“The Sanctuary of Spirit” is an exhibit of the newest works of DM Windwalker Taibi and Joe Menth at Raven Rocks Gallery on Whidbey Island.
Windwalker’s watercolors are based on the places he goes to find renewal and mark a return to his earlier studies of the Far East and American Indian culture, according to press materials.
Menth is a graphic artist, photographer, printer and mixed-media artist. This exhibit will display his masks and prints and photographs mounted on 3-D wooden frames.
The show is on view through Sept. 1 at the gallery at Greenbank Farm, 765 Wonn Road, Greenbank.
Multimedia: Nicole Dinardo is known for painting on just about anything: guitars, KitchenAid mixers, skateboard decks.
Dinardo is also a designer of handbags, cakes and invitation cards.
Dinardo is the featured artist for August at WiseDesignz Custom Framing &Fine Art Gallery, 2908 Wetmore Ave., Everett.
“Tapestry: A Weaving Art” is the new exhibit in Edmonds that features the work of weavers Marielle Snyder and the late Gloria Mae Campbell.
Most of Snyder’s pieces are done using traditional materials such as cotton warp — the stationary part, strung on the loom — and wool weft — the part woven back and forth. Her pieces that depict ocean voyages contain recycled plastic bags, old sailing charts and bamboo garden stakes, according to press material about the exhibit.
Campbell, a longtime Edmonds resident, had her own business for which she designed and wove tapestries for 32 years, developing a strong sense of composition and color and using subtle changes to the weave structure and knotting techniques to add interest to her pieces, the press materials said.
“Tapestry” is on view through Sept. 13 at the Frances Anderson Center, 700 Main St., Edmonds.
Mix it up: Randena Walsh’s artwork is an extension of the sketches she produces during her many hikes through the woods translated to larger canvases and done in pastels and mixed media.
Her work has won awards in regional and national juried shows for more than 20 years and appears in a number of publications, according to her biography.
The exhibit is on view through Sept. 15 at the Edmonds Library, 650 Main St., Edmonds.
Theresa Goffredo: 425-339-3424; goffredo@heraldnet.com.
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