Welcome to Wimberley guide, Spring/Summer 2021

Page 6

skillfully capturing life’s precious moments

Lisa Motley

Lisa Motley By BONNIE EISSLER

L

isa Motley knew from an early age that she wanted to be an artist and, unlike many eight year olds who abandoned their ambitions to be an astronaut, a movie star, or a marine biologist, Lisa held on tightly to those childhood dreams. She has “drawn hundreds and hundreds of faces” for as long as she can remember, sketched and painted, studied and taught art for a lifetime. Although she has explored all of the other artistic media, her favorites are watercolor and fabric dye on silk, both of which require a lot of skill and practice. “Watercolor is not forgiving and doesn’t allow for changes,” Lisa says, “and painting on silk is a long process that requires patience and persistence. Lisa studied Fine Art and Business with an accounting concentration at Texas State University, a double focus that has allowed her to pursue an art career and manage her own art business. As a certified art teacher, only recently retired, Lisa has taught all ages, from three and four year olds to octogenarians. She taught private lessons from her studio and art classes in public and private schools. She believes that everyone is an artist because creativity is an essential characteristic of our being, and we express our God-given creativity in many different ways. “Creativity is so important,” Lisa says, “especially during these chaotic times when so many people are reinventing their businesses and finding alternative ways to navigate unfamiliar territory.” Her artwork has been exhibited at the United States Botanical Gardens Museum in Washington D.C., The Art Museum of South Texas in Corpus Christi, and The Rockport Art Center. For many years, she participated in the Rockport Art Festival and her work has been represented by numerous galleries in south Texas. For the 100th anniversary celebration of the United States National Parks in 2016, Lisa’s silk painting was chosen for the special exhibit at the U.S. Botanical Gardens Museum in Washington, D.C. The contest required portrayal an endangered tree or flower in one of the national parks. The goal of the exhibit was to educate people about the at risk trees and flowers, and to foster appreciation of the amazing diversity of plant life in the 6   Welcome to Wimberley Spring/Summer 2021

parks, which are truly national natural treasures of this country. “The painting is a gray lily, an endangered flower in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park, that’s named after a famous botanist named Gray,” Lisa says. “It’s very colorful and not gray in color at all.” For her artistic inspiration, Lisa paints what is closest to her heart. She started by painting portraits of her own family and has been painting family portraits for a large clientele for over 30 years. “My passion is drawing and painting precious moments, and these moments are usually captured in photographs that clients send to me,” Lisa says. See LISA MOTLEY, Page 7


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