WHITNEY KIMPTON ART
  • Home
  • Artist
    • Artist Statements
    • Artist CV
  • Gallery
    • Available Work
    • In the Studio
    • Select Past Works
    • Commissioned Work
  • Contact
  • Wanderings
  • FORM - Artisan Halters
    • Available Horse Halters and Lead Ropes
    • Sold Halters
    • Meet the Team
    • Helpful Details

29th Annual Women's Works Show

3/14/2016

 
Picture
"Endure; The Reign of Sorrow, Acrylic on Canvas, 24 x 48
I am thrilled to have this painting in the 29th Annual Women's Works Show. Reminiscent of the fissures cut by water through the landscape and echoing the colors of the area's native sandstone, this piece serves to investigate the intangible demands of sorrow. I've found that as I am developing a work, it begins to have specific characteristics.  My task then is to integrate those characteristics and underlying thoughts in order to convey them accurately and aesthetically.  With this specific painting, I found an elusiveness in the lines that I wanted to maintain, as well as an intense level of realism and emotion around her eyes and the way she holds her ears. 

It is currently displayed at the Old Court House Arts Center in Woodstock, IL from March 10 through April 30, 2016.  The annual exhibit is the Northwest Area Arts Council's international juried competition. More information and the catalog can be found at http://www.womensworks.org/ .

The Blood Moon

1/31/2016

 
The eclipse of the Harvest Moon in September of 2015 was a striking event as the earth's shadow gradually infused the moon with a hue of red. I wanted to portray the horse as pushing through this unavoidable event that is shrouded in mystery.  Research regarding various myths about the Blood Moon indicate a level of destruction or, interestingly enough, growth.  

Restoring Balance

10/1/2015

 
My latest piece is explores the concept of amending while building on flaws.  I first created this painting by intentionally and irregularly dripping tinted medium on a color-washed canvas. The horse was then enmeshed with the marring lines.  The duality of paint application and texture expressed within the painting speaks to the nature of self and the environment.  I am working with the idea of the various layers of ourselves. This painting became a search to regain the beauty and balance upset by the initial rift.  His gaze seems to implore the viewer to face...something.  He calls to engage with him.

The Unknown

9/4/2015

 
Part of my quest, or development, as an artist is sharing my work and ideas.  For without that, I have pondered my purpose.  What is this drive to create that which has been unseen before? 

Georgia O'Keeffe said, "Whether you succeed or not is irrelevant, there is no such thing. Making your unknown known is the important thing--and keeping the unknown always beyond you." The portion of her words that ring with resounding clarity is the idea that sharing that piece of myself, yourself, ourselves, is the primary focus.  

Eva Hesse, an influential sculptor working in the 1960s in New York, said, "I am interested in solving an unknown factor of art and an unknown factor of life." I can appreciate her insight as I work through my pieces.  There is a juxtaposition that I cannot quite grasp between myself, my subject, the material, and that unknown essence.  Each painting is a reach to come to the full understanding of a concept.


Picture
"Encounters; Cultivating the Collective", Honorable Mention, displayed Aug. 4-29 at the Magnum Opus XXVI show at the Sacramento Fine Arts Center in Carmichael, CA
Picture
"With" displayed Aug. 4-29 at the Magnum Opus XXVI show at the Sacramento Fine Arts Center and Feb. 7-March 15 the Representing the West show at the Sangre de Cristo Arts Center in Pueblo, CO
Picture
"Repose" displayed May 1-22 at the Contemporary Women Juried Art Exhibition at the Chico Art Center in Chico, CA

Life in the Wild Show

9/4/2015

 
PictureImage from the Berkeley Art Council's "Life in the Wild" National Juried Wildlife Art Exhibit, juried by artist Susan Fisher
I am honored to be exhibiting my piece titled "Adjust; Movement Above 11,000 Feet", showcasing my interpretation of a Montana mountain goat, with whom I shared the Froze to Death Plateau on my way down from Granite Peak.  They live in a wild, vast, and extreme environment, and I marveled at the ease that this particular goat navigated the terrain.

For more information regarding the show, please click on the following: "Life in the Wild" show

Picture
My painting, prior to packing and shipping...to be seen again in Martinsburg, West Virginia. The show runs from Sept. 2 to Oct. 4, with the reception on Sept. 12 from 3-5 pm.

Musings: Shadows

3/31/2015

 
Picture
The truth of shadows lie in the relationship between the entity, the surface contours, and the light. Without each other, the shadow would simply not exist. That blocking of the source of illumination; that elusive shape that creates depth, mystery, intrigue. It's a fleeting moment, a difference constructed by the confluence of factors that rely on each other. In the change lies a distant effect that we may not yet, or ever, see.  Does the grass grow a little less where your shadow fell?  Does an insect scurry in a different direction?  In that elusive moment in time, what truths are in the phantom nature of the shadow? 

Capturing those shadows lends legitimacy to each essence of the trinity: object, surface, and illumination.
                                                                                                        - Whitney

Forward>>

    Thoughts = Art

     

    Archives

    July 2025
    June 2025
    April 2025
    December 2024
    January 2024
    January 2020
    December 2019
    January 2019
    December 2018
    October 2018
    June 2017
    March 2017
    February 2017
    March 2016
    January 2016
    October 2015
    September 2015
    March 2015

    RSS Feed

Services

Fine Art
Halters
Other Assorted Goods

Who Are WE?

About
The Crew
​

Support

Contact
Halter FAQs

© COPYRIGHT 2015. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.