Share Tweet Liron's Art - Oil paintings depicting nature metaphorically. Landscape Paintings. Flower Paintings. Plein Air. Buy or lease. Originals and Fine Art Prints

Liron was the featured guest on The Monday Night Live, PKRG-TV, Channel 77, on October 16, 2006. The program included two previously shot segments at the studio and at Green T  

Click to read A Painter's Life by Maggie Fazeli Fard, Pascack Valley Magazine, Spring 2007 

Liron's painting Hudson River at Boscobel featured in SOMETHING BORROWED starring Kate Hudson, Ginnifer Goodwin, and Colin Egglesfield

liron Liron's oil paintings have been featured in shows in New York City and throughout the country, have won multiple awards, and have been written about extensively.  Her works are in institutional collections and in over 100 private collections in the US and abroad. Liron's artwork was recently the subject of a 40 minute TV interview.  Liron is a professional artist listed in Who's Who in the World, Who's Who in America, Who's Who in American Art, and Who's Who of American Women.   

"Every painting is a self portrait. I do not paint flowers.  Having no faces of their own, flowers in my work represent an image which viewers of diverse backgrounds would be able to relate to.  Unencumbered by personal features, they serve as portraits of human nature. 

I became interested in painting the landscape when I realized the symbolism of water as representing life and serenity; the sweet promise of that to which we aspire, often so close yet illusive. My compositions often depict a body of water seen through a screen of trees. While partially obscuring thus connoting a hurdle these trees provide glimpses. My landscapes like my flowers are not merely intended to reflect nature but rather to project an inner reflection, a metaphorical journey.
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I admire the intensity of emotions found in the works of the Expressionists.  Like them, I too mix my soul with my paints. However, I strive to be subtle in my expression of the intense." 

"The plants [in Liron's work] become anthropomorphic lovers"
Joseph Jacobs, Curator of American Art at the Newark Museum

"The paint [in Liron's work] is no longer a means by which to reflect the natural world but rather to express it"
Maggie Fazeli Fard, Art and Entertainment Editor, Community Life

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