, Pilchuck Glass School, Stanwood, WA



2000	Glass Technician Session Five, Pilchuck Glass School, Stanwood, WA

1999	Research and Education Lead Technician (&#8217;99-&#8216;01), Bullseye Glass Company, Portland, OR

1998      	Instructor, &amp;quot;Assemble Your Thoughts: Building on the Punty&amp;quot;, Hot Glass Casting Workshop, Pratt Fine Arts, Seattle, WA

1997	Production Manager Apprentice(&#8217;97-&#8216;99) , Bullseye Glass Company, Portland, OR 

	Studio Technician, Chimicum Glass Studio, Chimicum ,WA

	Production Assistant, River Dog Fine Arts Foundry, Chimicum ,WA

1995	Sales Representative (&#8217;95-&#8217;97), Libbey Glass Company, Toledo, OH

	Glass Blower (&#8217;95-&#8217;97), Tidal Wave Glass Studio, Toledo, OH 


SOLO EXHIBITIONS

2009	&amp;quot;New Work&amp;quot;, Lovetts Gallery, Tulsa, OK

	&amp;quot;New Work&amp;quot;, Blue Rain Gallery, Santa Fe, NM

2007	&amp;quot;A Place In Between&amp;quot;, William Traver Gallery, Tacoma, WA

	&amp;quot;New Work&amp;quot;, D&amp;A Fine Art, Studio City, California

2005	&amp;quot;Intersecting Lines&amp;quot;, William Traver Gallery, Seattle, WA

2004	&amp;quot;New Work&amp;quot;, Museum of Northwest Art, La Conner, WA

2003	&amp;quot;Monuments to Moments&amp;quot;, William Traver Gallery, Tacoma, WA


GROUP EXHIBITIONS

2009 	&amp;quot;Rising Stars&amp;quot;, Museum of American Glass, Wheaton, NJ

	&amp;quot;Wheaton Glass Weekend&amp;quot;, featured by Thomas Riley Galleries, Wheaton, NJ

	&amp;quot;Narratives from the Kiln&amp;quot;, Columbia Art League, Coumbia, MO

	&amp;quot;Portland Presence&amp;quot;, William Traver Gallery, Seattle WA

	&amp;quot;Vision Realized&amp;quot;, Moragn Contemporary Glass Gallery, Pittburgh, PA

	&amp;quot;Inspired By&amp;quot;, William Traver Gallery, Tacoma, WA

	&amp;quot;Glass Unexpected&amp;quot;, Space 301, Mobile, AL
	
2008	SOFA Chicago 2008, with Thomas Riley Galleries, Chicago, IL

	&amp;quot;New Work&amp;quot;, Blue Rain Gallery, Santa Fe, NM

	&amp;quot;House Guests&amp;quot;, Canberra Glassworks, Canberra, Australia

	&amp;quot;Repair and Replenish&amp;quot;, Beaver Galleries, Canberra, Australia






2007	&amp;quot;Glass at Daniel Kany Gallery&amp;quot;, Daniel Kany Gallery, Portland, ME

SOFA Chicago 2007, with Thomas Riley Galleries, Chicago, IL

&amp;quot;Architecture/Structure in Contemporary Craft&amp;quot;, The Society of Arts and Crafts, Boston, MA

	&amp;quot;Young Glass 2007&amp;quot;, Ebeltoft Museum, Ebeltoft, Denmark
	
&amp;quot;Blend&amp;quot;, Minthorne Gallery, Newberg, OR

2006 	SOFA Chicago 2006, with Thomas Riley Galleries, Chicago, IL

	&amp;quot;Synthesis: Fusing and Kilnforming&amp;quot;, Morgan Contemporary Glass Gallery, Pittsburgh, PA

2005	&amp;quot;Pilchuck Artists 2005&amp;quot;, William Traver Gallery, Seattle, WA

	SOFA Chicago 2005, with Thomas Riley Galleries, Chicago, IL

	&amp;quot;20/20: Twenty Artists / Twenty Years&amp;quot;, Bullseye Connection Gallery, Portland, OR

	&amp;quot;North West Visits The North East&amp;quot;, Society of Arts and Crafts, Boston, MA

	SOFA New York 2005, Thomas Riley Galleries, New York, NY

	&amp;quot;Emerging Artist &#8216;05 Exhibition&amp;quot;, Parada Hall, Scottsdale, AZ

2004	&amp;quot;Contemporary Glass&amp;quot;, Missoula Art Museum Missoula, Missoula, MT
	&amp;quot;New Gallery Artists&amp;quot;, Andora Gallery, Carefree, AZ
	&amp;quot;Coefficients: A Selection of Contemporary Kiln-formed Glass&amp;quot;, Contemporary Crafts Museum, Portland, OR

	&amp;quot;Seven Emerging Artists&amp;quot;, Linda Greene Contemporary Glass, Dallas, TX

2003	&amp;quot;Legacy&amp;quot;, Bullseye Connection Gallery, Portland, OR

2002	&quot;Light and Line&quot;, Firehouse 12, Vancouver, WA

	&quot;Pilchuck Summer Staff Show&quot;, History of the World Gallery, Camano Island, WA

	&quot;Cast Glass&quot;, Firehouse 12, Vancouver, WA

2001	&quot;Bullseye Employee Show&quot;, Bullseye Connections, Portland, OR

1997	&quot;Monuments of Moments&quot;, New York College of Ceramics at Alfred University BFA Exhibition, Harder Hall, Alfred, NY

1996	&quot;Three Walls and a Floor&quot;, Alfred University Student Gallery, Alfred, NY 

	&quot;Chosen Works&quot;, Fosdick-Nelson Gallery, Alfred, NY


AWARDS/PUBLICATIONS

2009	New Glass Review 30, Neues Glass. Corning, NY

	&amp;quot;Glass Unexpected&amp;quot;, Show Catalog, Mobile, AL

2008	Contemporary Glass&amp;quot;, Black Dog Publishing, London, UK, pg. 38, 39

Pilchuck Glass School, 30th Annual Auction, Live Auction, Seattle, WA

	&amp;quot;Review Jeremy Lepisto&amp;quot;, Glass Quarterly, Number 110, Spring 2008 Pg. 63
	
	New Glass Review 29, Neues Glass., Corning, NY

2007	&amp;quot;Summer Hot Shop Artist Series Residency,&amp;quot; Tacoma Glass Museum, Tacoma, WA

