Winston W채chter Fine Art
Northwest Artists
Regolith 2, 2014, acrylic on paper, 50 x 38 inches
Stack 1, 2014, acrylic on paper, 50 x 38 inches
Julie Speidel, Kessjen, 2014, stainless steel, 60/18 x 52/55 x 18/24 inches
Betsy Eby, Finlandia, 2013, encaustic on canvas over panel, 48 x 66 inches
Ann Gardner, Gesture 3, 2014, cast bronze, 9 x 10 x 8 inches
Ann Gardner, Gesture 2, 2014, cast bronze, 8.75 x 8 x 7.5 inches
Christopher Boffoli Northwest artist Christopher Boffoli combines miniature, hand-painted figurines from Germany with staged arrangements of food and beverages to create clever photographic vignettes. Inspired by an unusual combination of magazine food photography and the 18th century fable “Gulliver’s Travels,” Boffoli explores how inverting the proportions of people and their surroundings create unexpected points of interest.
Christopher Boffoli, Coffee Crew, Salt Harvesters, archival pigment ink print, varied sizes available
Erich Woll After graduating from Alfred University in 1994 with a BFA degree in glass sculpture, Wm. Erich Woll moved to Seattle, Washington in 1995 to pursue his career as an artist. In 1997, Dale Chihuly’s glassblowing team offered Woll a position at Chihuly’s residence in Seattle, known as ‘the boathouse.’ During his six-year tenure with Chihuly, Woll traveled around the US and the world and gained valuable skills and knowledge of glass sculpture, both technical and artistic. Woll combines humour, sentimentality, and wordplay into his captivating glass pieces.
e New Normal, 2010, blown glass, 60 x 47 inches
Mistakes Will Be Made, 2014, glass, variable dimentions
Michael Schultheis Local Seattle-based artist Michael Schultheis finds inspiration and elegance in the world of analytics. Schultheis has a background in mathematics and economics, giving his wildly colored abstract paintings the appearance of chalkboards filled progressively with notations and illustrations. His expressive images mirror the abstract world of numbers and boldly invite viewers to consider the relationship between math and the human experience. Trained in mathematics and economics, Michael Schultheis began painting after becoming captivated with the artistic mathematical notations he would see on the chalkboards of his professors. His work can be found in the collections of the Tacoma Art Museum, Tacoma, WA; United States Embassy, Athens, Greece & Bern, Switzerland; and the Mathematical Association of America, Washington DC among many others.
Pythagoras Winter & Pythagoras Summer, 2014, acrylic on canvas, 48 x48 inches
Dreams of Pythagoras, 2014, acrylic on canvas, 60 x 96 inches