AD INFINITUM -Photograph of crystalline phenylethylamine found in chocolate.
“Look deep into nature, and then you will understand everything better.” —Albert Einstein
SUNDANCE -Photograph of crystalline phenylethylamine found in
chocolate and lactic acid found in wine.
Available as archival metal, or paper prints starting at $95
NEWS FROM THE STUDIO/LAB:
Summer is upon us, and that means cookouts, hiking, and for me, road trips. I prefer the first two, but I am looking forward to seeing old friends and making new ones at art fairs this summer.
This year my exhibit schedule has included a new show in Colorado Springs on the grounds of the historic Broadmoor Hotel and return trips to Avon, CO, and Park City, UT. I will be on the road for three weeks in July, and early August to cover this far-flung itinerary.
This is my 18th year of doing road shows. Although I thoroughly enjoy the opportunity to share my story with so many wonderful art lovers, it is a physically demanding routine. Therefore, I am working on plans for a reduced travel schedule in 2024.
So, although I won't call it a "farewell tour" just yet, I do hope you will tell your friends and visit the upcoming shows if you have a chance. Please check out the dates and the remainder of the 2023 schedule below.
Cheers and have a wonderful summer!
- Lee
JUNE 2023
LEE'S UPCOMING EVENTS:
July 22-23, 2023 Broadmoor Arts Festival -Colorado Springs, CO
July 29-30, 2023 Avon Arts Festival -Avon, CO
August 4-6, 2023 Kimball Festival of the Arts -Park City, UT
September 23-24, 2023 Mill Valley Arts Festival -Mill Valley, CA
October 28-29, 2023 Kierland Art and Wine Festival -Scottsdale, AZ
November 17-19 and 24-26, 2023 Hidden-in-the Hills Studio Tour-Cave Creek, AZ Please note my new studio host this year! Studio #30.
January 12- March 29, 2024 Arizona Fine Art Expo -Scottsdale, AZ
“Ordinary people are products of their environment and fit in. Artists transcend their environment and stand out.” -Oliver Gaspirtz, author, artist
MIRACLE AND WONDER -Crystalline THC from cannabis -NEW!
ART AND SCIENCE: PAINTINGS AND POLLUTION
Southeastern Ohio's idyllic landscapes, with rolling hills, forests, and streams, attract outdoor enthusiasts from far and wide. However, there's a dark secret hidden beneath the surface: acid mine drainage (AMD), a byproduct of the region's coal
industry, has contaminated over 1300 miles of the area's watercourses. High concentrations of iron oxide in the toxic discharge from these abandoned mines give these streams an unsettling orange color. The repercussions are devastating, as
the toxicity of the outflow renders the waterways inhospitable to fish and other aquatic creatures. The absence of life in these once-vibrant streams paints a grim picture.
Amidst this environmental crisis, two visionary individuals have sought to turn the situation around. Guy Riefler, an environmental engineer, and John Sabraw, an artist, have collaborated to address the issue. They decided to extract the iron oxide from the contaminated water and repurpose it as color pigments for artist paints. By selling these pigments, they aimed to generate funds for the crucial cleanup efforts.
While Riefler possessed extensive knowledge of AMD and had developed a a method for neutralizing and removing iron oxide from the toxic outflows, he lacked expertise in creating artists' pigments. Fortunately, Sabraw stepped in with his considerable understanding of the subject. Together, they embarked on a mission to establish a pilot facility designed by Riefler and partnered with the paint company Gamblin to produce a limited run of artist paints.
These paints, aptly named "Reclaimed Earth Colors," were readily embraced by artists. By incorporating these environmentally conscious pigments into their artwork, artists could express their creativity and contribute to the restoration of the affected waterways. A Kickstarter fundraising campaign rewarded its supporters with these unique paints and helped construct a successful pilot plant.
Building on this success, Riefler, and Sabraw have taken their initiative a step further, establishing a social enterprise called "True Pigments," enabling them to construct their first full-scale treatment facility. This facility is expected to be operational by 2024, marking a significant milestone in their mission.
Interestingly, using iron oxide as a source material for artist pigments dates back thousands of years. In fact, it can be traced back as far as 100,000 years ago when the earliest of artists utilized yellow ochre (iron oxide) and carbon black in the first prehistoric cave paintings.
