70 THE QUEENS COURIER • BUZZ • MARCH 21, 2013 FOR BREAKING NEWS VISIT www.queenscourier.com buzz FLEX SPENDING Use it or lose it! SPRING SAVINGS ONSITE DOCTORS • EYE EXAMS • CONTACTS • 1 HOUR SERVICE • VISION PLANS ACCEPTED • SUNGLASSES • LOWEST PRICES 2 PAIR OF EYEGLASSES QC QC QC $99 Includes: EYE EXAM, Frames & Lenses Select frames with clear plastic, single vision lenses+/- 4 sph., 2 cyl. Not valid with any other offers, sales, vision plans or packages. Must present prior to purchase. Offer valid at this location only. Offer ends: 4/24/13 NO-LINE BIFOCAL EYEGLASSES $99 Includes: EYE EXAM, No-Line Bifocal Lenses & Frame Select frame with select clear plastic no-line bifocal lenses +/- 4 sph., 2 cyl up to 2.50 add. Not valid with any other offers, sales, vision plans or packages. Must present prior to purchase. Offer valid at this location only. Offer ends: 4/24/13 DISPOSABLE CONTACTS $99 Includes: •EYE EXAM •2 Boxes of Lenses Clear Soft contacts brand clear spherical lenses. Not Valid with any other offers, sales, vision plans or packages. Must present prior to purchase. Offer ends: 4/24/13 BAY TERRACE SHOPPING CENTER 211-51 26 AVENUE • BAYSIDE, NY 11360 718.631.3699 *FREE with the purchase of glasses. Contact Lens Exam and EYE EXAM tting add’l. *See store for details. QC of the 2013 THE QUEENS QueensCourier.com BY ANGY ALTAMIRANO [email protected] Looking out every window in her life, Diane Sipprelle fi nds life, beauty and inspiration. Born in Knoxville, Tennesse, the young artist made her way to the Big Apple in the early 1980s to chase her dreams. After a few years of traveling, Sipprelle made her way to Long Island City, where she was able to move into a “large, airy” apartment. Once her surroundings blocked her views of the world around her, she moved to Dobbs Ferry, where she now overlooks the Hudson River. “It’s important for me to have something I fi nd interesting to paint from these windows,” she said. “It’s like living in the painting.” Working a day job, she fi nds it easier to be able to paint from her windows before and after work. During her time in Long Island City, her inspirations would come from the industrial landscape that surrounded her every day. “I had such wonderful views of the No. 7 train which ran within a couple of arms lengths from my windows,” she said. “It was hilariously noisy but this was a perfect painting situation for me.” Beginning her process of bringing the painting to life, she would take photos of the scenes that caught her eye, trace it onto a canvas, lay in the outlines and then color in like a coloring book. “I particularly like oil paintings because you can change your mind, add and subtract layers as you feel more acquainted with your home view,” she said. One of the works that can describe her best views from her Long Island City apartment is called “LIC Train Workers.” It can now be found at the Diego Salazar Gallery. “The work is a refl ection of me and me is a refl ection of where I live, being a domestic person I was painting my life,” she said. She recalls a specifi c mentor in her life in the early 1960s, who had a studio right off her kitchen. While the mentor would be cooking dinner for the present dinner party, she would also go about checking her painting in the studio. “My fi rst memories are of art and I always felt most in my element when I was with artists,” she said. Among her inspirations are women who were considered to be eccentric and kept true to themselves in life and in their art works. Some of her infl uences include Emily Carr, Alice Neel, Georgia O’Keef Marjorie Portnow and many more. “I’m a slow thinker and I mull things over and like to push things too far and then I can reconsider and rub that off and repaint. Push and pull.” Images courtesy of Diego Salazar Art Gallery WINDOW TO THE ART WORLD
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