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6 results for Artists--Wilmington
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Record #:
3932
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Rowan LeCompte, who lives in Wilmington, creates stained glass art. One of his best-known works in the twenty-six-feet West Rose window in the Washington National Cathedral. He also created forty-five other windows there. He is a self-taught artist who has never been without work in his sixty-year career.
Source:
Coastwatch (NoCar QH 91 A1 N62x), Vol. Issue , Holiday 1998, p12-15, il, por Periodical Website
Record #:
9727
Author(s):
Abstract:
Earley discusses the artistic creations of Sally Nunnally, who is the Educational Coordinator at the Marine Resources Center at Fort Fisher. Nunnally is a nature printer, and the process is called gyotaku, a Japanese word traditionally used to describe prints made from fish. Any object can be used, but the process remains the same--coat an object with ink and press paper against it and an impression of the object will be left behind.
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Record #:
10280
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Verlee discuss the life and work of Wilmington artist Jodie Wrenn Rippy.
Source:
Our State (NoCar F 251 S77), Vol. 76 Issue 4, Sept 2008, p158-160, 162, 164, il, por Periodical Website
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Record #:
19322
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Landscape artist Chris Wilson is at work on a large project. He'll paint one hundred large-scale paintings of landscapes along U.S. 64, which stretches 563 miles across the state. The project will be titled \"Murphy to Manteo--An Artist's Scenic Journey.\" He has completed thirty paintings to date, and some are huge--sixteen feet tall and a dozen feet wide. Some of the paintings already hang in the North Carolina Museum of History.
Source:
Our State (NoCar F 251 S77), Vol. 80 Issue 10, Mar 2013, p92-96, 98, 100-102, 104, 106-108 Periodical Website
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Record #:
28690
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Abstract:
Elisabeth Augusta Chant was born in England in 1865 and grew up in Minnesota, where she became a painter. After struggling with family events and hospitalization for insanity, Chant moved to Wilmington, North Carolina to re-establish herself. She became an art teacher and ultimately had a profound influence on the Wilmington art community.
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Record #:
29362
Author(s):
Abstract:
The art of Long Creek, Pender County, North Carolina native Minnie Evans will be displayed through this spring in the North Carolina Gallery. Evans work is often inspired by a religious vision she had in the 1930s and from her time as a gatekeeper at the Airlie Gardens at Wrightsville Beach. Evans work often incorporates nature and is described as being closer to Near Eastern art than Western prototypes. The approximately 30 works include paintings, drawings, and collages.
Source:
Preview (NoCar Oversize N 715 R2 A26), Vol. Issue , Winter 1985-1986, p7-8