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Rebecca Odes
Mar 26, 2026
Electric Ladyland at Every Woman Biennial
It’s a long way from Ojai, but my piece “Electric Ladyland” is up
now at the Everywoman Biennial in New York City! It’s an incredible salon style
show at the Pen and Brush Gallery, 29 East 22nd Street, open every day until April 11th. There is so much inspiring work filling the gallery, and a bunch of performances scheduled during the run of the show.
In my light sculpture, “Electric Ladyland”, organic shapes and materials are interwoven with plastics and electronics, creating an abstracted fantasy of femin-ish utopia.
This piece is part of an ongoing series exploring the intersection of nature and technology through layers and light.
Sooz Glazebrook
Mar 26, 2026
Long Time Idea Coming into Reality at Last
Something I have pondered on for long time,
has finally gained momentum. A Pedestal is being made,
& for the OSA April 11th, 2nd Saturday will be Viewable
Come by to see what I'm talking about,
plus enjoy a stroll through my Spring Garden
Brian Berman
Mar 26, 2026
Digging Deep to Find New Inspiration
Digging Deep to Find New Inspiration is my motivation for this Blog post and likely this year. I've been invited to stay with a friend in Thailand and visit Vietnam in May. I'm turning 77 in April and want to explore some of the ancient carvings in these two countries. It is my goal to explore ancient temples carved out of Marble and Limestone mountains. I might even take a stone carving class in Nuoc Stone Carving Village.
As my main support comes from the sales of my artwork, I invite you to book a trip to my studio or website and select gifts for yourself or loved ones from my stunning collection of HOLOS Amulets, or my sculptures and wall artwork. I will make it worthwhile, so find what you want and we will work out a way to make it happen.
Many of my artworks can be viewed on my website: BrianBerman.art , and if you'd like to come see my artworks in person, drop me an email at brianlberman@gmail.com or text or What'sApp me at 360-620-1040. Please identify yourself with your namewhy you are reaching out to me, this will clear up any mystery.
Many thanks for the 35 years of support from all the art lovers and patrons that have supported me through my art sales. I am humbled and grateful when you find my artwork appealing and meaningful to you.
Christine Beirne
Mar 26, 2026
Making Space, Moving Home
This April, I won’t be open for Ojai Studio Artists’ Second Saturday.
After months of living in between, our belongings are finally being returned following the fire just before Thanksgiving. The timing overlaps with Second Saturday, and I need to be present as everything comes back into our home—unpacked, checked, and, piece by piece, put back into place.
The construction is mostly complete, and this marks a long-awaited shift: we’re moving home. I’m also looking forward to getting my studio back in order—over the past months it’s become a kind of “command central” for the construction process, with all sorts of things finding their way in that don’t normally belong there. It will be good to return it to a space for making.
It feels significant in a quiet way. Not just returning to a space, but rebuilding a sense of order and familiarity after a period that has asked for a lot of flexibility and patience.
I’ll be taking a break from unpacking to participate in Cross Pollination: The Intersection of Art and Nature—a plein air paint out at the Ventura Botanical Gardens on Friday, April 10 from 9–4. Admission is free that day, so if you’re in the area, come by and say hello.
While I won’t be open for Second Saturday, I do plan to step out and visit some of my fellow neighborhood artists—many whose studios I rarely get to see since we’re usually all showing at the same time. Later, I may head back to the gardens as the paint out continues through the weekend.
And just a few days earlier, I’m excited to be part of something new:
I’m included in a group of artists from Studio Channel Islands Art Center now showing on Artsy, with an in-person exhibition opening April 4 from 4–6 pm. This show marks the launch of that program and brings the work into a physical space.
If you’re not able to make it out in person this month, I invite you to visit my website. Any work purchased directly there supports something close to home—10% is donated to the Ojai Valley Land Conservancy. As a landscape painter, I’m deeply grateful for the places they’ve helped preserve. La Cañada Larga Road, in particular, is one I hold close—it’s hard to imagine it ever having been at risk of development. Supporting OVLC feels like a way of giving back to the land that continues to give so much.