Pilchuck Glass School, 29th Annual Auction, Live Auction, Seattle, WA

&amp;quot;Young Glass 2007&amp;quot;, Ebeltoft Museum, Ebeltoft, Denmark

&amp;quot;Emerge 2006&amp;quot;  Juror, Jurors Statements, Emerge 2006 Catalog, Bullseye Gallery, OR

2006	&amp;quot;Glass Notes: Fourth Edition&amp;quot;, Kilnforming Basics by Jeremy Lepisto, Franklin Mills Press, OH
	
	&amp;quot;25 Years of The New Glass Review&amp;quot;, The Corning Glass Museum, NY

Pilchuck Glass School, 28th Annual Auction, Live Auction, Seattle, WA

	&amp;quot;500 Glass Objects&amp;quot;, Lark Books, NY

2005	&amp;quot;Glass Breaks: Through the Art Ceiling&amp;quot; by Nancy Ruhling, Art and Antiques Magazine, Sept.05, pg. 84

	&amp;quot;Bullseye Glass for Art and Architecture&amp;quot;, Product Catalog 3, pg. 13

Pilchuck Glass School, 27th Annual Auction, Live Auction, Seattle, WA

	UrbanGlass 2005 Auction and Glassblowers Ball

	Hauberg Fellowship, Pilchuck Glass School, Stanwood, WA

2004	&amp;quot;Kilnforming; Exploration of Firing Techniques&amp;quot; by Jeremy Lepisto, Glass Arts Society 2004 Journal New Orleans, pg. 78-79

	&amp;quot;Kilnforming by Jeremy Lepisto&amp;quot;, Gloine: The Journal of the Glass Society of Ireland, Number XXXVII, DEC 04, Ireland

	&amp;quot;Portfolio Jeremy Lepisto&amp;quot;, American Craft Dec &#8217;04/Jan &#8216;05 Issue, Pg. 54

	Pilchuck Glass School, 26th Annual Auction, Live Auction, Seattle, WA

	&amp;quot;Glass Now 2004&amp;quot; Annual Auction, National Liberty Museum, Philadelphia, PA

	New Glass Review 25, Neues Glass, Corning, NY

	Salem Art Association, the Fifth Annual Clay Ball, Live Auction, Salem, OR

2003	Pilchuck Glass School, 25th Annual Auction, Live Auction, Seattle, WA 

2002	Pilchuck Glass School, 24th Annual Auction, Live Auction, Seattle, WA

2001	Pilchuck Glass School, 23th Annual Auction, Silent Auction, Seattle, WA	

1997	Alfred University Pilchuck Glass School Scholarship, New York College of Ceramics at Alfred University, Alfred, NY 


SELECTED COLLECTIONS/COMMISSIONS

2009	&amp;quot;Each Unto Its Own&amp;quot; Watertower Series, Museum of Glass, Tacoma

&amp;quot;Shade of Support&amp;quot; Bridge Series, Knoxville Museum, Knoxville, TN

2007	&amp;quot;Coming Together&amp;quot; Building Block Series, Ebeltoft Museum, Ebeltoft, Denmark

	&amp;quot;Between Destinations&amp;quot; Building Block Series, collection of Lani McGregor and Dan Schwoerer, Portland, OR

2006	&amp;quot;Separate Views&amp;quot;, commission, Stoel Rives LLC, Seattle, WA

	&amp;quot;Honor&amp;quot; and &amp;quot;Ernie&amp;quot; Awards, commission, Dance USA 2006 Conference, Portland, OR

2004   	&amp;quot;Drawn Conclusion&amp;quot; Bridge Series, Museum of Northwest Art, La Conner, WA
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			<title>Orlando Gabby Leyba</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/orlando_gabby_leyba/</link>
			<description>Orlando&#8216; Gabby Leyba&#8216;s vibrant, contemporary canvases draw you in by twisting common perceptions. His unique juxtaposition of elements -- a blossoming flower with a stylized motorcycle tail light -- challenge you to look below the surface and find new beauty in unexpected places.  The dichotomy extends throughout each multi-media canvas as Leyba balances bold hues with muted tones, smooth painted surfaces with carved plaster sections&#8230; all of it blending seamlessly into spellbinding art.

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			<title>C. Loncho</title>
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			<title>Joseph Lonewolf</title>
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			<title>Donna Lopez</title>
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			<description></description>
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			<title>Edmundo Lopez</title>
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			<description></description>
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			<title>Arthur Lopez</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/arthur_lopez/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<title>Jose L.  Loya</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/jose_l._loya/</link>
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			<title>Lydia Mahle</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/lydia_mahle/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<title>Duane Maktima</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/duane_maktima/</link>
			<description>Duane Maktima takes vibrantly colored and unusual semi-precious stones, a phenomenal knowledge of aesthetic design from ancient iconography to contemporary Art Deco motifs, and creates jewelry that is distinguished, provocative, and exquisite. Maktima&#8216;s use of color and line clearly point to his background as a painter &#8211; his stones have an inherent energy that his eye recognizes and his skilled hands then set them into intriguing silver and gold settings that elevate his rings, necklaces, and pendants to engaging works of art with magnificent presence. Duane has been a source of encouragement, empowerment, and enthusiasm among southwestern jewelry artists for long enough that he is becoming a legend in his own time. A principled approach to his design, a tenacious respect for his Laguna/Hopi ancestry, and exhaustive research into the past accomplishments of his predecessors allow Duane Maktima to offer pieces to the Blue Rain Galery that truly are classic works from one of the most highly respected contemporary artists working today.</description>
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			<title>Dante Marioni</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/dante_marioni/</link>
			<description>AWARDS
2002
1st Place - Reticello, Ebeltoft Museum, Denmark

1997
Outstanding Achievement in Glass, Urban Glass Award, New York, NY

1988
Young Americans, American Craft Museum, New York, NY

1987
Louis Comfort Tiffany Foundation Award

SELECTED PUBLIC COLLECTIONS
American Museum of Art + Design, New York
Birmingham Museum, Birmingham, AL
Chrysler Museum, Norfolk, VA
Cincinnati Museum of Art, Cincinnati, OH
Columbia Museum of Art, Columbia, SC
Corning Museum of Glass, Corning, NY
Davis, Wright &amp;amp; Jones, Seattle and Bellevue, WA
Ebeltoft Museum, Denmark Houston Museum of Fine Arts, 

Houston, TX Hunter Museum, Chattanooga, TN 

Huntsville Museum, Huntsville, AL
Japanese National Museum of Modern Art , Tokyo, Japan 

