My work is loosely based on the figure, sometimes morphing into quirky and other worldly beings. The figures I create, some creepy and dark are not to be found on the street but rather in one’s imagination or dreams creating an alternate universe. My ceramic figures inhabit boats, circular and square stands, clay or wooden wagons with wheels, figures sitting on animals or chairs and recently figures appear in portraits.

Marilyn Richeda

South Salem, NY
marilynricheda.com
@marilynricheda

My work is loosely based on the figure, sometimes morphing into quirky and other worldly beings. The figures I create, some creepy and dark are not to be found on the street but rather in one’s imagination or dreams creating an alternate universe. My ceramic figures inhabit boats, circular and square stands, clay or wooden wagons with wheels, figures sitting on animals or chairs and recently figures appear in portraits.

Although my figures are pared-down minimalist in outside appearance, I mean for them to have complicated and subtle inner lives. For me, they carry the heavy weight of emotional fragility.

Wondering how to live in the world with others … this is my way of speaking through my art, my way of being in the world.

Girl Bandit | Ceramic/porcelain | 4.5"h x 3.5"w x .5"d
Girl Bandit | Ceramic/porcelain | 4.5″h x 3.5″w x .5″d
Flower Bandit | Ceramic/earthenware | 4.5"h x 3.5"w x .25"d
Flower Bandit | Ceramic/earthenware | 4.5″h x 3.5″w x .25″d
Horse with Rider | Ceramic/earthenware | 3.5"h x 4.5"w x .5"d
Horse with Rider | Ceramic/earthenware | 3.5″h x 4.5″w x .5″d
Blue Dress | Ceramic/earthenwaren |4.5"h x 3.5"w x .5"d
Blue Dress | Ceramic/earthenwaren |4.5″h x 3.5″w x .5″d

Featured Artist | Releah Michelle

Releah Michelle

http://www.releahmichelle.com
@releahmichelleart

Bio:

Releah Michelle was born in Georgia in 1987. She is a self-taught abstract expressionist who has been honing her artistic voice for many years. Merging her love for painting abstract figures and automatic painting around the movement of energy paves a straight line to her artistic vocal cord.

She is currently based in Georgia and is inspired by her ancestors, ancient Egyptian history, the spiritual world, meditation, and the use of bright colors. Beauty also plays a significant part in her style presented in the artworks because she was previously an independent latex clothing fashion designer for a total of 7 years. She presented at NY Fashion Week and put on several local fashion shows. Her creative process for the abstract figurative paintings begin with either her sketching first or free-hand painting figures into abstract backgrounds. Her creative process for abstract paintings begin with layers of acrylic paint being applied on the canvas over a period of days often incorporating a mixed media approach.

Artist Statement:

Art is a path so I describe my art as an extension of my previous fashion designer career. As an artist and expressionist who is constantly evolving spiritually my art explores the relationship between beauty and the spiritual world. Reflections of the soul, beautiful black woman, and texture are a couple of the subject matters you will find in my artwork.

Neutral Identity | Acrylic on Canvas | 24" x 12"
Neutral Identity | Acrylic on Canvas | 24″ x 12″
We Are Connected | Acrylic on Canvas | 18" x 24"
We Are Connected | Acrylic on Canvas | 18″ x 24″
The Sun is Shining | Acrylic on Canvas | 18" x 24"
The Sun is Shining | Acrylic on Canvas | 18″ x 24″
Heatwave VS Comfort | Mixed Media on Canvas | 18" x 24"
Heatwave VS Comfort | Mixed Media on Canvas | 18″ x 24″

 

Featured Artist | Martin Coyle

Martin Coyle

Dover, NH
martycoyle.com
@martincoyleart

Martin Coyle is and Outsider Artist with no formal art education or training, he has been painting out of his home studio located in a converted barn behind his house for the last 15 years here in the beautiful city of Dover N.H

Martin Coyle is originally from Long Island New York and is related to late NYC expressionist painter Otto Mjaanes.

