Carla Spence shows new landscapes and still life at Tumalo Art Co. in Bend Oregon

Share This Post

"Sunset at Black Butte" is a landscape painting in acrylic by Carla Spence.
“Sunset at Black Butte” is a landscape painting in acrylic by Carla Spence.

Septembers featured artist at Tumalo Art Co., Carla Spence, questions the conventional wisdom of color, borrowing discordant palettes and bold shapes from the Fauvists, yet creating a warm and emotive whole. In her show, Between Here and There…Closing the Divide with Color, opening September 4 from 4-8pm, she strives to capture a “joie de vivre” in her vivid portrayals of the places she loves—the high desert of Central Oregon, the Adriatic Coast of central Italy and the south of France.

Her work reflects her preoccupation with the color and shape of things, of landscapes, of details in the ordinary components of life, which call to be altered, and to be represented in unexpected ways. She deconstructs the various elements of her compositions, simplifying them, and distorting the perspective, blending sophistication with primitive simplicity.

Tumalo Art Co. is an artist-run gallery in the heart of the Old Mill District, open 7 days a week. www.tumaloartco.com; 541-385-9144.

Carla Spence's still life of the South of France, Apres Midi #2, reflects her preoccupation with the color and shape of things, of landscapes, of details in the ordinary components of life.
Carla Spence’s still life of the South of France, Apres Midi #2, reflects her preoccupation with the color and shape of things, of landscapes, of details in the ordinary components of life.

Subscribe To Our Newsletter

Get updates and learn from the best

Related Posts

Workshops & Classes Online and In-person

David Kinker teaching every Thursday, 9:30-noon at Sagebrushers, he will teach Insight into Modulations as Value. Contact David to sign-up. February 21-March 20 and April 3-May 1, David is presenting

Artists in Juried Events this Spring

Helen Brown and Judy Hoiness have been juried into the Watercolor Society of Oregon’s Spring experimental aqueous media show. Keiko Tanabe, the juror, chose 80 paintings from across the state