LIULIGONGFANG, LIULI CHINA Museum's                                                                                                        

Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los Angeles, CA
MCI, Washington, DC (promised gift to National Museum of American Art, Renwick Gallery, Smithsonian Institute)
Microsoft Corporation, Redmond, WA
Mint Museum of Craft and Design, Charlotte, NC
Mobile Museum of Art, Mobile, AL
National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, Australia
National Museum of Art, Renwick Gallery, Smithsonian Institute, Washington, DC
National Museum of Stockholm, Stockholm, Sweden
New Orleans Museum of Art, New Orleans, LA
New Zealand National Museum, Auckland
Niijima Glass Museum, Niijima, Japan
Powerhouse Museum, New South Wales, Australia
Safeco Insurance Company, Seattle, WA
Seattle Art Museum
Security Pacific Bank, Seattle, WA
The Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh, PA
The Prescott Collection of Pilchuck Glass at the U.S. Bank Centre, Seattle, WA
The White House Crafts Collection, Washington, DC
University Art Museum, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ
Vero Beach Museum, Vero Beach, FL
Victoria &amp;amp; Albert Museum, London, England
Yokohama Museum of Art, Yokohama, Japan 

TEACHING EXPERIENCE
2008
Haystack School of Craft, Deer-Island, ME. 

2006
Northlands Creative Glass, Lybster Scotland 

2005
Canberrs School of Art, Canberrs Australia
Nijima Glass Center, Nijima Japan 

2004
Haystack School of Craft, Deer-Island, ME. 

2003
Visiting artist, International Glass Workshop, Centro Studio Vetro, Venice, Italy
Demonstration/Lecture, The Creative Glass Center of America, Wheaton Village, Millville, NJ
Teaching with Kiki Smith, Pilchuck Glass School, Stanwood, WA 

2001
Northlands Creative Glass, Lybster Scotland 

2000
Haystack School, Deer Isle, ME
Miami University, Miami, FL 

1999
CCAC, Oakland, CA
Kent State, Cleveland, OH 

1996
SUWA Glass Museum, Nagano, Japan. Instructor
Haystack School, Deer Isle, ME. Co-taught with Lino Tagliapietra
Penland School of Crafts, Penland, NC 

1993
New York Experimental Glass Workshop, Brooklyn, NY
Rhode Island School of Design (winter session), Providence, RI
Toyama Glass Art Institute, Toyama City, Japan
Pilchuck Glass School, Stanwood, WA. Co-taught with Lino Tagliapietra 

1992
Haystack School, Deer Isle, ME. Co-taught with Lino Tagliapietra
New York Experimental Glass Workshop, Brooklyn, NY
University of Hawaii, Honolulu, HI. Visiting Artist with Richard Marquis 

1991
Haystack School, Deer Isle, ME. Co-taught with Paul Marioni 

1990 - 2003
Pilchuck Glass School, Stanwood, WA. Instructor 

1990
Fujikawa Craft Park, Fujikawa, Japan 

1989 - 92
Nijiima Glass Art Center, Nijiima, Japan. Instructor 

1989
Wanganui Summer School, Wanganui, New Zealand 

1988
Penland School of Crafts, Penland, NC 

1987
Canberra School of Art, Canberra, Australia. Guest Instructor
Haystack School, Deer Isle, ME. Assistant to Richard Marquis
Pilchuck Glass School, Stanwood, WA. Assistant to Lino Tagliapietra and Benjamin Moore 