The inspiring, collaborative efforts of Sabraw and Riefler, bridging the realms of art and science, have addressed a daunting and pervasive environmental issue and paint a brighter picture for the future.
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EARTHLY DELIGHTS-Photograph of crystalline tartaric acid found in wine. -NEW
“If you will stay close to nature, to its simplicity, to the small things hardly noticeable, those things can unexpectedly become great and immeasurable.” -Rainer Maria Rilke, author
NEWS FROM THE STUDIO/LAB:
I often meet interior designers as I travel across the country exhibiting my artwork, and I have had the opportunity of collaborating with many. I met Stacey Lapuk last year and have become familiar with her design philosophy and award-winning work. Her specialty, biophilic design, incorporates natural elements throughout the design process. Colors, patterns and textures, materials, and lighting are all thoughtfully and beautifully integrated into her clients' homes and work environments.
Numerous studies have shown that when designs incorporate biophilic elements, there a measurable benefit to our mental and physical health occurs, including lower levels of the stress hormone cortisol and increases in dopamine and serotonin.
I talked at length with Stacey to learn more about this up-and-coming design trend and you can read more about her insights in this month's Art and Science column.
Since we spend the vast majority of our lives indoors these days, a closer look at what makes a space healthier is certainly worth the time and effort. Dr. Claudia Miller, the head of medicine at the University of Texas, sums it up by stating, "Architects and designers have a greater ability to improve public health than medical professionals."
Cheers!
- Lee
May 2023
“The goal of life is to make your heartbeat match the beat of the universe, to match your nature with Nature.” -Joseph Campbell, author
CALLAS -Photograph of crystalline acetaminophen
LEE'S UPCOMING EVENTS:
Please note that I'll be exhibiting at some new shows, while some of the usual shows are missing from this year's agenda. The jury process is an unpredictable beast for any artist and especially so for those of us who venture into unique areas.
July 22-23, 2023 Broadmoor Arts Festival -Colorado Springs, CO
July 29-30, 2023 Avon Arts Festival -Avon, CO
August 4-6, 2023 Kimball Festival of the Arts -Park City, UT
October 28-29, 2023 Kierland Art and Wine Festival -Scottsdale, AZ
November 17-19 and 24-26, 2023 Hidden-in-the Hills Studio Tour-Cave Creek, AZ New studio this year!
SYMPHONY -Crystalline citric acid -Installation Kingston, WA
ART AND SCIENCE:
BIOPHILIC DESIGN: AN INTERVIEW WITH STACEY LAPUK, ASID
Lee: The concept of biophilic design is unknown to most people, so how would you explain what you do as a designer to a new client?
Stacey: Biophilia translates into a love of nature, and I tell my clients that biophilic design acts like a cloak infusing all the design elements of the home, whether it be through the use of natural materials, lighting, color, or patterns. It's much more than putting a plant in a room. Think of it as living in a three-dimensional painting, where your beautiful space is also biologically aligned with good health. Beautiful design, biologically aligned.
L: It would seem to me that biophilic design is then one of the oldest design principles. Are designers and clients becoming more aware of the benefits?
S: Yes, they are. Remember, our nature connection is embedded in our DNA. We have over 200,000 years of evolution within the natural environment and only 20,000 years of living in structures. When I give talks, I often ask people to close their eyes, take a deep breath and imagine they are in their happy place. And most everyone raises their hand when I ask if it is someplace outside. It makes sense that incorporating natural design elements into our homes will be beneficial, and this has been proven true by numerous scientific studies.
L: How do you determine what biophilic design elements are appropriate for a particular client?
S: I ask them a lot of questions. I actually have a 15-page questionnaire. In it, I'm asking them how they want to feel in a space and what are their functional requirements. Then I look at the architecture of the space. Because people often have difficulty describing a style that they like, I give them homework to collect images of spaces that resonate with them. We can then discuss what in that space they find appealing.
Everything in a design should have a reason for being there. Perhaps why we like a particular element may be difficult to describe, but where we place that in the space should have a reason. That reason has to do with proportion, scale, and the relationship to the whole.
L: As an artist, I am convinced that including art as well as nature in our lives is extremely beneficial. What role does the inclusion of artwork play in your designs?
S: All types of artwork can be included, encompassing a client's interests and tastes. The art need not be as predictable as a relaxing landscape painting, although that may make a great addition, or even anything representational, for that matter. Art of all types can positively stimulate both conscious and unconscious brain functions.
