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James Hubbel

James Hubbell exhibition: Autumn. November 25, 2017 through January 7, 2018. A one-person show that features the work of this iconic San Diego County artist.

On exhibit is Hubbell paintings, current assemblage and sculptural pieces, and stained glass. The paintings are plein air watercolors from Hubbell’s past that document his many hiking and camping trips into the Sierra Nevada.

James Hubbell is a major figure in the art and architecture world. Hubbell, a sculptor, painter, poet, stained glass artist, designer and builder has created many large pieces of public art in San Diego County and around the world. Hubbell studied design and painting at Whitney Art School in New Haven, Connecticut until being drafted into the army and serving in Korea. Returning home, he chose to study painting and sculpture at Cranbrook Academy of Art in Michigan. In 1958 he married Anne Stewart, a teacher, and moved to Santa Ysabel, in the mountains of San Diego County near Julian. It is here the couple designed and built their home and studio with help from family and friends. They named it llanLael, a Hebrew name which to them symbolized the joining together of spirit and matter in wholeness.

With the building of additional studio buildings and the artistically famous ‘Boy’s House’, an adjunct dwelling that they built for their own four growing sons, Ilan-Lael grew into what is now known as the Hubbell compound, the place from which James Hubbell has made his art for over 40 years.

The original Hubbell house and studio have been rebuilt in recent years since burning in the Cedar wildfire of 2003. After the fire, the home was designated as an historical site by San Diego County. James and Anne Hubbell host a fundraiser, the Ilan-Lael Foundation Open House there every year on Father’s Day.

Hubbell has designed hundreds of commissions: windows, doors, sculpture, architectural details, fountains and gardens. When building, James Hubbell works in stained glass, forged iron, wood, cement and other materials. He has designed and built restaurants, homes, chapels, schools and parks. He is best known for the Chapel at Sea Ranch, in Northern California and for the Doors of Abu Dhabi, now in the United Arab Emirates. Current Hubbell projects include three new buildings that comprise the Ilan-Lael Foundation Art Center at the Hubbell compound in Santa Ysabel, an art installation for a San Diego Gas and Electric office building, and a baptismal font for St. James Catholic Church in Solana Beach.

For many years Hubbell has led design / build classes with students, with some of these classes leading to the construction of parks around the Pacific Rim. There are now seven Pacific Rim Parks including The Pearl of the Pacific on Shelter Island in San Diego Bay. The most recently completed park was built in Taiwan with the help of twenty-four architectural students from around the world. James Hubbell sees the parks as a way to open up dialogue about evolving Pacific culture and community.

James Hubbell’s work has become known through videos and publications in the United States and from abroad. He is the subject of two KPBS public television documentaries: The Art and Vision of James Hubbell and Eye of the Beholder. In the past few years he has been honored with several one person exhibits at the Oceanside Museum of Art and solo exhibits at the Mingei International Museum and the San Diego Museum of Art. Hubbell was also featured and with an exhibit, The Architecture of Jubilation at the Shusev Central Museum of Architecture in Moscow, Russia.

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Adele Earnshaw

ADELE EARNSHAW’s one-person exhibition of landscape paintings, Wide Spot In The Road,  will be at the Santa Ysabel Art Gallery from October 14 through November 12, 2017.  Earnshaw is an internationally known artist as well as being an international person, dividing her time between her residence in New Zealand and living and traveling in the United States. She paints and exhibits her work in both hemispheres, with emphasis on scenery that inspires. 

Earnshaw’s main interest is not in painting a literal landscape, but in capturing the feel of a place. The still pristine oak covered hills of the Santa Ysabel area are among her favorite places because of the light, which softens contours and colors, creating a mood that she can express in her paintings. She is author of the North Light book, Painting the Things You Love
  

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JOE GARCIA EXHIBIT, “ENTWINED”

JOE GARCIA had an his exhibition, Entwined, at the Santa Ysabel Art Gallery, April 8 through June 4, 2017 This was an one person show featuring the art of internationally known San Diego County painter Joe Garcia. On exhibit was Garcia’s landscape and wildlife paintings in oil and in watercolor. Entwined, as an exhibit title, refers to the connectedness of the artist’s favorite subjects to paint, that is, wildlife, habitat and landscape.

A native Californian, Joe Garcia grew up on a small ranch near Escondido, California where he developed an exceptional awareness of wildlife and habitat. He studied illustration at Art Center College of Design in Los Angeles and worked as an illustrator before deciding in 1983 to make fine art his primary focus. With this change of interest to fine art, Garcia took a step that would later turn out to be key to his career as a painter of wildlife. He built an aviary for various types of quail with the intent of drawing, painting and photographing them. He would go into this habitat and sit with the birds, eventually learning to draw and paint each quail type accurately and with feeling.

Garcia’s fame as a painter of birds grew, and was spread, in large part, due to his quail studies and to the early paintings that he did of the birds in his aviary.

Garcia’s work has appeared in the Leigh Yawkey Woodson Art Museum’s Birds in Art exhibition in Wausau, Wisconsin and in the permanent collection of the Bennington Center for the Arts in Vermont. He exhibits annually in the major nature oriented art festivals throughout the United States and has been a demonstration artist for the PBS television series “The Artist’s Workshop”.

Garcia is as acclaimed for his landscape paintings as he is for his wildlife work. He is also very well known as a teacher of watercolor painting in this country and overseas. Joe Garcia is the author of The Watercolor Bible and Mastering the Watercolor Wash, now art book classics, and the recent Secrets of Watercolor, all published by North Light Books. He has been featured in numerous art books and magazines and has written a major article for the publication Watercolor Magic.

In recent years, traveling to photograph painting reference has become an enjoyable and adventurous part of the painting experience for Garcia. In addition to taking photos he has been traveling and teaching painting workshops in the United States and in Greece, Italy, France and New Zealand. Joe Garcia lives in Julian, California with his artist wife Anne, where the oaks and pines support an abundance of wildlife, a good place for an artist with a specialty in painting creatures and habitat.

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Will Gullette, June 17 through July 23, 2017

At Santa Ysabel Art Gallery, June 17 through July 23, 2017, will be Sites/Insights, a one person show featuring the work of San Diego County artist Will Gullette. The emphasis of the exhibit will be Gullette’s plein air and studio landscape paintings. Reception for the Artist will be Saturday, June 17, 4-7 PM. The public is invited. Admission is free.

Will Gullette has been an artist since he could hold a drawing implement in hand. He received a Master of Arts Degree with an emphasis in painting, drawing and printmaking in 1969 from San Diego State University. After military service he subsequently received an Associate Arts Degree in Photography from San Diego City College. He has been an award winning professional photographer since 1978 and is a Professor Emeritus at Palomar Community College where he taught photography and art for 24 years. His work has appeared in several national and regional publications including–San Diego Magazine and San Diego Home/Garden Lifestyles Magazine, where he has been a contributing photographer since the 1980’s.

On a sabbatical from Palomar College a dozen years ago, Will Gullette found himself wishing to once again follow his true passion, painting. His sabbatical project was to research the relationship between painting and photography from an historical to contemporary viewpoint. One aspect of this was to create paintings from photographs he made as reference material

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