An owl as the suggestion of wisdom psychologically involves the viewer with the making process, provoking instinctive responses to the precarious assemblages. I dig it!
Posted 5 months ago by Matthew (Father)
Wow! Perry is so very dashing. Nice use of blended browns. I think Perry's eyes are very well drawn as well. Definitely a grand-looking owl!
Posted 5 months ago by Andrea
This water color is very pretty! I love the pink background with the lively green plants.
Posted 5 months ago by Andrea (Mother)
Hadley, this work fuses chaos with order, with lines and shapes laid randomly - at first glance. Closer inspection gradually reveals that a set of rules governs the placement of shapes and the choice of colors. Thus, you are challenging the viewer to explore the rules encoded in the subconscious that shape our aesthetics, to consider why we find beauty in the juxtaposition of chaos and order. PS- Don't sit on that cactus Hadley :)
Posted 5 months ago by Matthew
Love the design! That one looks really angry lol!
Posted 9 months ago by Matthew (Father)
The abstract quality of this piece transcends the viewer into a kaleidoscopic universe... with cellophane flowers of yellow and green towering over your head. Nice work Kiddo!
Posted 9 months ago by Matthew (Father)
Hadley, do not... I say do not... sit on that cactus! Cactuses are pointy!
Posted 10 months ago by Matthew (Father)
Are those lollypops sugar free? They look good enough to eat!
Posted 10 months ago by Matthew (Father)
This makes me think of the 4th of July... sitting in the back of the truck watching fireworks. Great job Hads!
Posted 10 months ago by Matthew (Father)
Cock-a-doodle do! This is an awesome representation of a farm at sunrise! I can imagine that crowing rooster is waking up the whole farm in this painting. Great work kiddo!
Posted 10 months ago by Matthew (Father)
I love it! Totally getting framed when it comes home!
Posted 11 months ago by Mom
Simply Amazing! Great work kiddo!
Posted 1 year ago by Matthew (Father)
Hadley, the subaqueous qualities of the biomorphic forms of cherries spatially undermines the larger unspoken universal truths. I'm impressed!
Posted 1 year ago by Matthew (Father)
Hads, I see that this drawing centers on an interest in the universality of our biological make-up and landscape; combined with the collective sense of the sublime. It's rad!
Posted 1 year ago by Matthew (Father)
Hadley, in my view, this piece examines hesitation as part of the process of decision-making, where the object is neither the object of objecthood nor the art-object. It is rather the oblique object of your intentions. Keep up the great work!
Posted 1 year ago by Matthew (Father)
Hadley, as the viewer, I can tell this drawing represents the void that signifies precisely the non-being of what it represents. Great Job!
Posted 1 year ago by Matthew (Father)
Fun Fact: Sloths only poop once per week. They are also very good swimmers believe it or not! Great work Kiddo!
Posted 1 year ago by Matthew (Father)
Great Job Hads! Love that the dog is looking at the sunset!
Posted 1 year ago by Matthew (Father)
This Raspberry looks so cool and abstract! It reminds me of a real raspberry so much that I can feel the raspberry seeds stuck in my teeth!
Posted 1 year ago by Matthew (Father)
This work really shows the artist's play with linear design