Renee Boyce
Artist Statement:
My work is the visual representation of managing anxiety and organizing scattered thoughts. Emotions become life in the form of color and movement. This process provides a deep sense of peace and is as vital to me as breathing. May you find the same tranquility in viewing my work as I experienced in its creation.
Artist Bio:
Renee Boyce, a Freeland, WA-based artist, is an acrylic painter known for her intricately painted mandalas. While she explored many other artistic mediums throughout the years, she always found herself drawn back to acrylic painting. In 2016, she fell in love with painting patterns and has been nurturing and deepening the nuance and beauty within her pattern work ever since.
Her work is labor-intensive, and some pieces can take months to complete. Because the process of collecting, cleaning, drying, painting, and sealing her stones in resin is so lengthy, there are only a few new releases of stones each year, and they are always done in batches. Boyce’s work has been featured in *The Whidbey News-Times*, *The Everett Herald*, and *Washington North Coast Magazine*.
Artist Statement:
My work is the visual representation of managing anxiety and organizing scattered thoughts. Emotions become life in the form of color and movement. This process provides a deep sense of peace and is as vital to me as breathing. May you find the same tranquility in viewing my work as I experienced in its creation.
Artist Bio:
Renee Boyce, a Freeland, WA-based artist, is an acrylic painter known for her intricately painted mandalas. While she explored many other artistic mediums throughout the years, she always found herself drawn back to acrylic painting. In 2016, she fell in love with painting patterns and has been nurturing and deepening the nuance and beauty within her pattern work ever since.
Her work is labor-intensive, and some pieces can take months to complete. Because the process of collecting, cleaning, drying, painting, and sealing her stones in resin is so lengthy, there are only a few new releases of stones each year, and they are always done in batches. Boyce’s work has been featured in *The Whidbey News-Times*, *The Everett Herald*, and *Washington North Coast Magazine*.