1985
Pratt Fine Arts Center, Seattle, WA. Instructor, Advanced Glass blowing 

SELECTED PUBLICATIONS / ARTICLES
Southwest Art; cover, December 2006
Seattle Post Intelligecer, May 2006
The Independent on Sunday, ( London England) December 2004
The Washington Post, February 2004
Western Interiors and Design, Glass Act, pp 15, June 2003
Architectual Digest, The Great Design Issue, pp 295, May 2003
Florida Design, Dante Marioni Glass Silhouettes, August 2000, pp 82, by Courtney Powers Curtiss
Glass, Marioni Magic Cover pp 22 Summer 1998 by John Pereault
Glass and Art, Winter 1997 No. 16, 'Dante Marioni, Seattle's Standard Bearer'. Cover and pp. 14-44.
Town and Country Magazine, 'Hot Glass' December 1996, pp. 71.
The White House Collection of American Crafts, Michael W. Monroe, 1995. Jacket cover and back and p. 44.
Smithsonian Magazine, June 1995, Cover.
Booklist, Vol. 92 No. 4, 10/15/95. American Library Association, Cover.
Puget Sound Business Journal, Vol. 16 No. 30, Dec. 8-14, 1995. Front page and p. 39.
American Craft, February/March 1994, Cover and pp. 34-37. 'Dante Marioni: Apprentice to Tradition', by Matthew Kangas.
Glass Art, winter 1994, Cover and pp.4-8. 'Dante Marioni: Upholding the Vessel Tradition', by Shawn Waggoner.
Glass and Art, spring 1993, Cover and pp. 25-35. 'Contemporary Art Glass Movement'.
Clearly Art: Pilchuck's Glass Legacy, by Lloyd Herman for Whatcom Museum of History, Bellingham, WA 1992, pp. 46.
Seattle Post Intelligencer, 'Father and Son Put Different Varieties of Pop into Glass Art', by Regina Hackett, May 1992.
Elle Decor, December 1991/January 1992, p. 26.
Out of the Fire: Contemporary Glass Artists and Their Work, by Bonnie Miller, 1991, Chronicle Books, pp. 60-63.
Financial Executive, 'Art That Pulls Its' Weight at Safeco', November/December 1991.
Gump's Since 1861: A San Francisco Legend, by Roseman, Birmingham and Saeks, 1991, Chronicle Books, pp. 72-73.
Beauty of Contemporary Glass, Sekisho Shoji Company, Ltd., 1991.
Glass Work, 'Interview with Rika Kuroki', January 1990, No. 4, pp. 60-61.
American Craft, 'Young Americans 1988', by Lisa Hammell, December 1988/January 1989, pp. 42-49.
Craft Arts, 'Anatomy of the Vessel', by Nola Anderson, October/December 1987, No. 10, pp. 71-74.
Canberra Times, 'Anatomy of the Vessel', by Nola Anderson, March 15, 1987.
Seattle Times, 'Dante Marioni', review by Dolores Tarzan, February 15, 1987. </description>
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			<title>Maria Martinez</title>
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			<title>Marie and Julian Martinez</title>
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			<title>Miss Waller McCleery</title>
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			<title>Sophia Medina</title>
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			<description></description>
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			<title>Ted Miller</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/ted_miller/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<title>Von Monongya</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/von_monongya/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<title>J.J. Mora</title>
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			<description></description>
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			<title>Pilo  Mora</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/pilo_mora/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<item>
			<title>Ed Morgan</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/ed_morgan/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<title>Shelley Muzylowski Allen</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/shelley_muzylowski_allen/</link>
			<description>Animals such as horses and elephants occupy the artist&#8216;s mind, surfacing in the work of Shelly Muzylowski Allen. With a fine art degree in painting, Allen never considered glass until a co-worker remarked that her paintings would translate well to the translucent and moldable medium.  This inspired her to apply to the Pilchuck School of glass, where it quickly became evident that her co-worker was right.  Her glass sculptures and paintings are adorned with rusted metals and hair, focusing on the strength as well as the stillness of animals.   Muzylowski Allen&#8216;s goal is to work flawlessly between the two mediums, mixing both painting and glass often in the same piece of artwork.
New works coming soon.</description>
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			<item>
			<title>Henry  Naha</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/henry_naha/</link>
			<description></description>
	  <pubDate></pubDate>
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			<item>
			<title>Les Namingha</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/les_namingha/</link>
			<description>Les Namingha credits his aunt, renowned Hopi potter Dextra Quotskuyva, for guiding him through the process of pottery making, which served as his artistic foundation. As a prolific contemporary artist, Namingha thrives on traditional motifs with modernist influences. Constantly manipulating form and design, every Namingha piece takes cultural symbols and brings them adeptly into present day, making the artist a true innovator bound only by his imagination. The painting on his pottery is unique in its small size and tight detail, the extent of which is rarely seen in the medium. Owning one of Namingha&#8216;s works offers Native-inspired significance to any collection.</description>
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			<item>
			<title>Jocelyn Namingha</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/jocelyn_namingha/</link>
			<description></description>
	  <pubDate></pubDate>
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			<item>
			<title>Priscilla  Namingha</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/priscilla_namingha/</link>
			<description></description>
	  <pubDate></pubDate>
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			<item>
			<title>Carla  Nampeyo</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/carla_nampeyo/</link>
			<description></description>
	  <pubDate></pubDate>
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			<item>
			<title>Darlene Nampeyo Vigil</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/darlene_nampeyo_vigil/</link>
			<description></description>
	  <pubDate></pubDate>
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			<item>
			<title>Flora Naram</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/flora_naram/</link>
			<description></description>
	  <pubDate></pubDate>
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			<item>
			<title>Dusty Naranjo</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/dusty_naranjo/</link>
			<description></description>
	  <pubDate></pubDate>
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			<item>
			<title>Elijah Naranjo</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/elijah_naranjo/</link>
			<description></description>
	  <pubDate></pubDate>
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			<item>
			<title>Joshua  Naranjo</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/joshua_naranjo/</link>
			<description></description>
	  <pubDate></pubDate>
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			<item>
			<title>Margie Naranjo</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/margie_naranjo/</link>
			<description></description>
	  <pubDate></pubDate>
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			<item>
			<title>Charmae Shields Natseway</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/charmae_shields_natseway/</link>
			<description></description>
	  <pubDate></pubDate>
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			<item>
			<title>Thomas Natseway</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/thomas_natseway/</link>
			<description></description>
	  <pubDate></pubDate>
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			<item>
			<title>P.  Navasie</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/p._navasie/</link>
			<description></description>
	  <pubDate></pubDate>
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			<item>
			<title>Joy Navasie, Frog Woman</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/joy_navasie,_frog_woman/</link>
			<description></description>
	  <pubDate></pubDate>
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			<item>
			<title>Jamie  Okuma</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/jamie_okuma/</link>
			<description>Jamie Okuma began working with beads at a very early age, inspired by the pow wows she attended. In high school, Okuma made her first miniature jingle dress, which she subsequently mounted on a doll figure. Historical authenticity, exemplary workmanship, and attention to every detail are the hallmarks of her dolls or &amp;quot;soft sculptures&amp;quot;. Generally taking up to four months to complete a figure, Okuma&#8216;s focus tends to be on the most elaborate garments and accoutrements that were part of the late 19th and early 20th-century classic ceremonial attire of Plains and Plateau people. A work by Okuma is much more than a traditional craft, but a piece of fine art for discriminating collectors.</description>
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			<item>
			<title>Sandra Okuma</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/sandra_okuma/</link>
			<description></description>
	  <pubDate></pubDate>
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			<item>
			<title>Sean ONeill</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/sean_oneill/</link>
			<description>A series of dots, ocular anatomy, or objects found in nature are often engraved into blown and slumped glass forms by artist, Sean O&#8216;Neill.  O&#8216;Neill works with shades of gray, black and white.  His forms are minimal, yet convey a great deal about patterns found in nature observed through the lens of daily life.  With glass as his canvas and several cold-working techniques intended to reproduce the erosive effects of nature, the artist makes a subtle statement about the effects of time through his art&#8212;ultimately creating something aesthetically pleasing.</description>
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			<item>
			<title>Janice Ortiz</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/janice_ortiz/</link>
			<description></description>
	  <pubDate></pubDate>
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			<item>
			<title>Macario Ortiz</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/macario_ortiz/</link>
			<description></description>
	  <pubDate></pubDate>
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			<item>
			<title>Angie Reano Owen</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/angie_reano_owen/</link>
			<description></description>
	  <pubDate></pubDate>
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			<item>
			<title> Pahponee</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/_pahponee/</link>
			<description>Pahponee&#8216;s Kickapoo name, Pahponee translates into &amp;quot;Snow Woman.&amp;quot;  She is a self-taught clay artist who has re-learned the traditional pottery methods of her Woodland Culture as well as learning contemporary pottery making techniques.

