Difference between revisions of "Rebecca Wetzel Wagstaff: Mormon Artist"
Line 11: | Line 11: | ||
However, she completed a painting of her daughter in her heirloom blessing gown called Passageway for the Church History Museum’s Eighth International Art Competition. Wagstaff is a member of [http://Mormon.org The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints]. | However, she completed a painting of her daughter in her heirloom blessing gown called Passageway for the Church History Museum’s Eighth International Art Competition. Wagstaff is a member of [http://Mormon.org The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints]. | ||
− | [[Image:Wagstaff_Green_Melon_With_Horse_Family_Flying.jpg|alt=Rebecca Wagstaff Mormon Artist|left|frame|''Green Melon With Horse Family Flying'' Courtesy Rebecca Wagstaff]] | + | [[Image:Wagstaff_Green_Melon_With_Horse_Family_Flying.jpg|alt=Rebecca Wagstaff Mormon Artist|left|frame|''Green Melon With 'Horse Family Flying''' Courtesy Rebecca Wagstaff]] |
[[Image:Wagstaff_Passageway.jpg|alt=Rebecca Wagstaff Mormon Artist|left|frame|''Passageway'' Courtesy Rebecca Wagstaff]] | [[Image:Wagstaff_Passageway.jpg|alt=Rebecca Wagstaff Mormon Artist|left|frame|''Passageway'' Courtesy Rebecca Wagstaff]] |
Revision as of 00:21, 22 July 2015
Rebecca Wetzel Wagstaff is an artist known for her realist botanic still life paintings. She was born in 1962 and raised in Utah and is the oldest of eight children. She attended Brigham Young University with the intent to study premed and obstetrics, but after taking a watercolor class, she switched her major to art. She developed an interest in the work of Arno Werner, a German-born bookbinder, so she moved to New York City where she both worked as a nanny and became Werner’s apprentice.
While working for Werner, she married Clay Wagstaff, an artist she had met at BYU. They live in Tropic, Utah, with their children.
Wagstaff says that she paints her life, “or, in other words, the elements of my life reappear as elements in my paintings—and those elements, which often happen to have universal symbolic meaning—always have personal symbolic meaning.”[1]
In an interview in December 2009, Wagstaff mentioned that she hadn’t painted much since her daughter Hannah died in an accident.[2] [3] However, she completed a painting of her daughter in her heirloom blessing gown called Passageway for the Church History Museum’s Eighth International Art Competition. Wagstaff is a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.