Thank you, as always, for your continued support—I look forward to welcoming you back soon, once things have settled.
—Christine
Spark Taylor
Mar 25, 2026
The Late, Great Walter J Zoro, or how I became a plein aire painter
I made this painting of my late husband Jerry (Walter J Taylor) many years ago, before we got married in 1984.
I only painted occasionally then. I made my living as a graphic designer and product development art director, and loved it. Never intended to do anything else as a job.
Jerry was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s in 1999. As the years went on and his health as regards his memory and brain function declined, I became full-time caregiver during the hours I wasn’t at work.
On the weekends, I started getting up at 5am, and driving down the canyon to Malibu, to paint. I could work a couple of hours and get home before he woke up, and begin my day as a caregiver.
I don’t know why it was this that did it for me. I only tried it because I loved those little jewel-like oil color sketches done by the old plein aire painters of the late 19th and early 20th century—and I needed to do something to settle my mind from worry.
We had a kid still in school, and a rapidly darkening future—but painting really helped me hold it together.
The discipline of doing the work and not being attached to the result as anything other than learning—the act of being set up and ready when the sun came up—witnessing the beauty of the new day beginning and having the opportunity to feel that gratitude for my life and all the good things still in it—kept me sane.
As I painted more and more, I started bringing Jerry with me on the drives. He’d settle in a chair with the dog, and enjoy the sunshine. It was sad, what was happening to him, but still many happy days too—we had a knack for that.
We lost that dear man on the first day of 2009. We miss him like crazy.
I'm still painting outside—still grateful!
Yolanda Bergman
Mar 25, 2026
Yolanda Bergman - Ode to Ojai in the Fall
This is my first landscape in Stained Glass mosaic. As every artist knows, perspective is challenging. I do love how the colors are just so alive in this piece. I want the viewer to be taken back to that moment in time when you are just gob-smacked by the scene you see. When your surroundings just make you stop and feel the power of the beauty in your bones. This what I love about Ojai. There is not a day that I am not swept up in the world around me here. I can breathe it, feel it, soak it up, and it is joy.
Carlos Grasso
Mar 24, 2026
Colorfeast 3D Immersive Installation in Los Angeles Gallery 825
COLORSPACE 3D is a magical immersive installation by Carlos Grasso, reimagining the relationship between light, color, and spatial perception. Visitors will step into a dedicated room where a monumental 8 ft x 46 ft acrylic painting envelops the space, transforming as light shifts throughout the canvas. Unlike traditional light-based exhibitions, COLORSPACE 3D relies solely on acrylic paint on canvas (it’s not “Blue Light”), yet, as illumination changes, hidden pigments and tonal dimensions emerge, unveiling new visual harmonies and emotional resonances. When viewed through special 3D glasses, these transitions take on a luminous, kinetic quality, immersing viewers in a living spectrum of color and motion. “I wanted to create a painting that breathes… one that changes not through technology, but through the natural language of light,” says Carlos Grasso. “Each moment in the room reveals a different facet of the same image, reminding us that perception is never still.”
Reception: April 4, 2026 10am-5pm
Show Runs: April 4 - May 1, 2026.
Location: Gallery 825 825 N. La Cienega Boulevard, Los Angeles CA 90069
Lindsay Thomson
Mar 24, 2026
Lindsay Thomson: Milky Way Over Green Valley
I just finished post processing Milky Way Over Green Valley.
To say I am thrilled with the final image is an understatement.
This was a difficult shoot due to the time of night the Milky Way rose above the mountains. I woke up at the hotel at 3am, got dressed, slammed some coffee down my throat and drove out to the photo site. It was windy as all get-out. I used my car as a windbreak, but still the wind circled around my car. My usual workflow is to set up two cameras to shoot the Milky Way as time lapses with two different focal length lenses, but it was much too windy to do that. I set up my camera with the heaviest lens on top of my heaviest tripod. I stood next to the tripod with my hands ready to catch the camera if it was knocked over by the wind. I didn't know til I got the images on the computer if the stars were in focus due to the wind.