Pahponee&#8216;s inspiration to learn about pottery making came from a life changing experience. &amp;quot;I was taken to see a White Buffalo mother and her White Buffalo calf.   White Buffalo are sacred to Native people.  It was an auspicious occasion to be in their presence.&amp;quot;  After their meeting, Pahponee had a dream about a White Buffalo pottery vessel. &amp;quot;I would keep dreaming this one specific pot and other beautiful pots, but I didn&#8216;t know how to make them.&amp;quot;  

Pahponee spent years experimenting with hand dug clay and commercial clay as well as primitive outdoor dung firing and contemporary kiln firing.  &amp;quot;The first several years were rough, until I began to develop a better understanding of the rhythm of earth, water, fire and air.&amp;quot;  Her experimentation and research has resulted in technical excellence in clay properties, tools, hand building, and firing techniques. Mastering several pottery techniques has provided the platform for Pahponee to create distinctive pottery that expresses her own personal style and innovative spirit.  &amp;quot;By working with clay from a variety of locations, I have learned that all clay is sacred and alive. Whether it is hand dug or purchased commercially, working with clay is a sacred activity for me.  This involves personal interaction between clay, myself, and as Native people say, All My Relations.&amp;quot;

Her pottery continues to be inspired by her dreams, personal life experiences, and is still being guided by the White Buffalo.  &amp;quot;When I work on my pots, the rest of the world falls away.  It is like being in a dream where each pot tells me its story.&amp;quot;  Today, Pahponee is one of the top Native American potters. She is recognized by peers and continues to receive awards from nationally juried shows.  She continues to experiment with new techniques always striving for excellence in her work.
</description>
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			<item>
			<title>Turid Pedersen</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/turid_pedersen/</link>
			<description>Turid Pedersen is one of the nation&#8216;s most respected still life artists. Ms. Pedersen was born in Oslo, Norway and received both a BA and an MAT in the History of World Art and Architecture at the University of Oslo.  In the1970&#8216;s, she settled near the Mimbres Valley in New Mexico due to a life-long interest in Archaeology and the plethora of ancient Native American artifacts found in that area. This coupled with her study of early Flemish and French still life painters has led to an extraordinary combination of art forms. 
	She has this to say about her work: &amp;quot;I work from the original artifacts, either in the museums or in local private collections. I make numerous studies and notes, striving for accuracy in scale and appearance. However most important to me is to create a mood in my paintings that evokes the deeply mystical lives of the Mimbres people. It is tremendously moving to touch and handle their objects, to feel the ancient surfaces of the pots, molded, incised, chipped and worn--- to gaze in awe and wonder at the sophisticated designs created by fellow artists centuries ago&amp;quot;.
</description>
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			<item>
			<title>Rodrigo  Perez</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/rodrigo_perez/</link>
			<description></description>
	  <pubDate></pubDate>
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			<item>
			<title>Norbert  Peshlakai</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/norbert_peshlakai/</link>
			<description></description>
	  <pubDate></pubDate>
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			<item>
			<title>A.A Peynera</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/a.a_peynera/</link>
			<description></description>
	  <pubDate></pubDate>
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			<item>
			<title>Marlin Pinto</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/marlin_pinto/</link>
			<description></description>
	  <pubDate></pubDate>
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			<item>
			<title>Kevin Pochoema</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/kevin_pochoema/</link>
			<description></description>
	  <pubDate></pubDate>
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			<item>
			<title>G. Phil Poirier</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/g._phil_poirier/</link>
			<description></description>
	  <pubDate></pubDate>
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			<item>
			<title>Maribel  Ponce</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/maribel_ponce/</link>
			<description></description>
	  <pubDate></pubDate>
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			<item>
			<title>Evelyn Poolheco</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/evelyn_poolheco/</link>
			<description></description>
	  <pubDate></pubDate>
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			<item>
			<title> Povi</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/_povi/</link>
			<description></description>
	  <pubDate></pubDate>
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			<item>
			<title>Al Qoyawayma</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/al_qoyawayma/</link>
			<description>Nothing quite like Al's pottery has ever existed before.  As with Native traditions, his pottery traditions run deep.  Contemplative by nature, studiously quite at times, and at other times he is quite gregarious, especially when describing his passion for the clay and its heritage.
As a descendent of the Coyote Clan, Qyawayma (pronounced ko-YAH wy-mah) is a direct recipient of the Sikyatki tradition of ceramics which traces to 1400 A.D., and earlier.  His style has its roots in the low shouldered forms of the Sikyatki culture; most likely of Keres speaking peoples, rather than Hopi. The Sikyatki tradition was first discovered by the Smithsonian in the early 1890s. That discovery became the inspiration for Nampeyos (Tewa) creative style and subsequently her influence on todays Tewa-Hopi pottery tradition.
Al learned from his aunt Polingaysi Qyawayma (aka Elizabeth Q. White) the aesthetics and philosophy of their ancient tradition. Another major influence in his artistic approach was his relative Charles Loloma, a major innovator in ceramics and jewelry, as well as Als father, Poliyumptewa, a painter.
Collectors describe Als ceramics as timeless, sensuous, sublime, elegant and perfected, reflecting the hues and shadows of the high desert landscape. In his original sculptural/repousse technique Al describes himself as an experimentalist creating in an eclectic minimalist style. His goal is to reflect a timelessness in style, and the migrations and the origins myths in the americas. Perhaps best known of his work are the architectural series and large vases with dancing figures.
More recently Al has added a new carved polychrome style.  Feathers, dancers, insects and other symbols are carved in relief, incised, and sometimes on recessed planes.  Thus, several individual surface plains and textures may be present in the same piece. In a new and unusual step some of the polychrome surfaces are painted and polished in a continuous gradient of many colors, such as might be obtained in oil painting techniques.
Influenced by his Native culture Al sees little differentiation between culture, the arts, science and the spiritual worlds.  His creations are diverse: They vary from patented high technology work to his innovative art.  His education and interests are equally diverse. Al sees education as a key survival strategy for Native peoples.  He has served a six year Presidential appointment as Vice-Chairman of the Institute of American Indian Art (IAIA).  That was balanced by serving as the co-founder and first Chairman of the American Indian Science and Engineering Society (AISES), a 25 year old international membership organization serving Native students and the new cadre of Native professionals.
A current visual and written review of his work may be viewed at his art educational website:  www.alqpottery.com</description>
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			<item>
			<title>Nicholas Quezada</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/nicholas_quezada/</link>
			<description></description>
	  <pubDate></pubDate>
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			<item>
			<title>Thomas  Quintana</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/thomas_quintana/</link>
			<description></description>
	  <pubDate></pubDate>
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			<item>
			<title>Betty Quizada</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/betty_quizada/</link>
			<description></description>
	  <pubDate></pubDate>
	  <guid isPermaLink="false">blueraingallery - 539</guid>
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			<item>
			<title>Deborah Rael-Buckley</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/deborah_rael-buckley/</link>
			<description>Deborah Rael-Buckley was born in Albuquerque, New Mexico in 1953. She finished her BA in the history of art and architecture with honors at the University of Illinois-Chicago in 1996. After a move to Milwaukee, Wisconsin, she began taking  art studio courses and discovered a profound interest in ceramics. She completed her MFA in ceramic  sculpture at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee in 2000, receiving awards and fellowships along the way.