Art supports us in multiple ways: First, it simply brings joy into our lives. It can also reduce stress. Research shows that simply viewing a favorite piece of art can increase the blood flow to the brain and increase the release of the "happy" hormones dopamine, serotonin, and oxytocin while lowering cortisol levels.
Viewing art also improves cognitive abilities, and as we make sense of what we are experiencing, we grow new neural pathways. Art also engages us, holding our attention and allowing us to pause, much like meditation. As we try to understand why it makes us feel a certain way we are reconnecting to our own life experiences. It gently encourages us to use our imagination. It should make us wonder, be curious, and ask questions. All this stimulates thought, encouraging creativity and expanding our worldview.
When you wake up each morning and experience a rich, multi- sensory home, its energy sets the stage for a joy-filled day.
Learn more about Biophilic Design and Stacey Lapuk on her website www.StaceyLapukInteriors.com
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SERENADE -Photograph of crystalline tartaric acid found in wine. -NEW!
"Nature does not create works of art. It is we, and the faculty of interpretation peculiar to the human mind, that see art." Man Ray - artist, photographer
NEWS FROM THE STUDIO/LAB:
After a cool and wet winter (by Arizona standards, anyway) the sunshine and warm weather have returned to the southwest. All those rainy days we sat through at the Arizona Fine Art Expo have created a desert bloom the likes of which have not been seen here in many years. So in tribute, I'm including three new crystal images that seem to fit a flowering motif in this issue of my newsletter. A new crystalline subject, malic acid which is found in wine, makes its debut.
Cheers!
- Lee
April 2023
SUMMER BREEZE -Photograph of crystalline malic acid found in wine. -NEW!
LEE'S UPCOMING EVENTS:
Please note that I'll be exhibiting at some new shows, while some of the usual shows are missing form this year's agenda. The jury process is an unpredictable beast for any artist and especially so for those of us who venture into unique areas.
July 22-23, 2023 Broadmoor Arts Festival -Colorado Springs, CO
July 29-30, 2023 Avon Arts Festival -Avon, CO
August 4-6, 2023 Kimball Festival of the Arts -Park City, UT
October 28-29, 2023 Kierland Art and Wine Festival -Scottsdale, AZ
November 17-19 and 24-26, 2023 Hidden-in-the Hills Studio Tour-Cave Creek, AZ New studio this year!
REVERIE -Photograph of crystalline tartaric acid found in wine. -NEW!
ART AND SCIENCE:
Recollections of High School Physics
During my junior year in high school I carried Berenice Abbott's photo with me most everywhere I went. It wasn't that Berenice and I were close or anything, and to be more precise, it wasn't a photo of Berenice that I carried, but rather a photo by Berenice. Her photograph, Bouncing Ball in Diminishing Arcs, graced the front cover of my high school physics textbook, wonderfully illustrating through the use of time-lapse stroboscopic imaging the trajectory of a bouncing ball.
From 1958 to 1960, Berenice Abbott produced a whole series of photographs for the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's Physical Science Study Committee Project, whose aim was to improve secondary school physics teaching.
Many years before, Abbott, a decidedly avant-garde artist, had penned a "manifesto" entitled Photography and Science. In it, she said "We live in a world made by science. There needs to be a friendly interpreter between science and the layman. I believe photography can be this spokesman, as no other form of expression can be." She was to prove herself to be an eloquent spokesperson, indeed.
Abbott's artistic and photographic journey began at the age of 17 when she left a difficult home life for New York City to pursue a career as a painter and sculptor. A move to Paris followed and led to a job as a darkroom assistant for the legendary surrealist artist and photographer Man Ray.
She knew nothing about photography at the time but began taking her own photos with a camera borrowed from her employer. Photography was to become her passion. Later, she wrote: "I took to photography like a duck to water. I never wanted to do anything else."
She returned to NYC in the early 1930s and began a lifelong career of authoring, editing and contributing to photographic publications. Her list of accomplishments is wider ranging than almost anyone else’s in the history of American photography. A true pioneer in the field she was inducted into the International Photography Hall of Fame and Museum in 2000.
Although Abbott's work remains largely unknown today (she was not even given photo credit for all those images in my textbook), I recall her photos well and am happy to shine a little light on her wonderful contributions to science, art, and photographic history.
