live oak with Spanish moss
The Elder, Nancy Tankersley, oil , 24 x 30 in. The giant oak tree on this southern plantation, one among many, has surely been here for generations.

Nancy Tankersley: My years as a portrait painter and studio painter and then as a plein air painter have given me the experience and skills to paint “things”. And often these things had narratives that I could use to evoke an emotion that I could share with the viewer. In recent years I have returned more and more to the studio where I could explore the paints and surfaces and experiment with new painting techniques and tools. My most recent work is more about memory, imagination and emotion. As Thomas Cole the famous Hudson River landscape artist said “If the imagination is shackled, and nothing is described but what we see, seldom will anything truly great be produced either in Painting or
Poetry.” (Thomas Cole to Asher B. Durand, 1838)

Currently as she searches for the unpredictable, Tankersley moves between landscape, figures and still life. Incorporating non-traditional tools , supports and technologies for her paintings she remains faithful to her impressionistic style.

To see more of Nancy’s work, visit:
Website

Heartland, Nancy Tankersley, oil, 36 x 36 in. A scene spied while traveling high speed on an interstate highway through middle America. The old-fashioned hay stacks evoked memories of family farms.
impressionistic water and sky
Quiet Day, Nancy Tankersley, oil, 30 x 30 in. Painted mostly from imagination and memory, I tried to keep the colors soft and harmonious.