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sense of humor doesn’t hurt either. Selma has it all, her
historic architecture is ey are eccentric, they are always quick to offer their
southern hospitality to anyone who shows up on their doorstep and especially
love wayward artists. I am lucky enough to live on a small farm in the middle
of all of this with my family and the expected animals. Several years ago, I
was fortunate enough to join with several “characters” to form a group called
Arts Revive, www.artsrevival.org for economic development through the arts.
One project that has been especially successful is the Harmony Club Art Show,
www.harmonyclubofselma.com which is opened to Alabama artists. This show has
helped bridge the racial gap and has given the local residents an idea of how
much talent is around them and the possibilities it holds for the future of
this area. Working with this group has personally challenged me to try things
I may not have otherwise. This settingsome of the most incred- ible to be found
in the state, her natural setting on a bluff overlooking the Alabama River is
simply beautiful. Her inhabitants are characters out of a book that there is
no way for me to describe. While th has offered me the freedom to play and explore
new areas in my work. In the past, I had the incredible experience of studying
at the Art Students League of New York and have had the good fortune to study
with such greats as Albert Handell and Anthony Palumbo. I am greatly inspired
by contemporary masters as David Leffell, and Ramone Kelly as well as any artist’s
work that I look at in awe from old masters to local artists, trying to take
the opportunity to always grow in my own work. I have come to especially love
the purity, grace and challenge of painting the human figure. I come from a
long line of artisans and craftsmen and am happy to say that my two sons are
highly creative and finding successes of their own expression. For me, any form
of creativity has been a link to contentment and to God as long as I can remember.
I hope my sons find the same satisfaction. Self expression is to me as necessary
as air. So it follows that if any one of my works inspires some level of feeling
in just one person, I have found true personal success for the moment. And to
please myself is by far the most difficult achievement and also the most fleeting
of victories. Born in Selma, Alabama, the as yet undiscovered cradle of the
arts in the South, Vicky Sommerville has always been a step ahead of the masses
- just ask her creditors. A master of abstract art at the young age of three,
as evidenced by her first showing on the Frigidaire art gallery, she has gone
on to teach herself the intricacies of form, color, and design. Unable to lure
the great masters to Selma except on video, Vicky set out on a quest for knowledge
into the wilds of the north where she discovered the Art Students League and
the strange and wonderful concrete jungle of New York City. But the peaceful
beauty of Selma called her home, not to mention her two boys who had run out
of frozen pizza and clean clothes. Invigorated by her stay in New York, Vicky’s
fame spread like the muddy waters of the Alabama River at flood stage. Today
she is known for her wonderful portraits that capture the inner spark of her
subjects. A minor celebrity in Selma, Vicky divides her time between painting,
teaching art classes, raising her sons, training her horses, working to uplift
Selma through the arts, and wondering how to fit 48 hours into 24.