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Sustenance Group Holiday Giving: Partnering with Artists to Support Women-Focused Organizations

Sustenance Group, in partnership with Atlanta’s  Fine Arts Workshop, artist Michael David and the Bill Lowe Gallery, launches a holiday fine art print sale to benefit women-focused organizations Mango Tree Foundation and Dining for Women.

The sale runs from November 14 – January 15, with 50% of proceeds from the sale of the prints going directly to the charitable organizations (the other 50% goes directly to the artists). Many images to choose from — prints from 19 different paintings/designs by 19 different artists. Quick shipping available for holiday gifting and easy Google checkout!


"Klimt Christie" by Karen Schwartz


These beautiful, signed-and-numbered giclee prints (each of exquisite quality and sized at 17 x 21 inches) feature the work of artists from the Atlanta Fine Arts Workshop, whose work appears in a group show entitled The Irascible Muse (a nod to the group of artists who appeared in Nina Leen’s infamous 1951 photograph for Life magazine) which is on exhibition at Bill Lowe Gallery through the end of the year.

This group of artists worked under the tutelage of Michael David, a renowned abstract painter and encaustic artist whose work has been featured at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, among many other well-known venues. Three years ago, Michael David and artist partner Scott Browning decided to launch Fine Arts Workshop, a studio for artists wishing to study under the direction of David, whose artistic vision landed him in some of the most coveted museums and universities in the world. Unlike the traditional art school set, these artists are finding their way back to art after meeting life’s detours that made it difficult for them to pursue an earlier career. The result is a group cured by maturity and experience powerfully reflected in their work. Add to the formula the spirit of the South and the adrenaline of reconnecting with a source impulse to paint, and these artists have produced work that represents the beginning of a new vernacular in Southern artistry.

Artists of "The Irascible Muse" exhibition. Photo credit: Barbara Brenner and Deborah Whitlaw


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