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Return to Yesterday - Open Edition Paper Print

Dolores Tema

$45.00


This piece is an open edition custom print reproduction on paper. Select your print size and framing preferences.


Customize Your Art

Size
9

9" x 12"

12

12" x 16"

18

18" x 24"

Frame Type
Framed and unmatted

Framed and unmatted

Framed and matted

Framed and matted

Frame Style
No frame

No frame

Clean white frame

Clean white frame

Clean black frame

Clean black frame

Clean natural frame

Clean natural frame

Silver frame black sides

Silver frame black sides

Warm gold frame with black sides

Warm gold frame with black sides

Description
Dimensions
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Shipping and Returns

About Dolores Tema

Dolores Tema studied design at Parsons School of Design in New York City, and after completing her degree at Hunter College of the City of New York She then worked as a graphic designer for Shell Oil and City Bank, both in New York City. After moving to Connecticut, she continued her study in visual art at Wesleyan University in Middletown, and spent a summer at Scuola Lorenzo de Medici in Florence, Italy.

While teaching art full time at a Jesuit high school in Fairfield, Connecticut, Tema also finds time to produce works in watercolor and various print mediums. Many of her pieces begin as sketches made on location around her home and while traveling. Her love of working on location adds to the vitality and life in her work.

"Art is an exploration of self as determined by the world around us. While we are anchored in time and space, art acts to bring us beyond the ordinary, to capture what can ultimately be defined as truth. I think anyone who involves himself in this process experiences that place which defies time and space, and where the journey begins. My journey began as a child, observing my surroundings, and those around me. I have always translated these observations in drawings, paintings and even small objects built. My current work involves the tension between that which we know and that which is felt. This tension is realized as colors come together and merge into each other to become whole. I hope to achieve a kind of movement; a dance and balance in the work through the use of shape, color, and form."