TOUCH OF BLUES -Photograph of crystalline tartaric acid found in wine. -NEW!
]]>"I think that sometimes we need permission to stop and adore, and a work of art grants us that." -Patrick Bringley, author
NEWS FROM THE
STUDIO/LAB:WHAT'S
TRENDING IN PHOTOGRAPHY OF CRYSTALSWhen the St Francis Hotel in San Francisco's Union Square first opened its doors in 1904, it immediately became one of the city's most prestigious addresses. Its 6,000-square-foot lobby has always been one of the busiest rendezvous locations in the country. Ansel Adams, who was hired by the St Francis in 1939 to photograph the hotel's interior, has a collection of his photographs on display there.
The iconic St Francis has survived earthquakes, fires, scandals, and an abundance of famous and not-so-famous personalities as guests, so considering this rather astounding pedigree, you can imagine how honored I am to announce that my crystal photograph, Blossom, will grace the permanent art collections in two of the St Francis' newly remodeled 31st-floor suites.
If you have an occasion to check into one of these sure-to-be sumptuous lodgings, please send me a photo. I've heard the view is quite extraordinary from up there.
- Lee
THE ARIZONA FINE ART EXPO IS NOW OPEN!
The view is also quite extraordinary at the Arizona Fine Art Expo, home to my studio/gallery until March 26. This is my eighth season under the big (40,000+ square feet) white tents, which I share with 80 very talented local, national, and international artists.
You can find me there every day with the exception of Tuesday and Wednesday. In addition to plenty of crystal photos on display, I'm able to have a fully functioning crystal growing laboratory, complete with my microscope and a monitor to show visitors all the action. So be sure to tell your friends and plan on a visit to the show.
The Arizona Fine Art Expo is located at the SW corner of Scottsdale and Jomax Road, 26540 N. Scottsdale Rd. in North Scottsdale, Admission for a season pass is $12 for adults, $10 seniors and military, and children under 12 are free. Show hours: 10-6 pm daily. Wheelchair accessible with Free Parking.
LEE"S UPCOMING EVENTS
July 22-23, 2023 Broadmoor Arts Festival -Colorado Springs, CO
July 29-30, 2023 Avon Arts Festival -Avon, CO
August 4-6, 2023 Kimball Festival of the Arts -Park City, UT
EBB AND FLOW -Photograph of crystalline tartaric acid found in wine. -NEW!
ART AND SCIENCE:
Seeing and Believing
We all have blind spots. In the center of the eye's retina is an area where the optic nerve fibers join together to allow our 126 million photo-receptors to send signals to the brain for processing. There are no photo-receptors here, and at that nexus of fibers, no image can be formed. So why is there no "hole" in our vision? Our brain simply makes a best guess as to what occupies that empty space in the visual field, then literally fills in the blanks with made-up stuff.
This adaptability of vision and brain was truly put to the test when 20-year-old Pete Eckert was diagnosed with retinitis pigmentosa, an incurable genetic eye disease that was to rob him of his sight. Eckert decided to channel his feelings of loss into art and set out to teach himself photography.
The result has been a very successful career as a commercial photographer. His photographs employ long exposures and "painting" with light, Eckert builds pictures in his mind, using both sound and touch to visualize his subjects."I actually build the images with layers and layers of information -- I'm memorizing the layers as I put them together," said Eckert.
His ghostly images have been published by Playboy magazine, which commissioned a series of eerie nudes, Swarovski jewelers, and Volkswagen, which hired Eckert to photograph its new car for an advertising campaign.
Photography by Pete Eckert
"You come to understand the 'sound signature' of an object," he said. "Take a stop sign, for instance. A stop sign shimmering in the wind vibrates and (projects) this image that oscillates. At first, you can't hear the pole holding up the sign ... but it has a sound shadow that's many feet long. "I actively listen to things, and then go up to touch them so I can relate the sound shadow to what that object actually is," he said. "I'm slowly building a language of sound to associate with the objects."
"Like a bat, I can use my voice to echolocate my model. In (my pitch-black studio), I layer light, measuring what I've done until I'm satisfied with the image in my mind's eye.
Pete Eckert's artistic journey is a reminder of how our ability to see and interpret the world around us is wonderfully fluid. In art, as in science, observational skills lie at the forefront. Through close examination we notice the slight and subtle differences, the quiet connections between things, and the result is so much more rewarding than just filling in the blanks with made-up stuff.