Her award winning narrative sculptures explore a blend of exciting architecturally informed shapes, culturally significant imagery, and richly textures surfaces. The dramatic open spaces, reveal the building process while creating negative spaces that interact with light and shadow.  Rael-Buckley&#8216;s sculptures are coil built without benefit of armatures or forms, and feature a vocabulary of imagery including branches, bones, ropes, text and culturally significant symbols to express her thoughts on family, culture, memory, and religion.</description>
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			<item>
			<title>Patty  Rodriguez</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/patty_rodriguez/</link>
			<description></description>
	  <pubDate></pubDate>
	  <guid isPermaLink="false">blueraingallery - 432</guid>
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			<item>
			<title>Mike Rogers</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/mike_rogers/</link>
			<description></description>
	  <pubDate></pubDate>
	  <guid isPermaLink="false">blueraingallery - 532</guid>
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			<item>
			<title>Jeff Roller</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/jeff_roller/</link>
			<description></description>
	  <pubDate></pubDate>
	  <guid isPermaLink="false">blueraingallery - 112</guid>
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			<item>
			<title>Mateo  Romero</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/mateo_romero/</link>
			<description></description>
	  <pubDate></pubDate>
	  <guid isPermaLink="false">blueraingallery - 192</guid>
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			<item>
			<title>Maria G.  Romero</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/maria_g._romero/</link>
			<description></description>
	  <pubDate></pubDate>
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			<item>
			<title>Persingula Romero</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/persingula_romero/</link>
			<description></description>
	  <pubDate></pubDate>
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			<item>
			<title>David Rosales</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/david_rosales/</link>
			<description></description>
	  <pubDate></pubDate>
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			<item>
			<title>Henry  Rosetta</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/henry_rosetta/</link>
			<description></description>
	  <pubDate></pubDate>
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			<item>
			<title>Silas Roy</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/silas_roy/</link>
			<description></description>
	  <pubDate></pubDate>
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			<item>
			<title>David Roy</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/david_roy/</link>
			<description></description>
	  <pubDate></pubDate>
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			<item>
			<title>Yellowbird Samora</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/yellowbird_samora/</link>
			<description>Yellowbird, an avid skier and kayaker, is &amp;quot;attracted to water,&amp;quot; he says, to &amp;quot;fluid, liquid forms.&amp;quot; He works &amp;quot;the shapes of traditional Pueblo pottery into something totally contemporary, with less emphasis on design and pattern than on the elemental form of the pottery. I try to leave something to the viewer to interpret. People say it looks like human forms; other viewers see moving water. I want it to have an organic feel&#8230;something of Pueblo pottery and something of what the viewer brings to it.&amp;quot;

The future of his work, he says, will involve &amp;quot;the pottery dictating its own form. I am always developing a closer relationship with the clay; it&#8216;s a constant process of patience, trial, and error.&amp;quot;</description>
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			<item>
			<title>Maria Samora</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/maria_samora/</link>
			<description>Maria Samora describes her stunning compositions as natural forms made contemporary. Her jewelry designs, she says, arise independently, from nature.
Although she has been invited to exhibit at the Smithsonian, among many other honors and awards, including first place in her Indian Market category, she feels that I am barely scratching the surface of what is possible in my work.</description>
	  <pubDate></pubDate>
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			<item>
			<title>Russell Sanchez</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/russell_sanchez/</link>
			<description></description>
	  <pubDate></pubDate>
	  <guid isPermaLink="false">blueraingallery - 129</guid>
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			<item>
			<title>Socorro Sandoval</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/socorro_sandoval/</link>
			<description></description>
	  <pubDate></pubDate>
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			<item>
			<title>Kevin A. Short</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/kevin_a._short/</link>
			<description>Kevin a. Short boldly paints the point where the abstract and the real converge. His New Mexico landscapes serve as a portal to a magical place and moment &quot;where something beautiful and odd happens, where the sky looks red and rocks look green.&quot;

&quot;I stitch the border between impressionism and expressionism,&quot; he explains, masterfully reconciling these opposing styles. He paints outdoors, recording an ephemeral moment and the transient effects of light and color in a familiar landscape. But his work expresses the emotional essence of a scene rather than a faithful rendering of it. 

&quot;I focus on capturing the quirkiness of our life today - urban culture or mundane things, and I try to make them rich and beautiful without becoming too romantic. New Mexico is stunning canyons and high plateaus, but also broken-down fences and tourist traps. I paint the way the world is now, with Native Americans driving SUVs and using cell phones. I don't paint old visions of cowboys and Indians,&quot; Short says. 

Struggling to &quot;get more paint on my brush,&quot; he applies oil paint thickly in big, blocky brushstrokes. Up close, an abstract storm of brushstrokes dominates your vision, but when you stand back and gaze at the image, the reality of the scene emerges. Just the perspective you would expect from someone whose first look at New Mexico was from 10,000 feet, as the pilot of a hot air balloon. 

&quot;Whether I was gliding quietly over farmhouses or skimming pinons atop mesas, I was having a different interaction with the place than others, and developing a different eye. I am still drawn to painting at dawn or dusk, calm times that are best for ballooning,&quot; he explains. &quot;I'm sure my penchant for having chaotic brushstrokes form harmony and order from a distance was born in ballooning.&quot; 

You don't learn the desert in a few days, says the California native, who moved to New Mexico in high school and stud- ied art at the University of New Mexico before graduating from the Art Center College of Design. &quot;The light is completely different. Because the vistas are big, the sky is vast, and colors are subtle, New Mexico begs you to paint large. There's an elusive quality about the desert that draws you to paint the same subject over and over. A quiet voice that keeps calling you.&quot; 

Using a palette of warm and cool colors, but never black, he creates subtle tone changes within the same color. He fear-lessly brightens colors to reproduce &quot;how the place felt.&quot;  Because scenery changes constantly, he does numerous color studies of moments in nature and synthesizes them in the studio to create a single large painting. 

