User:Julls96/sandbox

Heather's Comments
10/2-  Good work! Can you be more detailed about the "information" you added and what source you found it in? (I can't tell from "Edits to Article" below.). Be sure to make edits here and not the main page. Update work log for this week. Keep it up!

10/31- This looks good. I took the liberty of bolding what I thought you had added to the original content. Is that right. See my notes and omissions. (Take out biased language.). If you've found any copywrite free images of her or her work, consider adding that too. Before you move to main space, have me or a Wikitech take a look, okay?

Julissa's Work Log

 * Sept. 29th- Chose Gwyneth Scally's article
 * Sept.29th- added information about her working in Arizona.
 * Oct. 27th - added information about her portraits of influential  10th- Century American poets.

Edits to Article
Scally's work is figurative and psychological, much of it deals with elevating biology over religion and with issues of nature and ecology. It includes large scale paintings, installation, and fiberglass sculpture.[citation needed] '''Scally worked as an artist in Arizona for the last decade. Her work has been shown internationally, and she has received numerous grants and awards.''' She received the Community Foundation of Southern Arizona Buffalo Exchange Visual Arts Award in 2003. In 2004 she completed a residency at the Red Gate Gallery of Beijing, China. In 2005 she showed "Jelly" at the Tucson Museum of Art and received a grant from The George Sugarman Foundation.In 2007 she held an exhibition, "Jelly", at the Mesa Contemporary Arts Center, Arizona, inspired by studies of jellyfish. The exhibition consisted of eight sculptures of jellyfish, six paintings and a panelled piece, each alluding to theological symbolism and evolutionary science.''' After working in Arizona, Scally relocated to New York in 2012. "In 2007, I spent the summer at an artist's residency in Newfoundland, Canada." Her work has been shown internationally. It has been featured in The Southern Review and New American Paintings. '''

'Heather's note: This needs to be integrated into what you have above. Decide how to organize this--chronologically maybe?'' Visual artist Gwyneth Scally has created a striking quintet of portraits of influential and beloved 20th-century American poets. Wallace Stevens, H.D., Langston Hughes, Elizabeth Bishop and Sylvia Plath are celebrated in this limited-edition series of elegant linoleum cut, hand-pulled prints. Each meticulously hand-carved plate shows an arresting image of a poet, interwoven with elements and images from that poet's written legacy. '''