I shot the foreground during blue hour to capture the beauty of the green mountains, then blended it with the sky with the Milky Way in it. Do you know why photographers do it this way? Because the sky and the foreground are two different exposures. If I expose for the sky, the foreground turns out black. Then what is the point of going to a place with beautiful landscapes if the foreground turns out completely underexposed.
I must say I am impressed with my new Sigma 20m f1.4. It is outperforming my Sony lens. Shock! If you squint your eyes, you can see Morro Rock waaaay in the distance.
I'll do a bit more tweaking to get it ready for printing. I'll have it printed for Ojai Studio Artists Second Saturday, May 9, 10am to 5pm.
Leslie Clark
Mar 22, 2026
Sharing the wild place where I live
My living room glass doors look out over a wild landscape of rolling oak covered hills. It is the home of many wild creatures who also call it home. We keep a pot of water in the garden for them to drink so they know they are welcome at our house.. A large buck decided to investigate what was going on behind those glass doors so when I saw him standing on the porch just beyond the patio table--he was staring in the window as I was staring out--curious both of us.
Richard Negri
Mar 20, 2026
You Make Me Feel Like a Million Bucks
When I was a kid, my mother and aunt used to have a line: "You make me feel like a million bucks." I've been using it for decades — and I'll come back to it in a moment.
In both my working life and my creative life, there is a theme to what people share with me that I can distill to this: these are some very strange times. And I agree. There is a lot of suffering right now, for a myriad of reasons. Those "strange times" conversations almost always arrive at the same place — that we need more art, music, performance. Anything that gives us the chance to gently release whatever we find ourselves clinging to these days. I've been thinking about this a great deal as we lead up to the Mira Monte Second Saturday on April 11th.
It is always a tremendous honor to share my work with this community. My intention has always been to help people unwind, let go, have a laugh — or even a good, solid think. But that intention feels more intensified now. Over the last two years especially, collectors have shared what it's like to live with my art in their homes and offices. What I keep hearing is that the work gives them a needed break. A release. A relief. A laugh.
I understand, philosophically, how art functions as catharsis — it gives form to feelings that are too tangled, buried, frightening, or shapeless to face straight on. A collector recently told me she feels safe with my abstract expressionist portraits. Another wrote simply, "You do emotion unlike anyone else, Rich."
In ordinary life, there is grief, fear, rage, shame, and longing — all of it can feel overwhelming precisely because it is our life, our pain, our risk. But I believe, in my heart of hearts, that art not only provides a safe distance — it also stands in solidarity with that life, that pain, those risks. It becomes a shared safe space. I know this from my own experience: a painting, a song, a film, a poem has let me enter complicated feelings without being crushed by them. I am deeply grateful that my work can do that for someone else — close enough to feel, far enough to survive the feeling. And that we can do it together.
What's wonderful, as I prepare for April 11th, is that 99% of my work is done spontaneously. For me, it has always been about process over precious — process over product — and I think the fearless, raw energy I bring to the canvas is what people are resonating with more and more in these strange times.
All of that, taken together, feels like a million bucks.
I can't wait to see you all.
Mary Neville
Mar 12, 2026
Caught in the Middle
Making marks
to leave a mark.
Does the art grow from me
or do I from it?
Part of me is there.
Part of me is here.
Is it possible to be in both places at once?
And still, I don’t know.
This Saturday my studio will be open and
questions will step into the room.
Waiting for other sets of eyes to see
what I have yet to notice.