&quot;I want to inspire an emotional connection with the viewer, not just to the place, but how they feel about that place. Collectors of my work often tell me that a painting has created a catch basin of memories for them about a place, even if they've never been there. I try to under paint, to leave details up to the viewer so that more of their imagination comes into it and they end up being a part of the piece,&quot; Short says. 
</description>
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			<item>
			<title>Ilene Shraulote</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/ilene_shraulote/</link>
			<description></description>
	  <pubDate></pubDate>
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			<item>
			<title>Linda Silva</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/linda_silva/</link>
			<description></description>
	  <pubDate></pubDate>
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			<item>
			<title>Preston Singletary</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/preston_singletary/</link>
			<description>&amp;quot;Glass brings another dimension to Native American art. It&#8216;s luminous quality and shadow effect are like a spirit that appears when this lighting is right&amp;quot;
-Preston Singletary 

In a unique meeting of European glass-blowing tradition and Northwest Native design, Preston Singletary&#8216;s artwork depicts cultural and historical images from his Tlingit ancestry in richly detailed, beautifully hued glass. By infusing traditional design with fresh energy through the use of modern materials, his work pays homage to his forefathers, who feel that the past, present and future are intertwined. 

Singletary entered the world of glass blowing as an assistant, learning to master the techniques of the European tradition as he worked alongside Seattle-area artists such as Benjamin Moore and Dante Marioni. He also had opportunities to learn the secrets of the Venetian glass masters while working with Italian legends Lino Tagliapietra, Pino Signoretto and others. In an early &#8211; and fortuitous &#8211; trip to Sweden to study Scandinavian design at Kosta Boda, Singletary met his future wife, who now resides in Seattle with him and their two children. 

Singletary grew up hearing his culture&#8216;s traditional stories from his family &#8211; both of his great-grandparents were full-blooded Tlingit Indians &#8212; and many of those stories provide inspiration for his work. The formline design skills evident in so many of his pieces were acquired through study and collaboration with other prominent Northwest Coastal artists such as Steve Brown and Joe David. Singletary credits mentor Joe David for helping him to take his work to a new level, one that is more spiritually based and culturally expressive of the different Northwest Coast styles. With Northwest Native icons, supernatural beings, transformation themes, animal spirits, shamanism and basketry designs among his many inspirations, Singletary has transformed Northwest Native art and incited other Native artists to utilize the wonders of glass. 

Recognized internationally, Singletary&#8216;s artworks are included in museum collections such as the National Museum of the American Indian (Washington DC), Museum of Fine Arts (Boston, MA), The Brooklyn Museum of Art (Brooklyn, NY) The Seattle Art Museum (Seattle, WA), the Corning Museum of Glass (Corning, NY), the Mint Museum of Art and Design (Charlotte, NC), the Heard Museum (Phoenix, AZ), and the Handelsbanken (Stockholm, Sweden). Singletary is a member of the Board of Trustees for Pilchuck Glass School and the Seattle Art Museum. 
</description>
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			<item>
			<title>Richard Zane Smith</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/richard_zane_smith/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<item>
			<title>Leigh  Smith</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/leigh_smith/</link>
			<description></description>
	  <pubDate></pubDate>
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			<item>
			<title>Nathan Solano</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/nathan_solano/</link>
			<description>Born in Utah and raised in southern Colorado, Nathan Solano paints extraordinary contemporary portraits of Native Americans as one of his favorite subjects.
In his forties, Solano has come to a point where he does what he wants: paint. However, that strong will is not new. After serving as an infantry sergeant in Vietnam, he attended college where rather than taking business, vocational, or courses toward a degree, Solano opted for electives in photography, ceramics, painting, and drawing. With several odd-job phases behind him as a photographer and graphic designer, Solano has evolved to a full-time fine art painter. Now a photographer of professional status, Solano haunts cattle roundups, powwows and other environmental scenes of the American West to capture visual information. Aware of the stigma of painting from photographs, Solano prefers freezing brief, allusive moments to later capture in acrylics, moments that exist for but a split second yet express life as Solano prefers to capture it - in the now.
Two elements dominate Solanos compelling paintings: light and gesture. His play with color creates a light that beams from the canvas as if tiny light bulbs were secreted underneath the paint. A sensitive instant is captured by his use of the camera rather than setting up an easel in an environment, a time consuming process in which he could never capture the same fleeting moment. Both elements - light and gesture - engender a powerful, inexplicable uniqueness to his imagery. A captivating Solano image is immediately undeniable and purports a dynamic career in the years ahead.</description>
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			<title>Ron Suazo</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/ron_suazo/</link>
			<description>&quot;I am a full-blooded Native American Indian from Santa Clara Pueblo, New Mexico.
My pottery techniques come from youth on, having learned from my mother who taught me not only how to form, polish and fire pottery, but every other intricate part of pottery-making.
&quot;Watching my sister drawing fine, traditional details on her pots encouraged me to work hard on incising my own designs with fine details as well.
&quot;While visiting several museums, I looked intently at pots created by the Ancient Pueblo Indians, and was deeply impressed by their creativity in designs.  I also visited the Puye Cliff ruins often while growing up, and was intrigued by their designs on broken pieces of pottery.
&quot;As a result of studying both traditional and early designs, my decision was to create my own style.  However, I included a combination of traditional feather designs, bear paws, and early as well as contemporary designs with inlaid turquoise, coral, lapis and malachite stones.  I do this on matte finish pottery that may include a combination of both carving and incising on the pots and lids.  The final finish on the pot is polished black on matte and sienna.
&quot;There is tremendous competition and great potters, but from the day I started as a potter, I hoped that my work would be unique and stand apart from others.  I believe I have accomplished my goal.&quot;</description>
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			<item>
			<title>Anita Suazo</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/anita_suazo/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<title>Roger Suetopka</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/roger_suetopka/</link>
			<description></description>
	  <pubDate></pubDate>
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			<item>
			<title>Paul Surber</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/paul_surber/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<title>Margaret Tafoya</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/margaret_tafoya/</link>
			<description></description>
	  <pubDate></pubDate>
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			<title>Mark  Tahbo</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/mark_tahbo/</link>
			<description></description>
	  <pubDate></pubDate>
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			<title>Jason Takala</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/jason_takala/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<title>Lowell  Talashoma</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/lowell_talashoma/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<title>Timothy  Talawepi</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/timothy_talawepi/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<title>Louise Owl  Tallman</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/louise_owl_tallman/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<item>
			<title>Justin Taylor</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/justin_taylor/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<item>
			<title>Keith Torres</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/keith_torres/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<item>
			<title>Elvis Tsee Pin Torres</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/elvis_tsee_pin_torres/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<title>Candie Trujillo</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/candie_trujillo/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<title>Debra Trujillo</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/debra_trujillo/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<title> Unspecified Artists</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/_unspecified_artists/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<title>Saul  Veloz</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/saul_veloz/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<title>Poteet Victory</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/poteet_victory/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<title>Felix Vigil</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/felix_vigil/</link>
			<description>Felix Vigil is a contemporary painter from the southwestern United States. He was born and raised on the Jemez Pueblo northwest of Albuquerque, New Mexico. Felix, who resides on Jemez Pueblo and is an active member of its community, relates, &quot;Living at Jemez affords me the opportunity to live a very traditional life-style. The language is strong and the ceremonies are still a major part of our lives.&quot;
Felix has displayed his work in many prestigious exhibitions throughout the country. He recently received a first place ribbon for painting at the 2000 Santa Fe Indian Market. A former instructor at the Institute of American Indian Art in Santa Fe, Felix Vigils paintings are mixed medium collage on canvas. His imagery is based on Native American mythology and themes.
Over the years his work has become more esoteric in its symbolism and composition. In addition to the popular imagery of his southwest native culture, Felix has been incorporating motifs of Northwest Coast tribes into some of his paintings. Felix states: &quot;There are many similarities in the philosophy of the designs between the Northwest Coast peoples and the Southwest. Paying homage to the animals is the central theme. The spirit of the animals is where our strength comes from. We emulate their character and pray that we can attain their powers.
&quot;Within the scheme of the design there is an interdependency and relationship that exists between each design element and symbol. This speaks of the relationship that is evident in the world around us. Each creature is dependent on another to live and survive. And we, as humans, depend on these creatures to live.&quot;
From an early age Felix was exposed to the art of his father Francis, whom was a highly regarded Native American painter working in oils, watercolor and later in acrylics. When Felix reached his early twenties he attended the Maryland Institute College of Art in Baltimore, Maryland. He graduated in 1980 with a BFA in painting.</description>
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			<item>
			<title>Minnie Vigil</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/minnie_vigil/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<item>
			<title>Albert and Josephine Vigil</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/albert_and_josephine_vigil/</link>
			<description></description>
	  <pubDate></pubDate>
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			<item>
			<title>Sabina  Villalba</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/sabina_villalba/</link>
			<description></description>
	  <pubDate></pubDate>
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			<item>
			<title>Sabino Villalba Hombre</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/sabino_villalba_hombre/</link>
			<description></description>
	  <pubDate></pubDate>
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			<item>
			<title>Jim Vogel</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/jim_vogel/</link>
			<description>Jim Vogel deftly weaves color and emotion, detail and shape into paintings that reflect life and land in New Mexico. Vogel hails from a family of storytellers, so each of his works tells its own tale of the land, the culture, and the common man's struggle. Vogel's storytelling continues including paintings which depict New Mexican folklore and myths that have crossed cultures and been told for generations. &quot;I'm trying to put images to these stories I've heard over and over from my mother and father,&quot; says the artist. Vogel is also well known for his paintings featuring New Mexican landscapes and rural life, many of which feature beautiful hand-made tin frames.</description>
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			<item>
			<title>Doug West</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/doug_west/</link>
			<description>&quot;The Southwest is my rich pallet for creative inspiration. Time spent out on the land is where I feel most grounded. Watching the sky's changing light, with heroic cloud forms overhead . . . these feed my artist's eye. I love that the land here is exposed and wide open to long distant horizons. New Mexico resonates deeply with my spirit as an artist. I am most interested in capturing what speaks of the expanse and the connection that ties us to this place in a timeless, memorable way.&quot; &#8211; Doug West

