Marcia Weber Art Objects Contact the Gallery

 

 

Major offerings
by these artists:

Leroy Almon
Alpha Andrews

Hope Atkinson
Michael Banks
Rudolph Bostic
Anne Buffum
Richard Burnside
David Butler
Lisa Cain
Ned Cartledge
Tory Casey
Cornbread
Brenda Davis
Mamie Deschille
Theresa Disney
Mike Esslinger

Minnie Evans
John Fesken
Howard Finster
Don Gahr
Sybil Gibson
Lee Godie
Ted Gordon
Dorethey Gorham
Annie Grgich
Haitian Artists
Spencer Herr
Teneco Hunter
James Harold Jennings
Charile Kinney
Jim Kransberger
Jean Lake
Eric Legge
Woodie Long
Peter Loose
Annie Lucas
Charlie Lucas
Erika Marquardt
Justin McCarthy
Frank McGuigan
Roy Minshew
Roger Mitchell
Ike Morgan
Bennie Morrison
Eddy Mumma
J.B. Murry
Bruce New
Pak Nichols
B.F. Perkins
John Phillips
Elijah Pierce
Sarah Rakes
Royal Robertson
Ruth Robinson
Nellie Mae Rowe
Lorenzo Scott
Welmon Sharlhorne
Bernice Sims
Mary T. Smith
Jimmie Lee Sudduth
Ionel Talpazan
Wanda Teel
Annie Tolliver
Mose Tolliver
Inez Nathaniel Walker
Della Wells
Myrtice West
Mary Whitfield
David Zeldis
Malcah Zeldis

Other artists in
the Gallery::

Minnie Adkins
Anonymous Artists
Z.B. Armstrong
Pat Astoske
Ray Brown
Jerry Coker
Chuck Crosby
Vic Genaro
Lila Graves
Alma Hall
Bertha Halozan
Joseph Hardin
Lonnie Holley
M.C. "5 Cent" Jones
Andy Kane
Fred Kessler
Reverend J.A. King
Bobby Lanter
Calvin Livingstone
Hogg Mattingly
Jake McCord
Jessie Lee Mitchell
Reginald Mitchell
Matilda Pennic
John Rhodes
Juanita Rogers
Jack Savitsky
Robert E. Smith
Julia Wilson Starke
Q.J. Stephenson
William Thompson
Tolliver Family
Bill Traylor
Daniel Troppy
Elmira Wade
Derek Webster
Fred Webster
Annie West
Willie White
Aritst Chuckie Williams
Artis Wright

Roy Minshew

Roy Minshew

Prior to a stint in the Air Force, Georgia-born Roy Minshew  held a number of positions, including fireman, trucker, sheet metal fabricator, machinist, and shoe repairman. The custom leather work involved in repairing shoes was the catalyst that initially gave shape to his creative energy.

In 1981, putting shoe repair behind him, he decided to pursue art as a career. He set up shop, hired employees, and began doing production carvings to ship worldwide. Two years later, feeling he was no longer being creative, he embarked on his adventure as a folk artist.

Since 1989, Roy has been at home in his shop, creating the kinds of pieces that give shape to his philosophy of life and art. He works in wood and mostly carves animals, including dogs, goats, horses, and pigs, ranging in size from one to five feet.

Roy's animals are formed with great imagination, exaggerating physical characteristics to create a mood and to foster an emotional reaction from the observer. He also does carvings and paint-carving combinations on religious and political themes.

Available Works