Coyle is married to his beautiful wife Rachel and they have a 19-year-old daughter Solei

Statement by the artist

As an outsider artist I don’t go into creating my paintings with an intention or direction, I let the artwork create itself. I consider myself an expressionist and create both figurative and nonfigurative artwork .

I have always been an artist but didn’t get serious with my art until 2012, In 2013 I had my first group exhibition art show at 100 market gallery in Portsmouth N.H and won the award for honorable mention.

Since then, I have been in group art shows in New Jersey and twice in California.

I work in many different mediums and enjoy both painting and drawing.

Deep Elm | mixed media | 20x24 inches
Deep Elm | mixed media | 20×24 inches
Self Reflection mixed media | 20x24 inches
Self Reflection mixed media | 20×24 inches
Barn Street | mixed media | 24 x 36 inches
Barn Street | mixed media | 24 x 36 inches
Soft Parade | mixed media | 24 x20 inches
Soft Parade | mixed media | 24 x20 inches

 

Featured Artist | Marcela Conomos

Marcela Conomos

Hong Kong
https://www.instagram.com/artbymarcela/
@artbymarcela

Bio:

Marcela is a self-taught intuitive artist born in Sydney, Australia. She is currently based in Hong Kong.

Her earliest creative explorations were in dance, drama, singing and visual arts. In childhood and adolescence, she found an escape in art and a place where she could express herself without words.

After high school, she completed a Law Degree at the University of Technology Sydney, which saw her work in various jobs from legal to publishing related jobs.

She felt herself pulled back into the arts during the Covid-19 pandemic in 2020. The turmoil brought about by the pandemic, led her to connect more deeply artistically and spiritually. Creating art felt therapeutic and her art quickly became deeply connected to her spiritual practice.

Marcela’s work is based on intuition, mindfulness and vibrational energies. Her works revolve around exploring the realms of the unknown and altered states of consciousness. Rainbows are often found in her works, as a symbol of the rainbow bridge.

Through predominately ink, watercolour and hand drawn digital art, her works represent her way of translating the unseen energies she experiences into something more tangible for others to see.

She hopes her art sparks discussions about other-worldly topics that transcend current human understanding.

——-

Artist Statement:

I try to capture the invisible and make it visible.

My work is based on intuition, mindfulness and vibrational energies.

My artworks are often created subconsciously from a prayerful meditative place, only once they are finished do I come to understand what they are expressing.

In part through automatic drawing and also through accessing my intuition, I challenge others to see beyond current human understanding by diagramming elements of the immaterial world and exploring altered states of consciousness. To have people look past the 5 senses, that is my goal and inspiration.

Felicity | Hand Drawn Digital Art | 16" x 20"
Felicity | Hand Drawn Digital Art | 16″ x 20″
By Your Side | Hand Drawn Digital Art | 16" x 20"
By Your Side | Hand Drawn Digital Art | 16″ x 20″
A Face In The Crowd | Hand Drawn Digital Art | 16" x 20"
A Face In The Crowd | Hand Drawn Digital Art | 16″ x 20″
Better Together | Hand Drawn Digital Art | 18" x 24"
Better Together | Hand Drawn Digital Art | 18″ x 24″

 

Featured Artist | Binna Kim

Binna Kim

Long Island City, NY
https://www.binnakimart.com
@binnnaart

In Binna Kim’s artwork, she aims to present a stimulating mixture of nature and a view from her vivid imagination.

Whether in colorful abstract works or visual interpretation of nature, the works demonstrate keen attention to the smallest detail in order to emphasize the depth of expression and emotive beauty of nature. This combination helps bring the audience to a different world, a stage for viewing scenery in an emotionally evocative way. While viewing the works, the artist’s visual expression and interpretation by the audience merge and go hand in hand to evoke a memory, a passion, or a feeling unique to each of us.

Emotions-19 Series focuses on positive emotions that we might have forgotten for a while due to Covid-19 pandemic, such as love, joy, comfort and gratitude.

