Interview with Claire Davenhall

Claire Davenhall was born in 1978 in London, UK and graduated from the oldest established fine art institution in Scotland, Gray’s School of Art in Aberdeen with a BA (Hons) in Fine Art Sculpture, she studied at Athens School of Fine Art & North Karelia Polytechnic in Finland. Now living in Perth in Western Australia, she has had 8 solo exhibitions and numerous group exhibitions in Australia, New York, Paris and London. She exhibits along side ‘World Class’ artists in exhibitions such as Sculpture at Scenic World in NSW, Swell Sculpture Festival in QLD, Sculpture by the Sea in WA.

Interview with Jeong-Ah Zhang

S. Korean and Contemporary artist. Majored in fine arts at Ewha Womans University in Seoul, Korea.
4 Selected solo exhibitions in the United States and Korea, and about 50 group exhibitions and art-fairs in the United States, Korea, Italy, the United Kingdom and France.
It also won 19 international awards and won 15 awards in Korea.

Interview with JR Rapier

JR Rapier, a professional artist living in between Austin, TX and Taos, NM, naturally gravitated to drawing and painting as a child. Gradually through her life she grew more incumbent with her talent as a painter. With a Bachelor of Fine Arts awarded from Texas Tech University in 1996, she spent 20 years art directing print and web campaigns in the spirit of design and illustration.

Interview with Natalia Rose

Natalia Rose is a Danish artist best known for her semi-abstract works which feature pictograph-like symbols painting with broad and heavy brushstrokes. The artist raises questions about the nature of communication and the way in which one can express abstract and conceptual ideas through colour and iconographic markings. For example, in her painting “I” (2016), the artist uses only essential strokes to spell out his name and create patterns of letters across the canvas.

Interview with Paul Ygartua

Paul Ygartua is a painter and muralist with bases in Canada, France, Spain and England. He has single handedly painted some of the largest public space murals in Canada and the United States. His most famous works are his “Heritage Series” depicting North American Natives (Native Heritage Mural, Chemainus, BC) and other ethnic and cultural groups. He is renowned worldwide for his monumental murals. “The World United ” (100ftx25ft/3,048cmx762cm) being one of his most notorious, commissioned by the United Nations for the United Nations Pavilion at the World Expo 86 Vancouver and his largest to date “Legends of the Millennium”, over 9,000 square foot (24ft x 390ft / 731cm x 11,872cm).

Interview with Cheryle Galloway

Cheryle G. Galloway, born in Zimbabwe, is a US-based photographer. She has lived in South Africa and Brazil, before settling in the US. After completing a BA in Communication Science and becoming a mother, Cheryle was drawn to the visual art of photography as a medium for story-telling and interpreting her experiences. Through self-learning and participating in a series of Leica Akademie workshops, Cheryle’s work was surrounding nature, street and portraiture.

Interview with Carlos Abraham

How would you describe yourself and your artwork?

I describe myself as a thinker, showing my images with a personal style and where each image shows that precise moment in just a few seconds and also the character is transmitting what I have in mind. I try to take pictures with ideas that I feel attracted to since the beginning, leaving my mark as an architect. I studied for my Bachelor’s degree in architecture in Mexico. I have a double nationality; Mexican and Lebanese.

Interview with Kana Hawa

What is a barrier you as an artist overcame? Is there anything that enabled you to develop your work as an artist in your life?

As an artist, I don't have much trouble expressing myself. Because I've absorbed a lot of things, and I've always expressed them as art, and my expression has always evolved. The problem with my activities as an artist is how to get people to see my work. I'm not rich, so I needed some ingenuity to spread my work. We've solved them by using the Internet effectively, but it's not perfect yet. We will have to continue to deal with those problems.

Interview with Chrice MAYOUMA

Chrice MAYOUMA is a French contemporary painter born in Brazzaville, Congo in 1985.
Passionate about painting and drawing since his childhood, he is an unconventional and self-taught artist who did not follow a classical academic path.
Having done his artistic education at home, he has always drawn from his daily experiences to work on his creations as a diary.

Interview with Marina Lörwald

What is the meaning or creative inspiration for your work? We’re curious what the narrative or story is to what you are producing?

We humans are creative by nature. For me, painting is something that frees me from everyday constraints. It allows me to take a deep look at the questions of life and to understands our desires and aspirations – besides philosophy, religion, ethics, ethnology, sociology. To search, explore, create playfully - like a child. Ultimately, it’s about experiencing the world in a non-rational way and trying to understand it.

Interview with Gloria Keh

DID YOU HAVE AN IDEA OF WHAT YOU WANTED TO CREATE RIGHT FROM THE BEGINNING?

Yes, the concept may be clear in my mind, and ideas may be there but I believe in the process of the becoming of the work. If I get out of the way, and stay quiet enough to tune in to my inner being, I then see the work unfolding with different eyes. There is great wisdom within us, so why not work together with this innate wisdom, than against it?

Interview with Joe Ferry

Dr. Joe Ferry holds several academic degrees including that of Ph.D. Dr. Ferry is a Grammy Award Winning Record Producer as well as an Award Winning Filmmaker and author. Though having never taken an art lesson in his life, Dr. Ferry has developed a unique style that is quickly becoming very popular in the USA and Europe.