Sweetwater Picture Framing partners with talented & accomplished local and regional artists to provide museum quality, fine art prints of their beloved work.

Johnny Dame - Painter

Over the entirety of my Lifetime, I have created thousands of drawings, paintings, articles and songs, all as a direct by-product of my Love for this Sacred Planet!

Suzanna Mars - Photographer

I explore photography as works of drama (or cinema); sometimes this manifests as set pieces or ornamentation and sometimes as small moments in dramatic time. The connection between evocation and emotion is the tie that binds these works together.

Shabnam Monadizadeh - Painter

My passion lies in the creative process, whether it involves designing buildings, crafting spaces, sketching on trace paper, or painting on canvas. For me, painting serves as a bridge to the subconscious, allowing me to explore a broader perspective of reality through my inner vision.

John Moran - Photographer

Traveling the Sunshine State with his cameras, John Moran seeks his vision of natural Florida as it must have appeared to Ponce de León and other early strangers in paradise. Moran's work celebrates the magic of a unique landscape born of water and blessed with beauty beyond measure.

Sara Nash - Painter

Sara Nash, PhD is a painter based in Gainesville, FL. Her work has been featured in several juried exhibits and is on permanent display at the University of Florida.

Leslie Peebles - Print Maker

Inspiration comes by way of experience, dream, memory or idea. The works push beyond the boundary of surface description to a deeper, numinous or magical realism. They are rooted in reality but occupy a space that is more real, more colorful; more alive.

Jeff Ripple - Painter

I am dedicated to a poetic realism in landscape painting inspired by intriguing compositions, mood and atmosphere I find in nature. My style involves carefully planned drawings, a reliance on sketches and studies painted in nature to inform studio work, and a treatment of light and atmosphere reminiscent of 19th Century artists working in the uniquely American Hudson River School and Luminist traditions.

Cara Van Leuven

The hyperreal, disproportionately long legs of the horses found in Cara Van Leuven’s art is founded in the sense of fragility omnipresent within any equestrian relationship. At times, such fragility is figurative, like the symbiotic bond between a horse and rider developed only via countless hours of functioning as one – a precious connection which can fracture in seconds.

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