Exploring the Colorful Universe of Mad Dog Art
Buy a lady a rose? If that sounds familiar, then you must know Mad Dog.
Buy a lady a rose? If that sounds familiar, then you must know Mad Dog.
"I really view writing as something that belongs to everybody," says Sarah Sentilles, an artist, writer, and coach. But not everyone believes they can write.
In 1964, a group of Jewish families went to the World's Fair in Queens, NY. When they saw the spiral-shaped American-Israel Pavilion, which took visitors through 4,000 years of Jewish history, it spurred this idea of "what if"?
“Get a white box and put your art into it.” This is not the only advice Tulsan artist and gallery owner, Chris Mantle, gives to aspiring artists when it comes to showing their work, but it is exactly how his career started.
Fauvism was the first of the avant-garde movements that flourished in France in the early twentieth century. Ruled by nature, and ideally—no rules at all—the Fauve painters helped break away from the controlled concept of Impressionism.
“It wasn’t supposed to be anything, but it turned out to be something”, says Danny Boy O’Connor speaking about his recent art show at the LTO Gallery at the Mother Road Market.
When I asked the multi-disciplinarian artist, Michelle Firment Reid, to describe her work, it made sense when she answered, “Art for me is all the time.” Having a 30-year career as a full-time artist, Michelle’s so-called input-time comes in the form of her everyday living.
Having started his career as a full-time artist in 2015, Jay Exon seems to have found his sweet spot many artists struggle with- focusing on his art full time while someone else markets and sells it. "I think as an artist; you're painting for you. You're not
When it comes to art in Tulsa, Steve Liggett is a household name. But similar to the aesthetic of contemporary art, his path into the art world was non-linear and somewhat out of the norm.
The Zarrow Center operates as part of a larger mission for the Oklahoma Center for Humanities at Tulsa University. Housed in the original Paper Company building that now makes up the south eastern corner of Museum Row next to the Bob Dylan Center, 108 Contemporary