Photography by Pete Eckert
"You can become blind by seeing each day as a similar one. Each day is a different one, each day brings a miracle of its own. It's just a matter of paying attention to this miracle." -Paulo Coelho -author
If you enjoyed my newsletter, please forward it to your art loving friends, we will welcome them into our family.
-Exhibits, Talks, and the Arizona Fine Art Expo
-Art and Science: Beebe and Bostelmann
CUMULUS -Photograph of crystalline phenylethylamine found in chocolate. -NEW!
"The job of the artist is to deepen the mystery."
— Sir Francis Bacon - writer and philosopher
NEWS FROM THE STUDIO/LAB:
WHAT'S TRENDING IN PHOTOGRAPHY OF CRYSTALS
The beginning of the new year traditionally leads to thoughts of New Year's resolutions, an attempt to redesign some part of our lives for the better. Here in the studio/lab I got to thinking my crystal photos should be honored and displayed in the best way possible. So, I'm pleased to announce the launch of a brand new, and I believe much improved, Photography of Crystal's website.
I've rebuilt the site from the ground up, with the goal of providing a more attractive gallery for the artwork and greater ease of navigation for my guests. It is still a work in progress, so I'll be adding more artwork and helpful content in the coming weeks; stay tuned.
THE ARIZONA FINE ART EXPO IS NOW OPEN!
A terrific way to see my artwork in person is by visiting the Arizona Fine Art Expo, home to my studio/gallery until March 26. This is my eighth season under the big (40,000+ square feet) white tents, which I share with 80 very talented local, national, and international artists.
It took me the better part of three days to set up my studio, but it was well worth the effort. In addition to plenty of crystal photos on display, I'm able to have a fully functioning crystal growing laboratory, complete with microscope and a monitor to show visitors all the action. So be sure to tell your friends and plan on a visit to the show.
The Arizona Fine Art Expo is located at the SW corner of Scottsdale and Jomax Road, 26540 N. Scottsdale Rd. in North Scottsdale, Admission for a season pass is $12 for adults, $10 seniors and military, and children under 12 are free. Show hours: 10-6pm daily. Wheelchair accessible with Free Parking. You can find me there everyday with the exception of Tuesday and Wednesday, and the weekend of Feb 4 and 5, when you can find me at the Kierland Art and Wine Festival, Kierland Commons-Phoenix, AZ.
LEE"S UPCOMING EVENTS
January 13-March 26, 2023 Arizona Fine Art Expo -Scottsdale,AZ
January 31, 2023 Hot Coffee Arts Lecture -Goodyear Civic Center, Goodyear, AZ
February 4 and 5, 2023 Kierland Fine Arts and Wine Festival -Phoenix, AZ
June 23-25, 2023 Utah Arts Festival -Salt Lake City, UT (TBD)
INCLINATIONS- Photograph of crystalline acetaminophen and
salicylic acid found in Excedrin® NEW!
ART AND SCIENCE:
A First-Rate Collaboration: Bostelmann and Beebe
Collaborations in the sciences are quite common, with scientists from multiple disciplines coming together as a team to work together toward a singular project goal. Although artists are typically lone-wolf in their pursuits, they also occasionally bring their talents together on large-scale endeavors.
History is also rich with stories of scientists and artists joining forces on a collaborative effort for the simple reason that most scientists are typically lousy artists. In order for scientific discoveries to be effectively communicated, bringing an artist on board is just the ticket.
One of the more productive science/art collaborations involved the earliest explorations of the deep sea. In a book that captured my imagination as a youth, Half Mile Down, scientist and explorer William Beebe describes descending beneath the ocean's waves inside a large metal ball, that he called a "Bathysphere" to depths of, you guessed it, a half-mile.
These epoch-making dives began in the 1930s and were the first time anyone had visited this ocean environment. Beebe, an explorer, marine biologist, ornithologist, and ecologist (before that term even existed), was an eloquent and captivating writer, but he soon realized that words alone could not describe the wonders of this new habitat. As Beebe states, "Adequate presentation of what I saw on these dives is one of the most difficult things I ever attempted."