Andrea Haffner
Mar 11, 2026
Still Point
In these turbulent times in our country and world, I find myself so aware of the comfort and presence I find in my creative process and in the natural world. Observing details and cycles in nature, and engaging in the meticulous process of creating my work with these small natural forms are a great respite. I'm looking forward to sharing the sculptures and jewelry I've been making, this Saturday March 14 -- OSA's first Second Saturday Tour of the year. I'll be in great company with 9 other artists in Meiners Oaks and the Arbolada neighborhoods. Come say hello!
Brian Berman
Mar 11, 2026
Old and New Mediums
A core element of my work is peace and connection, including wall and wearable art. My life and artistic path have taken me through many transitions - some tumultuous - yet this newest chapter is producing some of the greatest work of my career.
Longtime peace activists, my wife Lisa and I relocated to Poland in 2022 to work with the One Humanity Institute supporting refugees fleeing the war in Ukraine. Many of my fellow sculptors were stunned when I sold most of my tools before leaving Ojai. For Lisa and I, it was a conscious step into the unknown - an opening to something new.
Just before their departure, I collaborated with printmaker Linda Taylor to create a series of letterpress embossed prints. Using laser-cut templates, his geometric images carry an intriguing dimensional quality - an early bridge from his sculptural roots into wall-based work.
While in Poland, I discovered how deeply he missed making art. I continued developing my signature HOLOS form, working with a Czech studio to produce cast-glass pieces from models generated with my 3D printer. When the slow pace of glass casting created delays, I began exploring new ways of “seeing” HOLOS.
That exploration led to something unexpected. Using inspection-style filters (x-ray and wireframe views) I began generating stark white-on-black images that are both mesmerizing and beautiful. They became the foundation for a new 2D series centered on HOLOS: clean, luminous, and quietly powerful.
Another personal transition has been my painful separation from my grandchildren. Turning again to art as a lifeline, I have been transforming 2D photographs into 3D-printed models of each child. “Not all my artworks are about beauty and peace,” he says. “But my intent is to find peace amidst these emotional challenges.”
These new works will be on view at my studio this Saturday, March 14, alongside original stone, metal, and glass sculptures. I just returned my Tri-Portal sculpture to our garden of Peace, so please come and enjoy. I will have many 3D printed gifts for all. I will also be demonstrating my 3D printing process.
Lindsay Thomson
Mar 11, 2026
Lindsay Thomson: Last Lunar Eclipse for a few years
I feel so fortunate that I was able to photograph the total lunar eclipse just a few miles from home. Let me tell you, I was nervous it would be foggy. The previous morning, the skies were completely covered with fog and lasted til mid morning. But in the early, early hours (O'dark thirty) of Tuesday, March 3, the skies were completely clear. I thanked my lucky stars. I packed up the car and drove a few miles to the outskirts of Ojai, set up my tripods and cameras and began shooting the eclipse. I used my 600m telephoto lens, which resulted in a very large moon image with exceptional color and clarity. Add to the ambience were the voices of a few coyotes howling in the dark night. the sounds and sights were like a setting for a mystery movie or novel.
The next total lunar eclipse for our area will be in December 2028.
Julie Grist
Mar 11, 2026
Sea Dance
The rhythm of the waves, sun warming the skin, a twirl , a taste of salt in the air.
Perhaps a nod to Edgar Degas and his ballet dancers - changing the art world some 160 years ago - but impressionism still beloved by many.
Or a nod to any young girl today, feeling the freedom brought by wind, a floaty dress and the song playing in her head.
"Sea Dance" is oil on canvas, 24"h x 20"w.
Drop by my studio this Saturday, March 14 from 10am to 5 pm for OSA's Second Saturday Open Studios. There are just 10 of us open on Saturday in the Arbolada and Meiners Oaks areas of Ojai.
Yolanda Bergman
Mar 10, 2026
Yolanda Bergman - Exploring sepia tones
I have been looking at Bespoke Vintage Wallpapers and Murals. I love the deep tones and subtle muted tones. I tried to capture this in my latests piece. The blues and lavenders in the flowers with deep emerald tones of the leaves. Then, just a pop of yellow/orange to make the centers of the flowers stand out. I hope you like it.