Binna Kim is a self-taught artist with a few different yet special career backgrounds. She is based in New York as an artist, floral designer and window display designer. Binna’s childhood was spent on the southern tip of the Korean peninsula, against the backdrop of mountains and ocean that first inspired her art. Natural forms have remained a central theme in her work, and as her art career flourished she developed an interest in floral design and plant-based installations. Binna’s arrangements have graced vitrines at flagship locations of Beretta, Madison Avenue Gallery and Oxxford Clothes, and at renowned boutiques across New York City.

Apex No.1 - Emotions-19 Series | Acrylic inks, Pastels & Pens on paper | 16 x 16 inches
Apex No.1 – Emotions-19 Series | Acrylic inks, Pastels & Pens on paper | 16 x 16 inches
Apex No.2 - Emotions-19 Series | Acrylic inks, Pastels & Pens on paper | 16 x 16 inches
Apex No.2 – Emotions-19 Series | Acrylic inks, Pastels & Pens on paper | 16 x 16 inches
Metaphysical Joy No.1 - Emotions-19 Series | Acrylic inks & Pastels on paper | 24 x 18 inches
Metaphysical Joy No.1 – Emotions-19 Series | Acrylic inks & Pastels on paper | 24 x 18 inches
Tranquil Joy - Emotions-19 Series | Acrylic inks & Pastels on paper | 24 x 18 inches
Tranquil Joy – Emotions-19 Series | Acrylic inks & Pastels on paper | 24 x 18 inches

 

FROM | Outsider Art Magazine | Issue Six

Issue Six is now available digitally for free or $25 for a printed version.

Outsidr Art Magazine Issue Six

Artists in issue six

Robert Gorchov *Cover Artist
Robert Frankel
Kevin Kemp
Dio D’Brutto
Valentina Fedoseeva
Ernest Compta
Matthew Clarke
RINA Taytu
Nicklas Farrantello
Sven Froekjaer-Jensen
Mitchell Pluto
Richard Reynolds
Gale Rothstein
Thelma Van Rensburg
Jennifer Levine
Susan Spangenberg
Emmanuel Laveau
Samia Farah
Selkie Quan
Bux Dhyne
Bill Skrips
Poete Maudit
Christy Carter
BILL _L47
Sophie Jacobs
Oshi Artist
Michael Chomick
David Sheskin
William Francis
Richard Green
Hermine Harman

Featured Artist | Dio D’Brutto

Dio D’Brutto

Chelmsford, MA
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCLW_bTFcdLwDoNbuqDj-5aw

Art is what you see in the mirror. An amalgamation of beauty and hideousness. You see what you see, because the conditions were right.

Awake | iPhone video
Awake | iPhone video
Thinking of You | iPhone video
Thinking of You | iPhone video
Still Life III | iPhone video
Still Life III | iPhone video
Awake II | iPhone video
Awake II | iPhone video

Featured Artist | Nicklas Farrantello

Nicklas Farrantello

Orlando, FL
https://fortunewheels.company.site

Recently, at a traveling carnival, I came across one of those old coin-operated fortune-telling machines. You put a quarter in the slot, a figure comes to life, waves its “hand” over a glass ball, and out pops a scroll of paper with your future written on it. I was struck by the device’s mannequin, wrapped in colorful, patterned, silks and the device’s antique carved wood cabinet, with brass detailing. I was also intrigued by the idea that this mechanical device with gears and cogs was somehow supposed to be able to tell me my future. How could a cold machine possibly know my life’s destiny? Of course, it can’t. Like the fortune cookie or the Magic 8 Ball, these things are meant solely for entertainment.

Yet, they still hold power over us. For some people, a Ouija board or a deck of tarot cards can be the couriers of life-changing information. These objects are believed to possess mystifying and arcane knowledge, even though, in reality, they are just novelty consumer products. The clerk at the magic store orders a gross of tarot cards whenever the stock is low and a new Ouija board can be purchased in the board game section of your local toy store, next to Chutes and Ladders.

