Category: Cloud Art

Got cloud art to contribute to the Cloud Appreciation Society? Submit in your work and we will be happy to consider sharing it here.

© Kat Williams

Kat Williams

in Austin, TX, USA

Elle Grassel-Johnson sent in this image of a cloud brooch of brass and wool made by Kat Williams.

© Kat Williams

PSD Photography Trina Paintings - INTERNET - 003

Trina Bohan

in Edinburgh, Scotland

Visit her website here: www.trinabohan.co.uk

This painting is from Trina’s recent show Time Lines, shown at the Arusha Gallery Edinburgh in July. Loch Naver, The Flow Country, Scotland. Impressive for its big skies, especially during the winter.

PSD Photography Trina Paintings - INTERNET - 003

© Kath Gonzalez

Kath Gonzalez

Kath has recently started soft pastel painting. Clouds are quite difficult to express without looking false and she says she would appreciate input from our members.

© Kath Gonzalez

© Kath Gonzalez

Mommark I 100x140cm 191 © Matthias Scholl

Matthias Scholl

Visit his website here: www.matthiasscholl.de

Matthias Scholl is currently preparing for an exhibition of his work at the Galerie Gerstaecker, Überseetor 13. 28217 Bremen. It will run from the beginning of September until the end of December 2015.

Weseruferpark   60x80cm  SAM_3999 © Matthias Scholl

Dänemark I   60x80cm SAM_3985 © Matthias Scholl

Mommark I 100x140cm 191 © Matthias Scholl

cloud-cropped-2013 © Clare Martin

Clare Martin

in Los Angeles, CA, USA

This sculpture by Clare Martin is entitled “Cloud” and is made with 30 thousand toy soldiers, at Canberra Museum & Gallery, Australia, 2013

cloud-cropped-2013 © Clare Martin

02 © AlexandraGerman_Cumulonimbus

Alexandra Germán

in Mexico City

Visit his website here: www.alexandragerman.me

Alexandra Germán is a visual artist. These are her “Metamorfosis de una nube” photographs which she provides with this statement.

“A cumulus is the first form of a cloud that as a child we learn to recognise and draw, at that time we don’t look at it and think in a storm, in a cloudy day or in the fog, and even though at that point that cloud might fade or continue to grow, we just recognise it for what it is for us at that moment: a cloud.
The observation of meteorological phenomena and the metamorphosis of clouds allows me, through construct a cloud in a space, a form of appropriation of the sky. A cloud shows us what does not last, it is the object that can not be maintained even with the look and that change from one second to another, the cloud speaks of a constant metamorphosis, reminds us the perishable; so I’m interested in its construction like a form to capture its transformation as if it were a still from a video, stop it´s transformation to constantly look within a picture.”

05 © AlexandraGerman_Altocumulus

04 © AlexandraGerman_Cirrus

03 © AlexandraGerman_Stratocumulus

02 © AlexandraGerman_Cumulonimbus

01 © AlexandraGerman_Cumulus

Yola Pilch

in Chicago, IL, USA

Visit her website here: www.yolapilch.com

Yola has a new art show called “Infinity Ever After” opening in Chicago which will run from 1st to 31st May at Realty Metrix, 1933 N. Damen, Chicago, IL. This image is one of her favourites from the show – a 10 foot ladder which she deconstructed.

© Yola Pilch

© Debbie Wagner

Debbie Wagner

in Kansas USA

Visit herwebsite here: www.3riversgallery.com

Debbie Wagner, a brain tumour survivor, has been painting the sunrise nearly every day since 2005. She continues this practice in gratitude for waking up one more day. Looking to the morning sky is a powerful way to start the day, showing all of us how the sky touches each one of us!

March 31, 2014 (2) © Debbie Wagner

© Debbie Wagner

©  Debbie Wagner