Location: United States
Déborah M.G. Cassolis has love for nature and enjoys expressing her studies of cycads,
palm trees, monocots, and tropical plants for over a decade. Fawn and fauna
have always inspired her from her backyard and travelling to tropical places like Hawaii,
Mexico, San Diego, California, other places around the world.
Her art has been acquired and exhibited by patrons and galleries from
Africa, Brazil, Canada, Italy, Mexico, Seychelles and
the United States (Hawaii, HI, Tucson, AZ, W. Hollywood, CA, Santa Fe, NM, New York, N.Y.)
and recently Déborah’s art was in a prestigious art exhibit at
the “Vatican Hall” in Rome, Italy February 2020,
Palazzo Venezia (Venice Palace) Naples, Italy September 2020.
Contemporary Art Gallery Online, Competition Winner, November 2020.
Publications include American Art Collectors, Art & Beyond Publications (2014, 2019),
I.G.O.R’s Special Book Edition (2019), International Contemporary Artists,
Sandscripts (2015), as well as an article about her in The Trinity Times (2019).
Déborah is always motivated to advance her techniques to improve her realism skills
to higher levels as a Hyper-Realism Painter. She has contributed to non-profit
organizations in her community in the form of signed prints for fundraisers.
Oil on Canvas by Déborah M.G. Cassolis
48in. W x 30 in. H x 2 in. D
February 2020
Getting lost on a drive to Agua Calienté Park to do some photoshoots of palm
trees in an oasis a rare view of a camel at someone’s property caught my
attention. When I decided to paint this camel, I used some techniques to
achieve special texture of the camel’s fur, it is a matted fur which challenged me.
Three dozen Camels were brought into southern Arizona in 1857 to explore the area where Interstate 40 is now.
Adding to the scene in the distance is a small plane and between up front a lizard admiring the fly in front of it. The palm trees are Washingtonia filifera which are similar to the Washingtonia robusta but bear fruit in a swirl type of pattern.
The fence is that of adobe brick, which is common in the southern Arizona desert, it was truly fun to make this painting.
“Jamaal Amidst the Washingtonia fileferas ”
Getting lost on a drive to Agua Calienté Park to do some photoshoots of palm
trees in an oasis a rare view of a camel at someone’s property caught my
attention. When I decided to paint this camel, I used some techniques to
achieve special texture of the camel’s fur, it is a matted fur which challenged me.
Three dozen Camels were brought into southern Arizona in 1857 to explore the area where Interstate 40 is now.
Adding to the scene in the distance is a small plane and between up front a lizard admiring the fly in front of it. The palm trees are Washingtonia filifera which are similar to the Washingtonia robusta but bear fruit in a swirl type of pattern.
The fence is that of adobe brick, which is common in the southern Arizona desert, it was truly fun to make this painting.
Walking along the La Jolla, California cliff side pathways the seagulls flying
and calling out over the sounds of the ocean, or sitting on the Lifeguard’s
emergency box. The box has all the words of a beach life, the seagull
resting as it appears to be looking into the land as we are looking at it.
The couple visiting in the sea front patio.
Can you just hear the seaguls calling out while you take in a deep breath of sea air!