sandi bruns
Sandi Ericzon Bruns was
born in 1942 in Elmhurst, Illinois. She holds a BA in Design and
Fashion and Textiles from University of Iowa and did graduate work at
University of Iowa, University of Wisconsin and University of Hawaii earning
a BFA equivalent and an MFA in Printmaking from University of Hawaii.
Her prints have won her awards in state art exhibitions and one was selected
for the Smithsonian Institute Young Printmakers show where it won a purchase
award. In San Francisco she was a juried artist in the William Sawyer
Gallery. After raising two children and doing commercial and commission work
for over 20 years, she became involved in public art projects and
invitational and juried exhibits in both Omaha, Nebraska and Summit
County, Colorado. Summit County Women of Watercolor (W.O.W!) led her
to her recent exploration of plein air painting. She is honored to be an
“Arts Alive!” Artist.
Sandi believes that artists learn through looking and creating; and, when things are going well, they “channel” the energy of the Universe into their creative flow, with their resulting interpretations helping others (and themselves) to see the world in new and exciting ways. She wants her watercolors to spontaneously reflect what she feels about her subject rather than to be realistic reproductions. Her goal is to discover something new each time she paints. She rarely drafts with pencil before she put her brush to paper. The finished picture should energize the soul as well as entertain the eye.
At home, she surrounds herself with the works of others (other than works in progress in her studio) because she learns through diversity of others. New ways of seeing are essential to everyone's development, she believes.
Sandi believes that artists learn through looking and creating; and, when things are going well, they “channel” the energy of the Universe into their creative flow, with their resulting interpretations helping others (and themselves) to see the world in new and exciting ways. She wants her watercolors to spontaneously reflect what she feels about her subject rather than to be realistic reproductions. Her goal is to discover something new each time she paints. She rarely drafts with pencil before she put her brush to paper. The finished picture should energize the soul as well as entertain the eye.
At home, she surrounds herself with the works of others (other than works in progress in her studio) because she learns through diversity of others. New ways of seeing are essential to everyone's development, she believes.