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Brooke Major
Brooke Major is an American artist born in 1979 and native of Atlanta, GA. Brooke Major has been living and working as a professional artist and sharing her time between the USA (Georgia) and France for the past 20 years. As a child, Brooke has always been top of her class in drawing and painting, as well as an avid equestrian, which led her to move to Normandy to breed and raise them for the sport of showjumping. She moved initially to Paris to study political science at an American university, but felt herself drawn more towards the arts and followed auditing classes at the Beaux Arts school in Paris. Her political science studies led her to work for over a year and a half as an intern at the US Embassy in Paris.
Following her two childhood passions, art and horses, Brooke moved to Normandy and started her dream of breeding showjumpers and set up her art studio in a grain loft in a 18th century farmhouse on the beach where she creates her work and raises her horses.
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Brooke sculpts oil paint, using pallet knives challenging both techniques of painting and sculpting and exemplifying light and shadow. She chooses all of her subjects from her childhood experiences: travelling, horses and architecture. Brooke also depicts her everyday life in her recent subject of her landscapes of the typical Normand countryside.
Trailers 2023
Kate Dardine
It is not my inten�on in my work to give you the answers, but rather to spark in you the desire to ask the ques�ons. I am always seeking, exploring, pushing myself to dig deeper, to find clearer, more powerful ways to visually express my feelings of connec�vity to all living beings.
Timothy Nimmo
The Dreamtime Series
These pieces are inspired by paleo man and their crea�ve works depic�ng their sacred animals. In exploring that idea, there are some very compelling ques�ons about the reason we as a species began crea�ng art. Each piece is a one of a kind, lost wax bronze.
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TTyrel Johnson hrough life’s trials
Con�nuance of Ac�on,” ... a magnificent shire dra� horse leans into the collar, dragging a seemingly immovable block of argillite stone, appearing to create grooves in the sculpture’s walnut base as it makes grueling but percep�ble progress.
As Tyrel says the piece is “all about persistence. Persistence through life’s trials is a consistent theme in my life and my art. The triumph of love and the human spirit is at its highest when contrasted to the trials it endures.”
Horse Head Sentinel
A lovely accent to go on either side of an entry or porch, and could also be a mantle support.
Horses...
www.tyreljohnsonfineart.com