Pamela Grau
Mar 7, 2026
Road Trip to Big Sur
Just back from our Big Sur road trip, and this time it was the calla lilies that captured me. They were everywhere, rising out of the hillsides with those sensual, sculptural curves.
Back in the studio, what began as photographs became sketches, layered painted papers, and digital collage.
Travel always leaves a trace.
Julie Grist
Feb 28, 2026
Inside Out
I'm enjoying letting the inside peak out, creating portraits which speak volumes in a quiet, discreet way. Letting scraps of words, imagery, maps and musical notes breathe out from within one's portrayal. An assemblage of life's journeys, foibles and dreams, rising to the surface.
Please stop in and visit my studio this Saturday, March 14, 10a-5p when I'm part of the mini studio tour featuring artists in Arbolada and Meiners Oaks.
Christine Beirne
Feb 27, 2026
What We Choose to Keep
On view at Integrity Wealth in Ojai through April 24, this exhibition brings together landscape drawings rooted in Ojai and selected works from my Dreamscape series. Together, they reflect two ways I move through place — direct observation and slow excavation — both shaped by the land that surrounds us.
The drawings are grounded in observation. Many are based in and around Ojai — places I return to repeatedly because they continue to shift, subtly, with light, season, and memory. The Dreamscape paintings move in a different direction. They are less about a specific site and more about the felt experience of terrain — erosion, atmosphere, distance, and time.
Supporting the Land That Shapes the Work
Integrity Wealth does not take a commission on artwork sales. Because of that generosity, a portion of each sale from this exhibition — 20% — will be contributed to the Ojai Valley Land Conservancy.
I’ve chosen to extend that same commitment to my studio practice as a whole: 20% of all original artwork sold directly through my website also supports the Conservancy.
As a plein air and landscape artist — and simply as someone who loves being outdoors — I’m deeply aware that the places I paint are not guaranteed. They exist because people protect them.
One place especially close to me is La Cañada Larga Road.
There was a time when development felt imminent there. I remember hearing that and feeling physically unsettled — the thought that this open stretch of land, this quiet geometry of road cutting through hills, might disappear. That I might not be able to stand there again and look out across that space.
The Ojai Valley Land Conservancy raised the funds to purchase and preserve it. Now, as with so many protected landscapes, the need is ongoing — stewardship, maintenance, care. Preservation isn’t a single act. It’s a long-term promise.
If my work is rooted in landscape, it feels only right that the work also gives back to it.
Additional Exhibitions
I’ll also have work included in the Member Show at Studio Channel Islands Art Center, on view March 7 – March 20, with an opening reception at 4:00 pm on Saturday, March 7 at the Blackboard Gallery in Camarillo.
And I’m part of a curated group of present and past Artists in Residence at SCIART, now featured on the Artsy platform. The collection highlights regional artists exploring a range of mediums and approaches, expanding visibility beyond our immediate area.
Closing Thoughts
When I think about this season of work — drawings made from walking the edges of Ojai, paintings built slowly in the studio, conversations happening in galleries and offices — it all comes back to one thing: attention.
Attention to place.
Attention to memory.
Attention to what could be lost — and what can still be protected.
La Cañada Larga Road is more than a subject to me. It’s a reminder that landscapes are not permanent unless we choose to care for them. The fact that it remains open — that I can return again and again to draw it — is not accidental. It’s because people acted.
The work currently hangs in a space devoted to planning for the future. In a small way, this is my version of that — reinvesting in the land that shapes the work.
If you’ve ever felt relief stepping into open land…
If you’ve ever had a place you hoped would still be there tomorrow…
Then you understand why this matters to me.
I hope you’ll stop by before April 24.
