Difference between revisions of "Liz Lemon Swindle"

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[[Image:Liz_Lemon_Swindle.jpg|right|frame|Artist Liz Lemon Swindle, courtesy FoundationArts.com]]
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[[Image:Liz_Lemon_Swindle.jpg|right|frame|Mormon Artist and Painter Liz Lemon Swindle|Artist Liz Lemon Swindle, courtesy FoundationArts.com]]
 
'''Liz Lemon Swindle''' began her painting career in first grade. Her first exhibitions were on the refrigerator, encouraged by her father. In the early 1980s she tutored under renowned wildlife artist, Nancy Glazier. In 1992, Liz began painting a subject matter she had long desired to approach: her faith. Her paintings are now held in corporate and private collections around the world and have been published in countless magazines and books. Liz and her husband Jon have five children and thirteen grandchildren (FoundationArts.com).
 
'''Liz Lemon Swindle''' began her painting career in first grade. Her first exhibitions were on the refrigerator, encouraged by her father. In the early 1980s she tutored under renowned wildlife artist, Nancy Glazier. In 1992, Liz began painting a subject matter she had long desired to approach: her faith. Her paintings are now held in corporate and private collections around the world and have been published in countless magazines and books. Liz and her husband Jon have five children and thirteen grandchildren (FoundationArts.com).
  
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[[Image:Come_and_See_Liz_Swindle.jpg|center|frame|Come and See by Liz Lemon Swindle, courtesy FoundationArts.com]]
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[[Image:Come_and_See_Liz_Swindle.jpg|center|frame|alt=Come and See by Mormon Painter Liz Lemon Swindle|Come and See by Liz Lemon Swindle, courtesy FoundationArts.com]]
  
 
[[Category:Famous Mormons]]
 
[[Category:Famous Mormons]]

Revision as of 00:33, 1 October 2010

Artist Liz Lemon Swindle, courtesy FoundationArts.com

Liz Lemon Swindle began her painting career in first grade. Her first exhibitions were on the refrigerator, encouraged by her father. In the early 1980s she tutored under renowned wildlife artist, Nancy Glazier. In 1992, Liz began painting a subject matter she had long desired to approach: her faith. Her paintings are now held in corporate and private collections around the world and have been published in countless magazines and books. Liz and her husband Jon have five children and thirteen grandchildren (FoundationArts.com).

Swindle is a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and her devout belief inspires the themes of most of her work. She is extremely prolific, and has created numerous paintings around a central theme, one group being of the life and experiences of Mormon prophet Joseph Smith, and another group centered on the life of Christ.

The following is her bio as reported by The Greenwich Workshop [1]:

Liz Lemon Swindle has a deep, abiding faith that she feels blessed to share through her art. A lifelong Utah resident, she studied fine arts at Utah State University. She worked for several years as a set designer and painter for the Osmond Studios television production company. As her family grew (she and her husband Jon Swindle today have five children), she saw the need for a more flexible career and decided to focus on oil painting. In the early 1980s she tutored under renowned wildlife artist Nancy Glazier and soon after established her own impressive reputation as a wildlife painter, participating in shows at major galleries in the central and western United States. However, Lemon Swindle became increasingly discontent, feeling artistically and spiritually unfulfilled. In October 1988 she reached a turning point when she submitted a portrait of children to the National Arts for the Parks competition and received the coveted Founders' Favorite award. She realized then that there was an audience for her portrait painting and by the early 1990s she had devoted herself to the topic closest to her heart: her faith. A one-woman show of her Christian art traveled to cities nationwide in the summer of 1997 and a book of her paintings, "She Shall Bring Forth a Son" was published in 1998.


Come and See by Mormon Painter Liz Lemon Swindle
Come and See by Liz Lemon Swindle, courtesy FoundationArts.com