 Departments
 Categories
- 1. NEW RELEASES - January, February, March 2010
- 2. NEW RELEASES - April, May, June 2010
- 3. NEW RELEASES - July, August, September 2010
- 4. NEW RELEASES - October, November, December 2010
- Americana art prints & canvases- reflecting America's past
- Artist Biography
- Autos, Trucks, Cycles
- Aviation-Space
- Canine
- Children-Family
- Cityscapes-Urban Scene
- Civil War
- Classic Style
- Contemporary-Modern Art
- Cowboys-Cowgirls
- Decoys
- Domestic Cats
- Ethnic
- Events
- Fantasy-Humour
- Farm-Ranch-Rural
- Featured products
- Fish & Anglers
- Floral
- Golf
- Historical
- Holiday
- Horses
- Hunting Art
- Landscapes
- Marine / Maritime
- Military
- Mountain Man
- Native American
- Nostalgia
- Other
- Patriotic
- Portraits
- Railroads-Railways
- Religious
- Smaller images
- Sports
- Still life
- Wildlife: African-Asian-Aussie
- Wildlife: Antarctic
- Wildlife: Central & South American
- Wildlife: European
- Wildlife: North American
- Women
|
Cassandra Christensen Barney was born and raised in Orem, Utah. She received her Master’s degree in Fine Arts from Brigham Young University in 2000. “I've had a passion for the craft of the portrait since I was a child. As a young girl, I visited museums around the world with my father, collecting postcards adorned with 16th century art. Exploring these simple images captured my imagination, unlocking a world of discovery. I love the art of storytelling, the layers of symbolism, and would create my own stories of these quiet women, making the paintings my own. Today I paint portraits that share my passion for storytelling while revealing my personal journey of transition and discovery.”
Christensen Barney’s images capture the souls of heroines, everyday women who have found strength and personal victory in their diverse experiences. Her portraits carry a range of emotion reflective of the events that have shaped their character. Ambiguous and poignant, Cassandra’s women find strength in their femininity. “They are beautiful and strong, because of the complexity of their feminine nature.”
Page: 1 2
Page: 1 2
|