Emily Thomas MaHarry
Feb 26, 2026
Residency at Taft Gardens & Nature Preserve
After a super great studio tour last fall in my new studio, I was invited to collaborate on a new gallery in town with Lulu Sherman, Stephanie Hubbard, and Jojo Anderson. We set up Still Gallery, had a beautiful show for four months and decided to move the gallery online. stillgalleryojai.com
February and March I will be at Taft gardens and nature preserve for my residency. The studio I am working out of is a dream come true. I am surrounded by a canopy of oaks and endless plants and succulents. I hear birds, frogs, crickets, squirrels and the creeks. It’s seriously a magical place. I highly recommend visiting. (And then you can visit me)
And the show at Beatrice Wood Center for the Arts is still up for a bit longer, so go check that out.
And some other things going on which I’ll share soon!
Yolanda Bergman
Feb 25, 2026
From One Artist to Another
I went to Karen K Lewis's studio last year ( huge fan) and saw a painting she did of pumkins and gourds. I stared at it and realized that I have all of this mottled and rippled glass at home. I asked her permission to do a mosiac of the piece, and she kindly agreed. Well it has taken almost a year and finally I have finished it. It is 2x3 feet and I love it. It is chunky, ripply, mottled, and vibrant!
Thanks Karen!
Brian Berman
Feb 18, 2026
The Art of Healing and the Healing of my Art
My last blog shared our family alienation crisis that began last June. These last 8 months have begun an exploration of health challenges and finding new ways to help me express what I'm personally going through. Not all my artworks are about beauty and peace. Though my intent is to find peace amidst my health and emotional challenges.
On that blog it was using a photo of my grand daughter and creating a reduction wood carving and letterpress printing class with Linda Taylor. I then shared turning photos of my grandchildren into 3D models that I printed on my 3D printer. Not all prints are successful. In the gallery of images you can see one of the failed prints. I saved it as a model of when life shows up in ways that can't be controlled. In my last class with Linda, the prints has a registration misalignment that one of my friends said was a perfect example of what your family is going through. The 3D print failure I have in the gallery similarly expresses that.
I needed help with my health and my helplessness, so I asked my health insurance for support and I began working with a therapist. I haven't felt the need for therapist help for 3+decades, and I really took a turn as 2026 began, as my life boat was filling with water. I wondered with worry if my life would end and the family alienation would continue. As a peace builder, I was needing support and with the helping hand of this therapist, I'm doing much better as I use art, and my life experience to help heal myself, and my family. I have lived by this creed, Art Heals Lives.
I drew the image of "Tsunami of Grief and Loss" and that was really helpful. I also felt that this image might resonate with others going through similar emotions, with what is going on here in the US and other parts of the world. My therapist asked me how I see myself in a couple of years. I said that I will be of great support for those that are going through what I am navigating now, and I can be of help and support for them.
I was then invited to take a still life painting class with master painter Carlos Grasso. "Moment of Solace" was the result of that class time. With the intense concentration in representing what was the still life model, it helped keep me in the present moment and release my emotions from the past and future. Though this was my first painting experience, I could see the value of this being a mindful practice. Not about making art for sale, but making art for healing.
After another therapy session examining and inquiry of my Tsunami drawing, the questions arose about "What's Next". The images that came up were about my lifeboat sinking, and I might not live to see my grandchildren again. I created the image of my "Heartache". This was a photo montage created in Photoshop. This helped me release much of my emotional sorrow, and once it was visually expressed, it no longer weighed heavily on my heart.
Next I imagined a still life model with my granddaughter for Carlos' next class. I've included the model, but I didn't take a process photo. Will see how well I can express this model in future classes, or maybe I go back to painting vegetable and fruits.
I've left town for a few days to retreat and break free from my dailies. I'm hopeful that I can explore artistically, what's in my heart and what's next for me. I will have a display of these images and models for the Second Saturday mini tour March 14th from 10-5pm, just a month away. Thanks for reading my blog, and I hope to see you next month at my Mini Tour. If you don't get to see a map, usually posted on the OSA Website a few days before the mini tour.
