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From her early years, April's
vision was to paint. She kept this vision throughout college,
and began showing in galleries shortly after graduating. Except
for six years as the designer and art director for a national
magazine, April's entire career has been creating fine art.
For the past thirteen years April
has lived primarily in Orange County. During this period she
turned her attention to painting scenes inspired by the canyons,
harbors, and coastlines in Southern California. "To capture
nature with the fluidity of moving paint is what keeps me constantly
pushing for the experience of amazement. The act of painting
is serendipity itself."
The oldest of 10 children, April
was born in Hawaii and was raised in North Florida, along the
wooded banks of the St. John's River. "In those days there
was much more open space; pine forests, blackberry patches, swamps,
and alligators. My parents were designers and innovators, architecting
and building their own home and designing and making most of
their own furniture and clothing. They involved all of us children
in these projects." April spent hours in the woods, sketching
and painting both small details from nature as well as large
vistas. She would offer these works for sale in her neighborhood
to earn needed income for school and art supplies.
With strong encouragement from
her high school teachers, she competed for and won the prestigious
May-Cohen Art Scholarship, which enabled her to begin her university
work in fine arts. "My high school years were immersed in
art. My teachers would encourage me to paint murals rather than
taking some non-art classes."
April had the opportunity to
study fine art under several masters while obtaining her degree
in art at BYU. These included William Whitaker, Gary Ernest Smith,
Trevor Southey,and Alex Darais. She was also profoundly influenced
by the expansive collection of Maynard Dixon paintings that surrounded
her. Shortly after receiving her bachelor's degree April began
exhibiting her work at some of the finest galleries in the West,
including Clark-Leaming, Tivoli and Voris.
During this time she encountered
and overcame two bouts with cancer. These encounters left a deep
impression on her work reflecting not only on the frail nature
of existence on Earth, but also our struggle with the perception
of opposition. It was during this period that she created the
controversial "dream" series, renditions of pivotal
scenes from the subconscious. These paintings, often autobiographical,
deal with emerging self-awareness and growth from the perspective
of a woman's psyche. Many of these are held in private and corporate
collections. A sample of work from this period is available on
the web.
Twenty years later, cancer well
in remission, April is painting on-site in and around Laguna
Beach, California and from her home studio. "Although my
plein-air paintings are representational, I am defiantly not
trying to emulate photo-realism. Rather, my mind and my eye work
together to form a double vision. This brings to the canvas impressions
of both the seen and the unseen. Without both visions the scene
does not come alive. For me, the process of art is about seeing
the image, then seeing beyond it."
April's primary media is traditional
artist's oil colors on primed canvas mounted to wood panels.
April is a participating member of the Laguna Plein Air Painters
Association (LPAPA), Southern California Artists Association,
Southern California Plein Air Painters Association, California
Art Club, and Oil Painters of America (OPA). April is also an
exhibitor at the Festival of Arts in Laguna Beach, CA, one of
the oldest and most respected summer art festivals in the country.
April Raber's current plein air oil paintings can be viewed online
at www.aprilr.com.
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