WARREN
DYKEMAN
warrendykeman@gmail.com
www.warrendykeman.com
My paintings and drawings are mixtures of images from hand lettering, digital art and collage.
I use pencil, acrylic, digital printing, computer projections and collage to create these works. The figure, hand lettering
and typography are the major themes of my work. I am informed by Folk Art, Primitive Art and all forms of Graphic Art from
information design to corporate identity systems. I want my work to contain awkwardness that has a rhythm between shape, contrast,
color and inaccuracy.

Doug Parent
http://dougparentfineart.com/
Doug Parent works with an array
of media on his drawings using pen and ink, charcoal, colored pencil, graphite, and pastels. His paintings on canvas and hardboard
are done with acrylics which he enjoys for their brilliance of color and responsiveness. The Barton Street Lofts show will
feature recent acrylic paintings and pastels of his free
trees, beyondo, and sails series.

kelly rae cunningham
http://www.kellyraecunningham.com
My paintings began with slabs of clay, ceramic glazes, and the same tools that I use today to
apply, layer, and scrape away paint. I fell in love with mixing colors and the smell of oil paint and turpentine, so I turned
from clay to wood and canvas. I now work in many mediums as they all lend different qualities to the process: oil for the
saturation of color and patience, acrylic paint for speed, collage and layering for depth, and encaustics (oil and wax): tactile,
three dimensional and most like working with clay.
I am mostly a self-taught painter through a series of trial
and error. My paintings employ layers of color, boldly worked with palette knives and brushes. I am inspired by green green
grass against blue blue sky, anything round, old fabric, yarn, aging shutters, doors and windows, a tulip or allium from underneath,
color, spring, fall, and everything I see when open my eyes.
“I always thought that inspiration
is for amateurs. The rest of us just show up and get to work” - Chuck Close
Niffer Calderwood
jnifferc@comcast.net
As a Seattle native I started going
to see live music regularly in my early teenage years and shortly thereafter picked up a camera and started photographing
the rock shows. I have never stopped. These are a few of my favorites.


Robin Short
http://cargocollective.com/robinshort
Robin is a graphic designer and fine artist who practices
exploration in illustration, typography, print design, product packaging and book arts. For the West Seattle Art Walk at
Barton Street Lofts, she will be displaying a series of watercolor illustrations. These observational studies of small houses
aspire to trigger a mutual curiosity and sentimentality for our places of dwelling and their surrounding environment.


Michelle Auer- Mixed media (Painting, photography, recycled art dolls)
www.michelleauer.com
Michelle comes from a long line of artists. Her father is a woodworker, her mother a quilter, her grandmother
a painter... the list goes on and on. While she was growing up she was exposed to so many different artistic mediums that
she has dabbled in a little of everything from photography to having one of her recycled art dresses featured on the cover
of The Stranger.
The Stranger


Amanda J. DeSilver
http://desilver.myexpose.com/
Amanda's work can be described as "Emotional Landscapes," from the representational to the abstract.
Amanda creates an impression of the world we live in, through a bold use of form and her individual interpretation of color.
Being able to find solace or an escape from the humdrum of the everyday world within the images she creates allows the viewer
a chance to step back from the activity of daily life and locate a harmony within oneself.


Margy Lavelle Furst
I have painted and drawn just about all my life. I started drawing as a
child and did my first oil painting at the age of 15. At the age of 20 I found myself enrolled in Nursing School but spending
every spare minute pursuing my work in art. I decided to change course and attend the University of Washington Art School
graduating in 1976 with a BFA in Painting. I had the good fortune to study with Bob Jones, Alden Mason, Norman Lundin, an
independent year with Jacob Lawrence and eventually Elaine deKooning. Between raising a family and making a living my art
has often had to take a back seat, but only temporarily. I now spend a good deal of time in the Skagit Valley where the ever
changing light and open vistas have inspired this most recent series of birds.
Clarita Hinojosa
missclarita@yahoo.com
James Sutherland
"Seattle Artist James W. Sutherland works intuitively in his unique medium of painted,
carved plaster panels. James' creative spirit is inspired by the magic and joy of nature, which he captures with a childlike
energy through use of line, color and texture.
His art is his soul at play."
james@jameswsutherland.com
www.jameswsutherland.com
John Rickenbacher
I am a self-taught
artist. Having taken black and white photographs for some time I finally picked up a paint brush two years ago
and play with it nearly every day. It is so much fun! The current focus of my work is with acrylic
paint which I choose for its vibrancy, and texture. My subject matter has been broad simply because I find inspiration
everywhere. I work from photos and plenaire as well as letting my imagination go. My studio has taken over the
kitchen in my home and is filled with music, great light, good wine, and once a week with my creative friends without whom
I would be poor.