Doug West has been capturing the magical skies and environment of the great Southwest for over 20 years. His work has been exhibited nationally and internationally with well over 50 one man shows, along with an extensive list of publications and thousands of serious art patrons who have collected his work.
</description>
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			<title>Mary  Witkop</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/mary_witkop/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<item>
			<title>Kee Yazzie</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/kee_yazzie/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<item>
			<title>Larry Yazzie</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/larry_yazzie/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<title>Nathan Youngblood</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/nathan_youngblood/</link>
			<description>&quot;As a Native American potter and artist, Nathan Youngblood has achieved something almost contradictory: his work is a successful marriage of age-old tradition and inspired innovation. Many collectors feel Nathans name is synonymous with Santa Clara Pueblo pottery, yet his design influences come from as far away as Japan and Russia. Nathan himself readily admits &quot;&quot;I try to push the envelope on technique while still staying within the borders of whats considered traditional.&quot;&quot;

Nathans pieces distinguish themselves on a number of levels. His pottery is striking in its perfection and balance. The smooth, clean lines of his work naturally draw the eye along the sensuous curves of his pots. Nathan is driven to create flawless art. It is not unusual for him to redraw a design, painstakingly scrape away unwanted spills of slip, or check the dimensions of his vessels with a carpenters level to assure their symmetry. In addition to the technical care he puts into each piece, Nathan approaches each creation from a deeply ingrained traditional standpoint. He learned from his grandparents that he had a certain degree of responsibility to the clay, and for that reason has never strayed from the customs he was taught. Nathan digs his own clay, hand coils each pot, uses the ancient pueblo open-fire technique, and applies thin coats of animal fat to the slip during his polishing process.

In direct contrast to the traditional craftsmanship used in the making of his pottery, Nathan freely borrows from other cultures when researching the decorative stage of his creation. Many of his designs are decidedly Asian in their detail and intricacy, and his adaptation of the Faberge egg into a Native American storage jar is well known.

By juxtaposing traditional Pueblo motifs with contemporary ideas, Nathan creates art that is at once familiar and startling. His attempts at redefining Native American pottery have raised the level by which ceramic art is judged. Respected and highly talented potter Tammy Garcia agrees. &quot;&quot;I feel Nathan has set the standards for quality among potters. His precision and creative design work is unparalleled.&quot;&quot;&quot;</description>
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			<item>
			<title>Nancy Youngblood</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/nancy_youngblood/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<title>Charlene  Youvella</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/charlene_youvella/</link>
			<description></description>
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			<title>Wallace  Youvella</title>
			<link>http://blueraingallery.com/artists/wallace_youvella/</link>
			<description></description>
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