Silo Art Studios offer a unique interaction with the Artists

Studio #113 — Mei-ing Hoffman is an artist and Associate Publisher for Grafikpress newspapers. Her email is meihoffmanart@gmail.com, and can be reached at 713-906-4585. These beautiful paintings were done by Meiing Hoffman. She can be reached at her Studio on the Second and Third Saturday of each month from 12 noon to 5 p.m. You can also see her work online at paintingsbymei.com.
Studio #113 — Mei-ing Hoffman is an artist and Associate Publisher for Grafikpress newspapers. Her email is meihoffmanart@gmail.com, and can be reached at 713-906-4585. These beautiful paintings were done by Meiing Hoffman. She can be reached at her Studio on the Second and Third Saturday of each month from 12 noon to 5 p.m. You can also see her work online at paintingsbymei.com. Photo by David Taylor

By David Taylor / Managing Editor

From young families shopping for art to decorate their new home to investors seeking out that special promising artist, The Silos at Sawyer Yards maximizes the 80,000 square foot space of private art studios and creative flex space to attract even the occasional art enthusiast.

What could be more creative than a developer turning the once Riviana Rice packaging plant and silos into divided space to house more than 100 established and emerging artists, arts groups, and creative entrepreneurs.

The gem of the space comes every second and third Saturday of the month when resident artists open their studios to welcome the public. The notion that artists are willing to spend valuable time discussing their feelings, thoughts, and inspiration behind their work is not novel, but rare.

Last second Saturday, as shoppers awakened from their winter slumber, foot traffic at The Silos was particularly busy.

When the front doors swing open for first-time visitors and novice art enthusiasts, they are greeted by an impressive array of art displays, akin to a museum exhibition, showcasing various genres of fine arts. Visual art includes realism, impressionism, surrealism, pop art, expressionism, minimalism, abstract expressionism, rococo, dada, conceptual art, portraiture, still life, landscape, and historical painting to name a few.

Before running to a dictionary to refresh your memory on all those terms, ask the artist. They are happy to explain their art and in doing so, gives depth to the meaning and purpose of the work.

In Studio 209, Patricia Blackwell makes an interesting use of oval canvas.

“It’s figurative artwork that’s acrylic and pan pastels on canvas,” she said. “I just needed to do something and to draw so I did that every day.”

Blackwell’s process begins with the canvased oval on the floor of her studio.

“All you do is throw paint on the canvas first,” she said, and then she paints the photo-like object she calls “realism” on top. She’s no novice, and the work can be done in as short a period as an hour. The detail in the painting is exquisite and comedic at times.

At the end of another hallway is delightful Grace Phillips whose studio is just as artfully decorated as her abstract art.

“No images and I do use a lot of black,” she said. For 50 years, she’s been creating art even while she lived in Dubai in the Middle East.

“I was really involved in the art scene in Dubai and served as director of a gallery at the Dubai International Art Center,” she said. She lived there for 20 years before returning to Houston and has since delved back into art locally.

Her husband has a PhD as a geophysicist, the left brain in the family, and she has an art degree, the right brain, she joked.

“We’ve had a lot of life experiences, and we retired and came back to Houston,” she said.

Elaine Rose Lanoue at Studio 218 is a self-avowed contemporary acrylic semi-representational and abstract painter who works together with her husband, Guiteau Lanoue in their studio at The Silos.

Some of her work is post impressionism with a little more abstract whereas her husband’s works are more cubist, and he likes Picasso.

Lanoue has been painting for 60 years.

“I’ve been making a living at this since 1970 and I will be 82 at the end of the month,” she said proudly.

Lanoue starts her works very abstract, “then I start to see it,” she said. “French Impressionists were more squares of color where mine are not. They’re loose.”

“The reason the movement was so popular and controversial, too, was they used to do very tight, like Rembrandt, detailed paintings. Then these guys come out and it’s much different,” she said.

Van Gogh, she said, would walk up to the canvas and use the tube of paint, turn it, and leave its mark. The style is different today.

Mary Rogas, Cora Salvino, and Suzanne Buckland share a corner studio. Cora does the glass work, and Mary does the abstract, floral and figurative work while Suzanne does oil, acrylic, and mixed media collage.

Mei-Ing Hoffman in Studio 113 is a part-time artist and full-time Associate Publisher for GrafikPress newspapers, which publishes three community newspapers reaching most of the East Harris County area.

She’s only been in The Silos since last September.

“I did my first painting six years ago, because my best friend wanted to have a bird, so I painted a bird,” she said. When she finished, she looked at it and realized she might be able to paint professionally. She is often inspired by the movement of nature, light, shadow, four seasons, and water. She has a great eye for composition, although she has never been officially trained.

“I’ve been running a commercial printing company, so I do know color and color schemes,” she said. She tries a lot of different styles, although one of her favorites is impressionism. She has also done small sculptures using recycled wire and other found objects, as well as free-hand pencil sketches that burst with feeling, despite their simplicity.

Besides sharing her own art with a wider audience, one of the things Mei appreciates most about being part of The Silos at Sawyer Yards is the sense of community. The artists there encourage her and share painting technics with her.

Most of the artists are available on the Second and Third Saturday of the month from 12 noon to 5 p.m. Others are also available during the week by appointment.

Drop by and visit them at their studios. The Silos at Sawyer Yards are at 1502Sawyer Street, off I-10 at the Taylor Street exit near downtown Houston.

This beautiful and colorful work of art hangs in the Ongrounds Art Gallery and was composed by Oluseyi Soyege. He can be contacted at The Silos inside Studio #118 or by calling him at 281-760-7679 or by email at ongrounds2000@gmail.com. His work is also viewable at www.oluseyisoyege.com. Photo by David Taylor

 

Patricia Blackwell has been creating art from just about anything including a unique shaped oval canvas. Her figurative artwork that’s acrylic and pan pastels on canvas draws attention. Visit Black-well in her Studio #209, or email her at pblackwellart@gmail.com, or phone her at 713-855-5499. Photo by David Taylor

 

For 50 years, Grace Phillips has been creating her abstract art, even while she lived in Dubai in the Middle East. While in Dubai, she served as the director of a gallery at the Dubai International Art Cen-ter before returning to Houston. For a private viewing, please call Grace at 832-703-8650, or email her at grace.phillips1015@aol.com. Her work is on display at www.gracephillipsart.com. Photo by David Taylor

 

Elaine Rose Lanoue is a self-avowed contemporary acrylic semi-representational and abstract painter who works together with her husband, Guiteau Lanoue in their studio at The Silos. Her im-pressionism with a hint of abstract comes from an incredible 60-year career with a brush in her hands. Her Studio #218 is loaded with beautiful art to take home. She can be reached at 832-541-5058 or by email at elaine.lanoue@yahoo.com. Photo by David Taylor

 

There’s nothing like doing business with your friends. Artists Mary Rogas, Cora Salvino, and Suzanne Buckland share a corner studio. Cora does the glass work, and Mary does the abstract, floral and fig-urative work while Suzanne does oil, acrylic, and mixed media collage. Photo by David Taylor

 

Mei-Ing Hoffman is a part-time artist and full-time Associate Publisher for GrafikPress Corporation that publishes three community newspapers reaching most of the East Harris County area. She’s only been in The Silos since last September and only began using her God-given talent in painting for the last six years. Photo by David Taylor

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