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La' Push Print

Joseph Ziolkowski

United States

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8 x 10 in ($40)

8 x 10 in ($40)

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ABOUT THE ARTWORK

La' Push turned out to be one of my favorite spots along the north coast of WA. Having visited the Pacific Northwest as a kid several times with my parents, I was exposed to the massive power and humbling dominance that much water has over a human spirit. If you've never been to the ocean, please put it on your list of to-dos. There is a magic to that much water in one collective mass. It's pretty much an organ of our planet, and you can't help but feel something when you are in its presence. So I was certain to return as a young man again in college, several times! Now living back in Montana, I often dream of La' Push, its golden pink sunsets and salty air misting against the skin. This painting is alive with movement and medium. Meaning; not only to I approach every painting with the intention to draw the viewer into a living space. I now implement a reflective medium or pigment as a means to build on the feeling that this space is living. This original was painted with Daniel Smith watercolors. Several duo-chrome and pearlescent pigments (these are reflective in nature) as to make you feel like you're standing on the reflective wet sand and the atmosphere is moving or glowing.

DETAILS AND DIMENSIONS
Print:

Giclee on Fine Art Paper

Size:

8 W x 10 H x 0.1 D in

Size with Frame:

13.25 W x 15.25 H x 1.2 D in

SHIPPING AND RETURNS
Delivery Time:

Typically 5-7 business days for domestic shipments, 10-14 business days for international shipments.

I am a moody and detail-oriented creature that craves awesome sunsets, overcast days when the wind doesn't blow, and fish. Fish are so cool! I have a real knack for art, at least that's what other people tend to tell me, so I stuck with it. Turns out I am pretty good. I've learned to love food too, I've got a real soft spot for pho', noodles, and anything with the word steak involved. Here is more on me if you like to read! Joseph Ziolkowski is a fourth-generation Montanan, born in 1975 in Lewistown, Montana. As a young artist, he was influenced by his family, many of whom art artists themselves, Joe has been immersed in the arts for as long as he can remember. Influences on his path as an artist include. Clarence Cuts The Rope, a deceased local artist, taught Joe’s brother Peter sculpting and painting for some time in the early 80s. Several of Joe’s earliest memories of watercolor painting are with Peter in the kitchen of their parent’s home in Central Montana. Anne Armont, a well­known oil painter who worked for Joe’s father, taught Joe oil painting classes in the late 80s. Gordon Russel; Joes Lewistown Junior High art teacher, is a diverse artist in many mediums and a much-appreciated figure of the Lewistown arts and educations system. The late Jim Borgreen, a Montana wildlife artist who won many awards and was a large contributor to Ducks Unlimited, the Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation, and outdoor organizations, was Joe’s art teacher in high school. After high school, Joseph Ziolkowski pursued his studies in graphic design and illustration at the Seattle Art Institute. After graduating in 1997 with a degree in Visual Communications, he did contract work for two years for Humongous Entertainment, a children’s animation company in Redmond, Washington. Two years of company life was enough for him and he wanted something much more from the core of our creative source. Joe happened to meet Dan Deegan, a kindred spirit at Pikes Place Market where Dan sold his work. He was fortunate enough to apprentice under the well­known Seattleite, watercolor guru, ex­marine, and Vietnam veteran Dan Deegan. For close to two years, Joe did underpainting, matting, framing as well as common duties and home construction for the militant 50-year-old artist. Dan’s lessons were straightforward and old school. After Dan’s untimely death by cancer in August 1999, Joe chose to move back to his roots in Montana.

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