John Ferry - Painter

John Ferry

John Ferry received his B.F.A. degree from Kansas City Art Institute and his M.F.A. from School of Visual Arts, New York. “Ferry’s works reveal the aesthetic beauty of the overlooked…
Gary Johnson - Watercolorist

Gary Johnson

Gary Johnson, a resident of Fayetteville, AR and self taught artist who, while living and working in the Pacific NW, developed his skills in watercolor painting by taking numerous classes…
Fredy Villamil - Painter

Fredy Villamil

Born in San Antonio de los Baños,  Cuba,1980.  Fredy Villamil has become one of the most important representatives of Cuban arts today. His father was a noted painter in Cuba…
Federico Barrault - Painter

Federico Barrault

Federico Barrault was born on March 18th, 1981. He lives and works in Mexico, Argentina. His artistic vocation started at early age and his creative sensibility developed his passion until…
Carmelo Pluchino - Mixed Media at the Art Collective Gallery In Rogers Arkansas

Carmelo Pluchino

Carmelo Pluchino was born in Spinea, on the Venice mainland, in 1946. After finishing school he decided to pursue the artistic vocation that he had cultivated since he was a young boy, but found a job with a local bank for his upkeep. He began mixing with the artistic circles in Venice, taking an active part in the debates that enlivened the creative research that the neo- vanguard movement was carrying forward. He met and became friends with exponents of the New Front of Arts and Spatialism and became part of the cultural clique that had formed around Virgilio Guidi, where he renewed his friendship with Emilio Vedova and the artists who exhibited in the Traghetto Gallery, which Gianni DeMarco had founded and which fully supported the up and coming artists. It was Gianni De Marco himself who first became interested in Carmelo’s work and convinced him to hold an exhibition in the gallery, which created a great deal of interest with the emerging figures of that time. In the meantime he had moved to Venice to live, but kept his studio in his hometown. In the 70s and 80s he received several invitations to hold exhibitions in various Italian towns, supported by the gallery owner and art merchant Gianni De Marco, who also gave him the chance of meeting several art collectors. He was also a frequent visitor to the Il Cavallino Gallery, where he met representatives of the Cobra movement, who became very important reference figures for his research, which revolved around the informal gestural expressiveness of Vedova and the fantasy of the Cobra group. After visiting the Biennial in 1964 where he discovered the American Pop Art artists, his style tooka decisive turning point towards the new Pop Art trends. He had various personal and group exhibitions in different galleries and in the 90s undertook a new research path to try and reconcile the drive of Post Informal language with the objective displays of popular figuration. During the next decade he met the architect and designer, Enzo Berti, and together they put on a performance in 2004 in the Milan Furniture Exhibition. He is a passionate collector of antique African art and after a trip to the Black Continent, he dedicated himself to depicting the tribal peoples with a cycle of works inspired by their culture.