Marsha
Hammel
As the daughter
of U.S.A.F personnel, Marsha's early years took her through much
of the United States, Panama, Germany and Italy. The experience
gleaned from these early days of travel would soon be recognized
as at the age of sixteen Marsha was selected to attend the Governor's
School for Gifted Students in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. It
was at this point that Marsha came under the influence of the
Classical and European approaches to art, an influence which continues
to the present day.
Although
considered by many to be a descendant of the European Modernists,
Marsha prefers to think of herself as an atavist, one who
returns to primitive form. In keeping with early Egyptian,
Minoan and Mycenaen art, Marsha strives to present
her figures in simple, powerful terms with reductive backgrounds.
Feeling strongly
that art is a mirror in which the human psyche can view itself,
Marsha's paintings convey simple human truths and desires. As
she states, "The image of the human figure is the signature
of our species. Since prehistoric times it has been a conveyance
of the spectrum of emotions, events, desires and our sense of
beauty. My work carries on in this tradition".
Selected
Collections:
Northern
Trust Bank, Tampa Florida.
Barnett Bank,
Sarasota, Florida.
Sun Hydraulics,
Sarasota, Florida.
University
of South Florida, Tampa.
State Capital,
Raleigh, N.C.
Riscorp,
Sarasota, Florida.
Bob James
[jazz recording artist] L.A.California.
Brian Johnson,
AC/DC, Sarasota, Florida.
Museums:
Museum of
Arts and Sciences, Daytona Beach, FL. Permanent Collection.
Museum of
Fine Arts, St. Petersburg, FL. Selected for Solo Exhibition, 1993.