Fortunately for Beebe, artist Else Bostelmann heard that the National Geographic Society was sponsoring a trailblazing oceanographic expedition to explore this ocean realm from Beebe's research station located in the Bahamas. She contacted Beebe, offered her considerable artistic talents to the project, and was signed on.
Although Beebe felt that Bostelmann, being a single mother with a teenage daughter, would be simply put into too much danger if she was to descend in the Bathysphere (for example, it had filled with water on a previous unmanned test dive), they worked out a system. She was to base her initial drawings while speaking with Beebe via a telephone line that ran inside the hose which tenuously connected Beebe and his Bathysphere to the research vessel. After returning to the ship, Beebe recalled that the two of them would go into an "artistic huddle" and refine the "proportions, size, color, lights" until a "splendid finished painting" emerged that accurately depicted their latest deep-sea discovery.
Using this system, Bostelmann created more than 300 paintings of marine creatures, many of which had never before been seen by humans. Her paintings brought Beebe's books and lectures vividly to life, eventually making their way into museums and magazines and the imaginations of the general public.
Saber-toothed Viper Fish and Ocean Sunfish -Else Bostelmann
Else Bostelmann's captivating artwork inspired a wide audience including future generations of scientists fascinated by the extraordinary wonders of the deep ocean realm. Collaborations, like Beebe and Bostelmann's, can often have a synergistic effect, where the results are much more than simply the sum of their individual parts, and instead open a new world, rich with mystery and potential.
"Nothing in the upper world can compare with the luxury of this nether realm of the sea, with its colors, its atmosphere of mystery, of poise, and tranquility. -Else Bostelmann -artist
-Exhibits, Talks, and the Arizona Fine Art Expo
-Art and Science: Arthritis, Stomach Aches, and the Art of Grandma Moses
]]>December 2022
LEVITATION-Crystalline phenylethylamine (from chocolate
grown in Dixeebe, Oaxacan mezcal) -NEW!
- Goodyear Mayor Joe Pizillo and the Artist
-Tempe Festival of the Arts 2022
Next up, the Arizona Fine Art Expo begins on Thursday, January 12th with the VIP Reception to which you are cordially invited (Please RSVP with me if you would like to attend this special event). The show officially opens to the public the following day, Friday, January 13th and continues through March 26th, 10-6pm daily, and is located under the white tents on the SW corner of Jomax and Scottsdale Rd, Scottsdale, AZ. Be sure to mark it on your calendar and plan a visit. Here is a link for more info on the Arizona Fine Art Expo.
Anna's paintings eventually found a home at the local drug store, where they collected dust for the better two years, until Louis Caldor seeking relief for a stomach ache, stopped by the store. Caldor, a New York City inventor and part-time art collector, saw Anna's paintings and was smitten. He bought all she had on exhibit and, after arranging to meet with Anna the next day, bought up her remaining inventory.
Caldor soon found a gallery in New York City that agreed to a one-woman exhibition of Anna's work. Her paintings were a huge hit. The press dubbed her "Grandma Moses," and Anna, now 78 years old, was about to put it into another gear. Grandma Moses' bucolic scenes of rural life and holiday festivities had struck a nostalgic chord in a world still reeling from WWII. She displayed a keen eye for the beauty of nature and a deep appreciation for the comfort of home and community, and the power of tradition.
She went on to produce over 2000 paintings during the next 21 years, arthritis and all. She appeared on television, on the cover of Vogue and Time magazines, and exhibited in galleries and museums worldwide. Hallmark was to print over 50 million Christmas cards featuring her winter scenes during her lifetime.
Like so many artists before and after her, Grandma Moses had to overcome disability and a lack of both artistic opportunity and acceptance. When she passed away in 1961 at the age of 101, she had left an endearing legacy, not only of her art but of her tenacity and optimism.
Time Magazine -December 28, 1953
“I look back on my life like a good day's work, it was done and I feel satisfied with it. I was happy and contented, I knew nothing better and made the best out of what life offered. And life is what we make it, always has been, always will be.” - Grandma Moses
BAY CITY BLUES-Crystalline phenylethylamine
(from chocolate) -NEW!
CRYSTAL PHOTOGRAPHY MAKES A GREAT GIFT!
Gift certficates are available.
Schedule a call or contact me for personalized help with your design ideas, media choices, framing options and questions about the artwork.
READ ALL ABOUT IT
If you enjoy my newsletter, please forward it to your art loving friends, we will welcome them into our family.
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