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| H u g a H o r s e ! | |
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[Ridgway Colorado] ALICE BILLLINGS IS THE HORSE LADY. Meeting her, talking with her, you sense this immediately. It’s not the scruffy hat, or the manure-bottomed boots, or even the bits of hay in her hair. It’s the look in her eye when she talks about her beloved horses. Then you look at her art and there is no doubt, all that emotion and feeling, color and line, just leaps from the canvas and captures your heart. As it surely has captured hers. Her work is joyous, vibrant, alive. It’s interactive. Makes you want to throw out your arms and just plain, hug a horse! |
Maybe. Maybe not. The jury’s still out on that one looking at her current work. Alice has whimsey down pat, and she possesses a unique sense of color. When this woman paints a horse, it’s not just a presentation of paint on canvas. What appears is a window to the animals personality and emotions. And to how Alice relates to it. That relationship is absolutely present in the colors she chooses and uses. You look at that horse’s face and you know what it is feeling. You are right there, communing with it, not just looking at a static picture. One horse might be sad and blue, another happy as springtime and just as brightly colored. “My strong suit is line,” Alice says. “Line and color, but not in the traditional sense.” Absolutely. Take a look at this show and there’s no doubt of it. Nor is there any doubt of her ability to get right into the horse’s head, and perform her own magic show and tell act. She does make you want to hug a horse! Asked where she will go with her art next, Alice states: “The horses will tell me.” It will be interesting to watch her journey, see where her beloved horses lead her." |
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Top: Alice's colorful, whimsical horses. Can't you just see what they're thinking? ©Kathryn R. Burke Middle: Alice in her studio.©Kathryn R. Burke Bottom: Off to an early start. Check out the hat and boots. Courtesy Alice Billings. |
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Alice's work is shown in SW Colorado at various places. Best place to see where she is showing is to check with the Watch Newspaper. Alice also has a column in the Ouray County Newspapers. Article: "Life Lessons and Horse Muses" at Ridgway Library. The Watch Newspapers. Peter Shelton.
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Last Updated (Sunday, 15 April 2012 17:54)
Alice grew up in Queens, the daughter of a Bohemian artist and cartoonist who was also an art teacher. She made her first drawings and paintings working alongside him in his studio. “I was four years old,” she says. “It was from my father that I learned the importance of drawing and of understanding color.” She mastered them both. Just look at one of her paintings. To abstract a subject, you must first understand the reality of it, be able to portray it with a nearly photographic eye before you can believably distort it. “To be a good abstractionist, you have to be a good draftsman,” says Alice.