Exposition Art Blog: watercolorist
Showing posts with label watercolorist. Show all posts
Showing posts with label watercolorist. Show all posts

John Balossi

John Balossi (May 28, 1931 – April 8, 2007) was a painter and sculptor.
"Painter, sculptor, printmaker, watercolorist, ceramicist, and teacher. Balossi studied at Columbia University, where he earned his BFA in 1956 and his MFA in 1960. Between 1956 and 1960 Balossi worked as a commercial artist and managed a gallery with J. Peplinsky, another young artist. He moved to Puerto Rico in 1960 and from 1962 to 1988 taught at the Río Piedras Campus of the University of Puerto Rico. Balossi was the recipient of an honorable mention at the First UNESCO Painting Salon and first prize at the Fifth. He worked principally in sculpture, using a variety of materials such as stone, wood, terracotta, hammered aluminum plates, iron (soldered), and ceramic clay; he joined the Manos Group of ceramicists in the eighties. Balossi was known as a colorist, and both his paintings and ceramic works almost always portrayed horses or female figures."(mapr.org)













 

Evgenia Antipova

Evgenia Petrovna Antipova (; October 19, 1917 in Toropets, Tver Governorate, Russia – January 27, 2009 ) was a Russian Soviet painter, watercolorist, graphic artist, and Art teacher, a member of the Saint Petersburg Union of Artists (before 1992 the Leningrad branch of Union of Artists of Russian Federation) lived and worked in Leningrad – Saint Petersburg and regarded as one of representatives of the Leningrad School of Painting.
Evgenia Petrovna Antipova was born October 19, 1917 in Toropets town, Tver Governorate. Her father was a railway office worker. Since 1928 she lived with her parents in Samara on the Volga River. There she began to get busy in an artistic studio under the direction of Pavel Krasnov. From 1935, Antipova lived in Leningrad. In 1936–1939 she studied in the Leningrad Secondary Art School at the All-Russian Academy of Arts. Her teachers were Leonid Ovsyannikov, Alexander Zaytsev, Leonid Sholokhov, Alexander Debler, Vladimir Gorb.Wikipedia