
Portrait exhibit opening at The Pharmacy
Each year the cover of Capital City Visitor, published by Illinois Times, features
a portrait of Abraham Lincoln by a central Illinois artist. This time
we decided to hold a contest as a way of finding the best, freshest Abe
possible,while offering exposure to local talent. The first place winner
was Kevin Atterberry but there were so many great entries it seemed a
shame to keep them to ourselves. That’s why on Friday, April 1, at The
Pharmacy Gallery and Art Space, 711 S. Fifth St., IT will host a reception for an ongoing exhibit featuring some of the very best entries we received.
Kevin Atterberry, fi
rst place winner, was born and raised in Petersburg. He graduated from
Porta High School in 1982 and is a graduate of the Colorado Institute of
Art with a degree in graphic arts communications. His fi rst job was as
an illustrator for Accent Publications in Golden, Colorado, and he has
also worked as a graphic designer for AT&T and Cox Cable. Currently,
he is senior graphic designer for Horace Mann. When Kevin isn’t busy
painting and illustrating he can be seen gigging around town with his
folk-rock trio, The Roastineers.
Felicia Olin’s art
has been featured on the cover of the Capital City Visitor twice in the
past. She was born in Kell, Illinois, and has lived in Springfi eld
since 1980. She studied art at Springfi eld College and ISU and has
worked in Jeffrey Alans’ frame shop for the last 16 years. Her art can
be seen in person at Wild Rose and Murphy’s Loft as well as at the Old
State Capitol Art Fair and The Pharmacy, where she is a longtime member.
One of her favorite projects is the 2015 book, A Net to Snare the
Moonlight, which features her illustrations of a selection of Vachel
Lindsay’s poems for children. The book is available for sale at the
Vachel Lindsay home in Springfi eld. Her favorite pastimes are petting
cats and watching documentaries, sometimes simultaneously.

Dominic Cellini specializes
in freelance illustration and design. Cellini graduated from Sacred
Heart-Griffin and is currently a senior at Savannah College of Art and
Design where he majors in Sequential Art. “I mostly work in character
design and storyboarding for animation, so my work has very much that
sensibility,” he says. To see more of his work, visit www.dominiccelliniart.com.


Artist Catherine “Cat” Clausen refers
to her entry as “Lavender Lincoln.” Three of Clausen’s Lincoln
paintings were recently on display at the Triennale Bovisa Museum in
Milan, Italy. Another of her Lincoln portraits was on the cover of the
2009 edition of Capital City Visitor. She lives and paints in Dwight,
Illinois. Her entire collection is available to view at www.CatClausen.com.

At 15, Teyha McDonald is
the youngest artist here. She started getting serious about drawing at
age 12, originally working in an anime-infl uenced style before moving
into doing portraits. She describes herself as a self-taught artist who
loves to skateboard. “I’ve only been doing it since May,” she says of
skateboarding, “but it’s pretty awesome.”

Jane Bucci, second
prize, describes her works as being “inspired by design, color,
composition, dignity, beauty and innocence. Also, all of the arts,
family, animals, people watching.” She works in watercolor, acrylic,
gouache, pencil, ink, charcoal and mixed media. She also occasionally
produces “realistic, one-of-a-kind, clay bas-relief sculptures.” A small
selection of her graphic designs (“just for fun”) can be viewed at www.zazzle.com/janebucciartist .

Springfi eld Native Jeff C. Williams, third
place, is a graduate of Lanphier High School and Illinois State
University. He began taking art lessons at the Springfi eld Art
Association at the age of 6, thanks to his mother, Alvina. He is a
graphic designer at University Illinois Springfi eld. Along with his
brother, Bruce, Jeff is a founding member of popular Springfi eld punk
band NIL8. He has shown his artwork at the National Art Museum of Sport
(“Bicycle Racer w/Split Pea Soup”) and has a painting on long-term loan
at the NCAA Headquarters in Indianapolis (“Boston 1969”). He has been
commissioned to do paintings for Bicycle Times Magazine and the 2013
Philadelphia Bicycle Expo. View more of Jeff’s paintings at www.Jeffveloart.com.

Tim Magill grew
up in Belleville, but has been a Springfi eld resident for years. He
studied art in high school and received a degree in visual communication
from Southern Illinois University in Carbondale. Later he found work
“designing Happy Meal toys and stuff like that” while interning at a
Chicago company before returning to Springfi eld to start a family. He
is currently a single dad and is employed by the Secretary of State’s
offi ce managing construction projects. “I don’t do Facebook or online
stuff or anything but I do have a ton of artwork and it’s really just
for pleasure and for fun,” he says. In addition to enjoying spending
time with his two daughters, he is also a self-described computer geek
and loves to get outside for a round or two of disc golf.

James Brady lives
in Chatham and has been in this area all his life. His formal art
training consisted of just a few art classes at Lincoln Land Community
College but that came to an end when he got married and joined the
workforce. He currently works as a custodian for District 186 and
credits the work environment for rekindling his interest in art. “One of
the rooms that I cleaned out at Grant Middle School was the art room
and I was inspired by the teacher and all the students,” he says. A trip
to Hobby Lobby to buy supplies was all it took to get him painting
again. In addition to his entry in this contest, Brady has another
Lincoln portrait which hangs in the mayor’s offi ce. “There have been a
few that sold but I really don’t push it,” he says. “This is my
passion.”

Go online to illinoistimes.com to see an image gallery of all of the entries for this contest.
Greg Walbert is a lifelong resident of Springfi eld.
A
Visual Communications graduate of Eastern Illinois University, he works
as a graphic designer, specializing in corporate identity, as well as
an illustrator, with a passion for colored pencils and expressive, loose
line interpretations. “Pencils allow me to be spontaneous, expressive
and loose,” he says. “There is a life to every image, and I want the
image I create to have a texture and a depth that goes beyond an
accurate representation, and draws the viewer in.”