Liliana Wilson
Liliana Wilson creates richly colored paintings with images often drawn from the subconscious. Born and raised in Chile in a time of social and political upheaval, Wilson creates enigmatic figures… Read More »
Liliana Wilson creates richly colored paintings with images often drawn from the subconscious. Born and raised in Chile in a time of social and political upheaval, Wilson creates enigmatic figures… Read More »
Come home to Women & Their Work and experience Open House, a re-envisioning of the gallery as a contemporary American home. Michelle Mayer combined video installation, photography, and painting to create… Read More »
The images in Scattered related to a specific physical state, in this case the artist’s diabetes. In the spirit of doing art true to personal experience, and in keeping with the… Read More »
Houston artist Melanie Crader transformed the Women & Their Work space with her exhibition installation titled The Basics (flowers not included). Crader has painted some of the walls in the… Read More »
Two artists, Ann Huey, from Lancaster, Texas, and Debra Rueb, from Houston, Texas created acrylic paintings and photographs for an exhibition titled New Works on view through June 21st. Ann Huey… Read More »
Two Houston artists, Denise Ramos and Tricia Moreau Sweeney created paintings and photographs for an exhibition titled Artificial Light on view at Women & Their Work through August 3rd. Denise… Read More »
Women & Their Work presented the exhibit Painters x 3: Joan Fabian, Faith Gay, and Corinne McManemin through May 11th. These three Texas artists have unique painting styles with some… Read More »
Austin artist Daphane Park created oil paintings on wooden panels for her exhibit Tierra Tierna on view at Women & Their Work. Artist Statement I am drawn to create an impression… Read More »
Polly Lanning’s paintings for her exhibition, Parallels, were linguistic objects, visual images loosely tied to concepts and to actual things. She used the properties of the paint and pigment, the… Read More »