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Articles in regional publications that pertain to a wide range of North Carolina-related topics.

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14 results for Painters
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Record #:
1459
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Sid Oakley, an internationally renowned potter and painter, creates his art at Cedar Creek, a ten-acre enclave of studios, kilns, and a showroom in southern Granville County.
Source:
North Carolina Home (NoCar NA 7235 N8 N32), Vol. 2 Issue 5, Oct 1993, p16-18, por
Record #:
27843
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Abstract:
Cephas Thompson was one of Virginia’s most prolific portrait painters of the early nineteenth century. The Museum of Early Southern Decorative Arts in Winston-Salem, North Carolina examined Thompson’s Memorandum of Portraits in which he recorded over five hundred portraits. The paintings reflect the changes in American society and offer early biographical records of the early Republic.
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Record #:
40698
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October of 2016 featured Jen Starwalt as the cover artist. In the past year, she went to new exhibitions, had a person transform one of her paintings into a tattoo, and moved across the country.
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Laurel of Asheville (NoCar F 264 A8 L28), Vol. 14 Issue 10, , p79
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Record #:
42595
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Through a series of mishaps and setbacks, cover artist Angela Alexander found a specific style of painting that has brought her, and many others, happiness.
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Laurel of Asheville (NoCar F 264 A8 L28), Vol. 15 Issue 5, May 2018, p10-12, por
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Record #:
41257
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As the cover artist for the April 2018 Laurel of Asheville, artist Jacqui Fehl describes her works and how she came to be the artist she is today.
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Laurel of Asheville (NoCar F 264 A8 L28), Vol. 15 Issue 4, April 2018, p10-12
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Record #:
15986
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Abstract:
Garl Browne, a famous portrait painter, came with his family from England to America in the 1830s. Dare relates information on the time he spent painting portraits in North Carolina before the Civil War and on a return trip made in the 1880s.
Source:
The State (NoCar F 251 S77), Vol. 4 Issue 8, July 1936, p20-21
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Record #:
3140
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Painters Bill Mangum and \"Cotton\" Ketchie, and photographer Carl Moser, Jr., live in the Piedmont, but their paintings and lenses capture scenes of the state, from the mountains to the coast.
Source:
Our State (NoCar F 251 S77), Vol. 64 Issue 9, Feb 1997, p16-23, il, por Periodical Website
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Record #:
42610
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Through the disciplines of math, physics, and art, Jim Waters creates paintings and works of art that are fascinating and pleasing to look at.
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Laurel of Asheville (NoCar F 264 A8 L28), Vol. 15 Issue 6, June 2018, p10-12, por
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Record #:
27710
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Abstract:
John Blake White was a painter born in 1781 in Eutawville, South Carolina. White’s historical paintings of Charleston street scenes are unique, for they treat topics and views confined to the South Carolina Low Country region. Some of White’s paintings are in collection at the Museum of Early Southern Decorative Arts in Winston-Salem, North Carolina.
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Record #:
27862
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Joseph-Pierre Picot de Limoëlan de Clorivière was a miniature portrait artist who fled to Georgia from France after conspiring to assassinate Napleon Bonaparte in 1800. Joseph-Pierre became a pastor and had a pivotal influence on the spirituality, curriculum and architecture of the Visitation Monastery in Georgetown, D.C. New accounts of his work are stored at the monastery and at the Museum of Early Southern Decorative Arts in Winston-Salem, North Carolina.
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Record #:
21979
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Ellen Rodman Hathaway is a Washington native who lives in Virginia but still calls North Carolina home. She discusses her work as a painter and why she paints so many flowers.
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Record #:
27723
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William J. Weaver was an Anglo-American portrait artist in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth century. Until now, little was known about him due to confusion over his correct full name. New documents uncovered by the Museum of Early Southern Decorative Arts in Winston-Salem, North Carolina resolve this matter, and shed light to Weaver’s contribution to Neoclassical portraiture.
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Record #:
19249
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Anna Matilda McNeill was born in Wilmington in 1804 and spent her early life there. She later married George Washington Whistler, and they were the parents of James McNeill Whistler. Whistler later immortalized his mother with a world-famous painting, \"Whistler's Mother.\" Now Wilmington has plans to erect some kind of appropriate memorial in her honor.
Source:
The State (NoCar F 251 S77), Vol. 11 Issue 32, Jan 1944, p28-29, il
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Record #:
40632
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Artist Virginia Pendergrass presented her series of oil paintings, called Moody Skies, at the Trackside Studios gallery in Asheville.
Source:
Laurel of Asheville (NoCar F 264 A8 L28), Vol. 14 Issue 10, , p19
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