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BIOGRAPHY
Ellen Orseck paints metaphors through images of figures submerged in water, sumo wrestlers immersed in food, turbulent weather and portraiture. She showed her underwater series “Submerged” at 80 Washington Square East Gallery in New York City. Her tornados were selected to represent Texas artists at the National Museum in Lima, Peru, as well as in Houston’s City Hall. She presented a solo exhibit of portraits of creative Texans in Made in Texas at Bering and James Gallery in Houston and her Storms, Sumos and Sweets, presented a view of sumo wrestlers, desserts and tornados at The University of Houston/Downtown O’Kane Gallery.
Throughout her career, Orseck has earned public arts commissions from state arts councils, corporate collectors and private patrons in Texas, Oklahoma, Virginia, the District of Columbia and Maryland. Her largest public commission was a mural awarded by the National Endowment for the Arts in her hometown of Baltimore, Maryland.
She earned her Master’s Degree in Painting from New York University, which included one semester in Venice, Italy, and two in New York City. As an undergraduate, Orseck studied painting at the Maryland Institute College of Art in Baltimore and earned a Masters Degree in Museum Education at George Washington University. Her post- graduate education also included four years at the Glassell School of Art.
Describing her most recent artwork Orseck said, “Whether I am painting fully clothed figures floating underwater or sumo wrestler dolls immersed in chocolate cake, my subjects are characters in a narrative. At times grave and at times beautiful, the subjects are selected to evoke different responses to life, to illuminate, or to call to mind human emotions.”
Orseck is an Adjunct Professor of Art at the University of Houston Downtown and works in her studio at 2101 Winter Street in Houston. |
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