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Red
Sun for Eve
Oil
on Archival Gessoed Paper
22.5"
x 17" framed
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Hercules
in the Night
Oil
on Archival Gessoed Paper
22.5"
x 17" framed
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She
Came in Through the Window
Oil
on Archival Gessoed Paper
22.5"
x 17" framed
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Gayle
Tustin
Gayle
Tustin is a full-time studio artist residing in Wilmington, North Carolina.
She was born in New Castle, Pennsylvania where her first clay experience
was making mud pies on the rolling hills in the neighborhood.
She
initially completed an Associate Degree in Business at Robert Morris University
in Coraopolis, Pennsylvania. Immediately thereafter, she started pursuing
her career as an artist/ceramist. Her studies in ceramics at Penn State
University, University Park, allowed her to realize her talent in this
field.
The
summer of 1978 found Gayle climbing the Andes Mountains and traveling
throughout Peru. It was here that red earthenware made an everlasting
impression in her choice of expressive materials. Subsequently she partnered
a tile business in the Pocono Mountains of Pennsylvania. Near the end
of 1987 she moved to North Carolina and set up her own studio. A trip
to France and Italy in 1988 fostered a fascination with majolica and the
desire to work in tin-glazed earthenware.
In
1992 she was the recipient of an Emerging Artist Grant. This assisted
her in the execution of her hand carved, low-relief tiles for wall murals,
vessels and sculpture. Attending the renowned ceramic school of Alfred
University, Alfred, New York in 1993 significantly contributed to her
artistic and technical repertoire.
The International Art Colony
in the monastery of Saint Joakim Osogovski, Kriva Palanka, Macedonia filled
the artist with endless inspiration and creative challenge in 1995. Working
with artists from France, Turkey, Bulgaria, Switzerland, Germany, Japan,
Egypt and Macedonia established a true interaction between art, artists
and the celebration of life. This experience, filled with explosive growth,
motivated Gayle to become the first student from the Art Department at
the University of North Carolina at Wilmington to graduate with honors.
Art historian, Anthony F. Janson writes in the April 1997 issue of Ceramics
Monthly, "Never has this writer seen anyone develop so rapidly or
change so profoundly as Tustin did."
August 1996, the Resen Ceramic
Colony in Otesevo, Macedonia invited Gayle to be one of eight international
ceramic artists to work on Lake Prespa for three weeks. A visit to Greece
before crossing over the Macedonian border had an astounding influence
on the artist, leading to heightened interest in the sculptural potential
of her terra cotta reliefs.
Gayle returned to Italy in the
fall of 1996 to visit classical Baroque sites in Rome, Florence and Venice.
The dynamics of this period is reflected in the artist's elevated reliefs.
An intriguing journey through the Antalya region of Turkey in July 1997
reaffirmed her tendency toward even higher relief wall sculptures. "Tustin's
larger, robust tile reliefs with their muscular abstracted forms have
a grand internal scale," explains art critic Kate Dobbs Ariail. Other
inspirational travels abroad included London, Prague, Mexico and Canada.
In 1998 she co-founded No Boundaries,
Inc., a non-profit organization inviting local and international artists
to participate in an artist colony taking place every two years on Bald
Head Island, North Carolina.
Gayle's artwork continues to
be commissioned and is part of numerous private and corporate collections.
Exhibition sites abroad include France and Macedonia.
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