Jeff Boyes

Jeff Boyes was born in Maple Ridge, B.C. Canada and graduated from The University of the Fraser Valley in Abbotsford, B.C. before moving to Vancouver to work in graphic design and printmaking. Jeff was exposed to screen-printing at an early age by his dad, who ran a screen-printing shop. His subject matter usually involves pop culture and is very graphic design influenced.



Harley Brown (1939)

Harley Brown was born in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada in 1939. He is a Western painter and sculptor of figures and domestic animals. He started selling his drawings door to door, while supplementing his income by playing piano professionally. Ready for a change, Harley, his wife, and young son moved to England, where he studied art for two years and began making a name for himself in western art. It was at this time that he was commissioned to paint Prime Minister Winston Churchill. Returning to Canada in 1966, Harley struggled to get his work accepted by galleries and finally held his first solo exhibition of seventy paintings at the Montana State Historical Society in 1973. It was a sell-out exhibition. Today, Harley has garnered an impressive following and continues to create his amazing works.


Arthur William Brown (1881 - 1966)


Arthur William Brown was born in Canada in 1881. By 1929 he had become a millionaire through his work as an illustrator for the "Saturday Evening Post, American Magazine, Redbook and almost every other magazine of importance in the United States." The vast majority of Brown's work was in pencil, though ink and color wash began appearing in his kit from the early 30s.


Neil Blevins (1976)

Neil Blevins was born in Pointe Claire, Quebec, Canada in 1976. He was Technical Director at Pixar 2002 and Animator at Blur Studio 1999 - 2002. Blevins’ work has a flavor of Zdzislaw Beksinski and JMW Turner meets Star Wars, with a Giger throwback. 
“I guess most recently I've been focusing more on 2D painting than the 3D work. Painting is just so much more immediate and you can make something fast and rough that still looks cool. Rough 3D to me always just looks unfinished, whereas rough paint can have a lot of vibrancy and emotion to it”.