The thing that makes these items magical can be found in their construct…not in just how they are made or their graphic design, but in their entire idea. Usually, the stories around these items are just as important as the items themselves; and the contexts in which they are used play a massive part in their power.

I began to wonder if there are other objects that somehow provide knowledge through purely mechanical means. Old analog calculators leaped to mind, the slide ruler, the abacus, and the mechanical adding machine with its crank handle. These devices also convey complicated ideas through the simple arrangement of moving parts. And their power is not questioned. All of ancient China was controlled using sliding beads on an abacus.

Like the fortune-telling machine at the fair, these tools of science were often also beautiful, delicately carved devices with inlaid brass and ivory. Although these machines were based on math, for some, they too possess mystifying and arcane knowledge. They have their own mysticism, their own sacred places of use, and their own histories and lore. In the hands of mystics at NASA, the slide ruler took us to the moon.

So here I present a new paradigm. What if science made devices that could calculate more than just numbers? What if engineers and mathematicians could come up with formulas and conversion wheels that could tell us who to love or the nature of the soul? What might it look like if all the mysteries of the world could be quantified, laid out in charts, then formatted into easy-to-use slide wheels? What if there was a company that had been creating just such devices for decades? This collection is a celebration of that idea

Whom Should You Trust | mixed | 16" x 16" x .75"
Whom Should You Trust | mixed | 16″ x 16″ x .75″
What They Made You Forget | mixed | 20" x 30" x 1"
What They Made You Forget | mixed | 20″ x 30″ x 1″
How Many Cat Souls Equals One Dog Soul | mixed | 30" x 20.75" x 1"
How Many Cat Souls Equals One Dog Soul | mixed | 30″ x 20.75″ x 1″
Is Your Relative Possessed | mixed | 20" x 23" x 1"
Is Your Relative Possessed | mixed | 20″ x 23″ x 1″

 

Featured Artist | Christy Carter

Christy Carter

Delta, BC, Canada
https://www.facebook.com/CCs-Unique-Creations-1251439794906138

Working with old vintage items and broken items is a thrill. Taking something discarded and giving them a new life is my passion as an Artist.

Down the rabbit hole | mixed media sculpture | 13in H x 7.5 in L x 4in W
Down the rabbit hole | mixed media sculpture | 13in H x 7.5 in L x 4in W
Woodlyn fairly on a toadstool | Mixed media sculpture | 10in H x 6.5in L x 4in W
Woodlyn fairly on a toadstool | Mixed media sculpture | 10in H x 6.5in L x 4in W
Fantasy Flowers | Mixed media sculpture | 14in H x 5in L x 4in W
Fantasy Flowers | Mixed media sculpture | 14in H x 5in L x 4in W
Family tree | Mixed media sculpture | 13in H x 11in L x 9in W
Family tree | Mixed media sculpture | 13in H x 11in L x 9in W

Featured Artist | RINA Taytu

RINA Taytu

Nerima-ku, Tokyo, Japan
https://www.instagram.com/rina_taytuart
@rina_taytuart

The theme of my works is coming from “To Live”. Most of them, if anything, are based on “sorrow” and “trouble” around us. Among these sorrow things, I shift my thought to feel a thanks. When I feel a thank, I see a small “dream” near in the future. It is “drawing” for me to make a form from a small dream.

ARIN | coloredpencil/ballpoint/acrylic | 420mm×590mm
ARIN | coloredpencil/ballpoint/acrylic | 420mm×590mm
NAKED ISLAND | coloredpencils/acrylics | 210mm×297mm
NAKED ISLAND | coloredpencils/acrylics | 210mm×297mm
OIRAN (lotus) | coloredpencils/acrylics/photoshop | 1000mm×820mm
OIRAN (lotus) | coloredpencils/acrylics/photoshop | 1000mm×820mm
OIRAN (rebirth) | coloredpencils | 300mm×300mm
OIRAN (rebirth) | coloredpencils | 300mm×300mm