Golden Glory by Nancy Glazier


. Giclee on Canvas - Artist Proof
Dimensions: 14.5 x 24.5
Release Date: 2-2009
Code: NGL066GIAPR1525 - NGL066
Edition Size: 25
Issue Price: $650.00


. Giclee on Canvas - Signed & Numbered
Dimensions: 14.5 x 24.5
Release Date: 2-2009
Code: NGL066GISNU1525 - NGL066
Edition Size: 250
Issue Price: $550.00

Quantity:  


. Print - Signed & Numbered
Dimensions: 14.5 x 24.5
Release Date: 2-2009
Code: NGL066PRSNU1525 - NGL066
Edition Size: 950
Issue Price: $175.00

Quantity:  


. Giclee on Canvas, Open Edition Signed
Dimensions: 9.5 x 16
Release Date: 5-2009
Code: NGL066GISON1016
Edition Size: Open
Issue Price: $95.00

Quantity:  


. Giclee on Canvas, Open Edition
Dimensions: 9.5 x 16
Release Date: 5-2009
Code: NGL066GIUSN1016 - NGL066
Edition Size: Open
Issue Price: $70.00

Quantity:  


. Digital Open Print, Signed
Dimensions: 9.5 x 16
Release Date: 5-2009
Code: NGL066PRSON1016
Edition Size: Open
Issue Price: $35.00

Quantity:  


. Digital Open Print
Dimensions: 9.5 x 16
Release Date: 5-2009
Code: NGL066PRUSN1016 - NGL066
Edition Size: Open
Issue Price: $30.00

Quantity:  



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Tell Me More



"This is the first time I have painted the Palomino horse, but it will not be the last!!! What a joyful experience this painting has given me! My hope is that this energy will flow outward from my easel...that this joy will be passed on.

 

I enjoyed every moment of the creative process with GOLDEN GLORY - from the research through sketching and composing, then creating the most supportive background almost "out of thin air" as it were. However, the most exciting experience for me as an artist was coming up with just the "right" quality of light, which actually took the most time and focus.

 

I did a fair amount of research on the Palomino breed and found out how tricky it can be to end up with that highly desireable "gold and silver" coloration, and how many variations are possible! When a new foal is born, what you see may or may not be what you get, for a Palomino foal is subject to changes in coat color as it matures. Will this foal turn golden like its mother, the central horse? Or will it become more silvery like the filly on the left? Or perhaps, it will stay dark and velvety???

I have the impression that this comfortable looking golden mare has produced many fine foals - that she is a "gold-maker". She is the GOLDEN GLORY...a valuable asset...a treasure, a gift to mankind."                - Nancy Glazier
DF


About The Artist





Nancy Glazier is passionate about her art and the subject of her art. This passion is evident in the way she paints and the way she lives – they are inseparable.

Surrounded by mountain beauty and the animals the artist loves to paint, Glazier says, “I feel a kinship with the animal that grows as the painting progresses. There is a powerful chemistry at work. People ask me, ‘Which is your favorite animal to paint?’ I can tell you it is always the very animal I am painting at the time." For Glazier, it is “…a warm, living, breathing process that brings me back again and again to the easel. It is my ultimate reward.”

Many of the artist’s admirers and collectors consider Glazier to be an extraordinary artist whose paintings seem “alive.” For her, this is warm praise, because she desires to share what she experiences through her paintings. She hopes the viewer, too, will feel the warmth of the sun or the crisp chill of winter, smell the sage and dust, or hear the bellow of the bison.

Glazier knew she wanted to be an artist from early childhood. In her teens, she lived in Wyoming where she immersed herself in the rugged, western terrain. There she was mentored and taught by artist Adolph Spohr, who gave her private instruction and taught her how a professional uses paint and brush…how to observe and self-correct. The artist’s style evolved over time. After seeing a dramatic photograph of a grizzly, she was awakened to a desire to paint animals “close up and hair-by-hair.” The artist has taken hands-on anatomy classes that enable her to paint an amazingly accurate portrait of an animal from its bone structure to muscles to hair, bringing it life on her canvas.

The artist enjoys much success as one of today’s most talented wildlife painters. Her original works are represented by one of America’s leading galleries. Her paintings have been featured at prestigious shows throughout the country, and two of her works hang in the Museum of Church History and Art in Salt Lake City.

Glazier and her husband reside in an idyllic setting in Nevada where a spacious studio allows her to create her extraordinary paintings and continue her journey of discovery to capture “the whole picture.”

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