The Tequihua Foundation--Gallery
Your Email
book cover of Seeing--bardo room, candlelight Sign up for a
Free Toltec E-book
Home Articles AkaDua  Events Telling Art Gallery Store About Us Contact Us
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

Invocational Art

"We like creativity because it connects us to something so fundamental about
our existence, our reality .... Reality is being created instant by instant all the time, continuously,
without interruption ... the amazing truth and the exquisite sense of beauty to that.
We like creativity because it is a reflection of that."

A. H. Almaas

"It's a process of discovery. Self-discovery? No, it's revelation."
E.J. Gold

 

Douglass Truth

Artistically speaking, he has spent much of his life as a writer and short order cook, based on the mistaken impression that he was color blind...

My Favorite House
Acrylic on Canvas, 18 x 24"
$450.00 USD

 

 

a Zoe Allowan acryllic painting of a man, seen from behind, wearing dark blue slacks, a long-sleeved white shirt, and a wide-brimmed white hat walking up a mountain path; the sky is swirling red, yellow, and white

 

Zoe Allowan

Zoe Allowan communicates her love of nature through her artistic expression.

"Art has a great deal to do with transformation. As a dancer and as a painter my work is in the theatre of possibilities. A commonplace piece of paper can become a doorway into another dimension."

Walking the Path
Acrylic on canvas, 14 x 20"
$125.00 USD

 

 

 

 

 

E.J. Gold

E.J. Gold is the master of many visual
artforms including painting, sculpture, pastel, photography, drawing and currently enjoys wide acclaim for his JazzArt ®tm which
serves as stage dressing, theatrical backdrops and companion exhibits to jazz concerts and jazz events in many venues.

Calder Exhibit
Acrylic on canvas, 30 x 50 "
$4000.00 USD

an E.J. Gold acryllic painting of a strange-feeling view inside a museum showing abstract canvases on the walls and ceiling of the room the viewer is in as well as a room beyond; the near room also contains a modern, oval-backed red chair, a tall, black sculpture on a tall and thin wood pedestal, a three-legged stool holding a large yellow- and green-leafed plant, and a ceiling mobile of primary colored ovals by Alexander Calder

 

 

sepia toned image of a cavernous gallery space repeated several times; between the second and third repetition, a mysterious and child-like art auction angel gazes out