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Artist's Profile
"If you've ever been to Africa, you are not likely to forget the experience," says wildlife artist Julia Rogers. And if you've never been to Africa, looking at a Rogers painting can almost make you homesick for places you've never seen. You can almost feel the heat, the sand and the beauty of the landscape.
Being an artist and painting nature was inevitable for Julia. Growing up on the Chesapeake Bay on the eastern shore of Maryland has had a strong influence on her since childhood. Her mother, an artist, and her father, a sportsman and wildlife enthusiast, it’s not surprising that she began drawing landscapes and animals at a very young age. She excelled in art in school and was placed in college as a fine art major before High School graduation. She was advised, like most art students, to study and work as a commercial artist. "The decision to leave the security of a regular paycheck and to paint full time was not easy, but was the best thing I ever did."
Over the years she has worked in several mediums and has gradually developed the distinctive style we see today in her oil paintings. She also paints a wide variety of subjects. Her extensive travel is documented in her work. "I’ve had many periods of growth that can be attributed to trips I have had taken." Africa has been very inspirational in her work and has become a personal favorite. "Seeing animals in their natural environment and witnessing their interaction in person changed the way I painted." Julia has traveled to many countries of Africa gathering references for her paintings. "
SHOWS
articles and awards
Julia’s work is included in many important collections around the world including the Hiram Blauvelt Museum and the Raymond James Financial collection.
During a sponsored visit to Malilangwe, Zimbabwe, she was commissioned by the regional Art Museum to create a major work for their permanent collection.
In 2000 she was invited by the Hiram Blauvelt Museum in New Jersey to participate in an exhibition titled "Kalihari to Kilimanjaro" with two other artists.
She is a member of the Society of Animal Artists and has been chosen for many of their annual exhibitions.
She is a regular participant at Southeastern Wildlife Exposition, Waterfowl Festival, Wildlife and Western Art Show and Safari Club International, Reno. Articles in Inform Art, Sporting Classics Africa issue, 1998, 2000, 2003. Wildlife Art News, Women in Wildlife. Gilcrease Museum, Plainsmen Gallery
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