3 minute read

KANYEYACHUKWU OMOZEE

Kanyeyachukwu Omozee Tagbo Okeke, born in November 2009, is a young creative artist who has had an exceptional year with his paintings gracing the walls of several galleries and museums in Europe and Nigeria.

He has also gained comprehensive promotion in the art world, with Art collectors and enthusiasts coming from all over the world to view his works and make purchases.

His art has been described as "deep, highly intelligent, and unbelievably very mature for his age.

Kanye's art infuses the deep colors of our society and, in his way, brings it to life on canvas. His works have been the cynosure of all eyes at various exhibitions as more art aficionados have taken an interest in his works.

Kanye is the youngest recipient of The Flame of Peace award, conferred on him by the Archduke and Arc duchess of Austria, and the most youthful fellow of the association of professional creative artists and designers in Nigeria (APCAD). In addition, he is the recipient of the Nigerian Indomie Independence Day heroes award.

Kanye has participated in many exhibitions for his age, most of which have helped to announce him as an upcoming creative genius.

“I n the painting "pulse of life," color blocks similar to the church's stained glass are used to compare different states of life. A person's life is like a tree, from luxuriant to withered.

A time of life, a time of death, a time of laughter, and a time of sorrow. Because everything is in the eternal will of God, only by looking to Him and seeking Him can life shine brightly."

In my opinion, artistic creation is not just to draw what your eyes see, but to draw your own feelings about what you see. I like to use bold color matching to bring a visual impact to the picture. I think the proper use of colors can deepen the theme and stimulate the association and emotion. I usually hope that my works of art can express positive emotions, such as hope, sunshine and energy”

“I

“Ilike to create art that tells a story—with paint, words, installations, and interactive imagery. I started with pastel and watercolor and often created a painting over a list of words. I called this style "Art of Lists" and did hundreds of them. I then spread my wings and created other styles.

Many of these efforts are installations that normally involve over a dozen pieces that are interconnected. They are sometimes large—"What is Missing," for example, involves 50 hand painted milk cartons. "If the shoe fits" captures a dozen portraits and the shoes associated with them. My latest "Dynamic Duos" shows famous couples like Lucy and Desi, created on 1-inch strips and assembled on zig-zag accordion pleats. From one side, it's Lucy. From the other, it's Desi. Head on, and it makes no sense…so viewers must walk around. But it's fun and interactive…as I aim to do with all my art."

Member of the Institut des Arts Figuratifs, Elected Member of Society of Canadian Artists, Officer of Mondial Art Academia and awarded artist, Josée was born in the sixties in Trois-Rivières, QC, Canada, and was raised by a melomaniac father.

While in high school, she took art lessons but finally decided to become a musician. She was, for decades, a professional violinist. Meanwhile, her father was drawing plans for their homes, and watching him gave her some knowledge. She did the same. She learned how to use many tools. Her love for banisters, gables, columns and wood lace-work was growing. She didn't know then she was preparing for her future life as a visual artist.

In 2005, she took her first painting class. Then, in 2010, after developing health problems and a bicycle accident, painting while listening to classical music became her new career. In part self-taught, she took workshops with Canadian masters. Since then, she has become another kind of artist.

Mrs. Tellier feels sorry when she sees how hard it is to protect our architecture from a severe climate. For her, painting and preserving memory is paying tribute to our architecture. Her love for beautiful houses brings her to visit historic districts.

The uniqueness of her work resides in a technique of lowrelief sculpture with a combination of stained glass. After years of practice, she brought the structured medium to a high technical level. It is carving, modeling, sculpting, sculpting the modeling!!! Working on wood, using various materials, allows her to sculpt the North American architectural heritage that she wants to make joyful using bright colors: a classic approach but rejuvenated by modern materials and a colorful vision of naive tendency.

As an artist with artistic roots in dramatic writing, Kat O'Neill works to balance impact and personality in all her pieces, often incorporating words and humor. Street art is mixed with city images, rocks turn into characters, tombstones ignite imaginative wonderings of life, death, and the things that happen along the way, industrial pieces take on their own beauty in abstract reflections or evocative still life's, vintage album covers create montages, words convey a story and, often, paint, and layers add dimension as her pieces are born.

Kat O'Neill's work has been exhibited by galleries, museums, and private collectors and featured in various publications and sites, including The New York Times, Hamptons Magazine, Modern Luxury Magazine, Hamptons.com, and Hamptons Art Hub. In addition, she has won many awards, including being voted repeatedly the best artist in The Hamptons. As a photographer and mixed media artist, Kat's work has been described as provocative, imaginative, unique, and unexpected. Kat is also coowner/co-director of The White Room Gallery in Bridgehampton, NY.