Bennett remembers painting with her grandmother as a child, who used a spatula as her primary tool. However, it wasn't until years later, staring at the blank walls of her loft in Birmingham, Alabama, that she rediscovered her passion for the process of creation. Though it began as a practical answer to the abject poverty of life after college, this act of thrifty outfitting inspired her to cultivate her own unique style, a place where process demands as much attention as its end result.
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As a Huntsville, Alabama native, Bennett spent ten years in Nashville, where she finally got serious about her art. Her music inspired art gained local attention, as her signature guitars found their homes in local digs such as Fanny's House of Music on the east side. When Bennett finally decided to release the paces of nine to five living, her art reflected her transformation.
She moved through a transcendent few months of abstracts and then awakened one morning from a night of mixed media dreaming. She has taken a few of her favorite things-mid-century advertising; acrylic mediums and photography-and transformed them in to a pop art-inspired funk style mash up on plywood for your viewing pleasure. Bennett now humbly hangs her hat in the city of New Orleans?. The city’s rhythm, color palette and energy will continue to stir and ignite a creative process born in the deep south.
Bennett is never too far from her grandmother's easel, creating art inspired by the technique and the soul of her teacher.
Bennett remembers painting with her grandmother as a child, who used a spatula as her primary tool. However, it wasn't until years later, staring at the blank walls of her loft in Birmingham, Alabama, that she rediscovered her passion for the process of creation. Though it began as a practical answer to the abject poverty of life after college, this act of thrifty outfitting inspired her to cultivate her own unique style, a place where process demands as much attention as its end result.
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As a Huntsville, Alabama native, Bennett spent ten years in Nashville, where she finally got serious about her art. Her music inspired art gained local attention, as her signature guitars found their homes in local digs such as Fanny's House of Music on the east side. When Bennett finally decided to release the paces of nine to five living, her art reflected her transformation.
She moved through a transcendent few months of abstracts and then awakened one morning from a night of mixed media dreaming. She has taken a few of her favorite things-mid-century advertising; acrylic mediums and photography-and transformed them in to a pop art-inspired funk style mash up on plywood for your viewing pleasure. Bennett now humbly hangs her hat in the city of New Orleans?. The city’s rhythm, color palette and energy will continue to stir and ignite a creative process born in the deep south.
Bennett is never too far from her grandmother's easel, creating art inspired by the technique and the soul of her teacher
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Bennett
remembers painting with her grandmother as a child, who used a spatula as her
primary tool. However, it wasn't until years later, staring at the blank walls
of her loft in Birmingham, Alabama, that she rediscovered her passion for the
process of creation. Though it began as a practical answer to the abject
poverty of life after college, this act of thrifty outfitting inspired her to
cultivate her own unique style, a place where process demands as much attention
as its end result.
As a
Huntsville, Alabama native, Bennett spent ten years in Nashville, where she
finally got serious about her art. Her music inspired art gained local
attention, as her signature guitars found their homes in local digs such as
Fanny's House of Music on the east side. When Bennett finally decided to
release the paces of nine to five living, her art reflected her transformation.
She moved
through a transcendent few months of abstracts and then awakened one morning
from a night of mixed media dreaming. She has taken a few of her favorite
things-mid-century advertising; acrylic mediums and photography-and transformed
them in to a pop art-inspired funk style mash up on plywood for your viewing
pleasure. Bennett now humbly hangs her hat in the city of New Orleans?. The city’s rhythm, color palette and energy
will continue to stir and ignite a creative process born in the deep south.
Bennett is
never too far from her grandmother's easel, creating art inspired by the
technique and the soul of her teacher.
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