JULIE ANN SCOTT - Acclaimed artist Julie Ann Scott has the gift of capturing such mesmerising moments with the artistry of a magician commanding light to strike for a moment in time - sometimes through cloud or water – illuminating and transforming the normal into the spectacular.
Julie Ann has had an exciting life. She was born into an RAF family abroad, grew up in both the north and south of England and set off after leaving school, where despite suffering from dyslexia she excelled at art, to find her real father. Subsequently she spent an eventful and adventurous time abroad working as a catwalk model in Israel, an actress in California and travelling around much of Eastern Europe carrying out mission work. Eventually Julie Ann returned to England and started creating art again, teaching herself to paint in oils by working every day for a year in a studio where her dazzling style developed.
Having spent 20 years living in and inspired by the beauty of the Lake District and selling her work to galleries nationwide, Julie Ann moved to Dorset on the spectacular south coast of England. She continues to transform her canvases by the use of dramatic light and shade whether the subject is floral, the transient flash of fish below the surface of the sea or a breath-taking landscape with clouds above riven by a shaft of sunlight.
Endlessly inspiring joy and hope in the observer, Julie Ann’s acclaimed paintings capture the vibrancy and mood of those magical moments leaving their sense of awe and wonderment to last forever.
“Art should speak for itself, like a grown up. It doesn’t need long paragraphs to explain itself, or shock tactics to motivate change. By all means, art should motivate, but I put it this way. Nothing motivates or commands change more than a move of the heart. At our very core is where the catastrophic shift should be. All art should do heart surgery. This is what I try to achieve. I work chiefly using imagination, light and colour to create a mood and atmosphere that will lift the human soul to a position of hope.” Julie Ann Scott