Leslie Clark
Feb 13, 2026
Hometown Stroll
I've painted people going about their daily lives all over the world. I've rarely painted at home in Ojai before. Our beautiful town attracts people from all over so I decided to pass the day watching people enjoying Ojai's Libbey park and arcade. So nearby and such a treasure.
Julie Grist
Feb 10, 2026
Losing Air
It's almost Valentine's Day, when love is in the air and red heart balloons are filled and ready to float aloft.
This year, while my love life is still full and bright and shiny, the state of our country doesn't seem so.
This painting of a red heart balloon, stuck mid-air, semi-deflated, speaks quietly to the times.
8" x 11" oil on paper, framed.
lindsay.thomson.art
Feb 9, 2026
Lindsay Thomson: Fogust in Mt. Tamalpais
A couple of years ago I photographed Mt. Tamalpais. It is north of San Francisco in the mountains. It is dotted with pine trees and has views of the ocean. Far away from the hustle and bustle of the cities, it is a quiet, serene location to enjoy the landscapes. I shot this timelapse in August. Jokingly, the locals refer to August as 'Fogust' due to the dense fog rolling in around sunset. They were not kidding. https://www.pond5.com/stock-footage/item/249106049-mt-tamalpais-visitors-watch-sunset-over-fog The nice thing about timelapse as opposed to video, is that each frame of the timelapse is an individual high resolution image. I can print images to sell or sell the timelapse. That's flexibility!
susanamend
Jan 23, 2026
Susan Stinsmuehlen-Amend: What's up -Jan. 2026
Just getting back into the studio after rigorous holiday activities/family travel With Miss Siggy, my granddaughter, in Petaluma visiting @wyattamendceramics Last weekend, the opening of the annual Ojai Studio Artists group show at the fabulous Beatrice Wood Center for the Arts. Lots of new works by the group. January 7-March 7 "Mayhem Tangle Whimsey", 29"h x 16"w x 4"d, Stinsmuehlen-Amend with works by Chris Noxon and Rebecca Odes, detail from the show I am pleased to be invited to the "She Persists" Exhibition at the Vita Art Center in Ventura, February 28-April 19. www.VitaArtCenter.com This curated show celebrates women artists whose work spans two decades or more (five decades for me!) and runs through March, Women's History month, with an artist's panel discussion on March 14, 2-4:00. Tree Service, Calendar Notations Series, 2004, kiln-fired paint on slumped glass, wood support, 27”h x 21”w x 3.5”d AND, I will be teaching a stained glass class in my studio March 21, 2026, an Ojai first!! There are a couple of openings left. Sign up through Mega Gallery, Ojai www.themegagallery.com . This workshop covers the fundamentals of stained glass fabrication using the copper foil method. Participants will learn to cut glass, wrap pieces in copper foil, solder them together, and apply a metal patina and hanging hardware. I will also work with artists who may have ideas pertinent to their work and want to incorporate glass. All for now. See you at the "Amend Art Compound", Second Saturday Tour, June 13 if not before! More news coming soon.
cindyclicks
Jan 23, 2026
Cindy Pitou Burton: After the Rains. . .
Epic wind and rain poured down the mountains and into streets for three days, closing streets and trapping many inside. Seeing sun peeking out from the beautiful and ominous dark clouds was cheering--and sent me running for my camera. See this at the Beatrice Woods Center for the Arts with the Ojai Studio Artist's filling two rooms full of art.
carlosgrassostudio
Jan 22, 2026
Oil Painting Classes with CARLOS GRASSO
(above) Finished demonstration. The first class always starts with a simple demo explaining the process in simple visual steps. Hello Art Enthusiasts! Come and paint in my Oil Painting classes (painting the still life) and discover how to see to start painting in oils. Simple method applicable to ultra beginners and advanced painters as well. Every Monday at the Ojai Art Center from 5:30 pm to 8 pm. For more information email me at:
carlosgrassoart@gmail.com to receive all the information about the classes.
Enjoy while Learning!
Carlos Grasso
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