"While visiting a cavernous cave in my youth when I had much more freedom to explore, I was always in awe of the mineral formations dripping from the cave ceiling and the reflection in the pools of water below. A light show made the colorful reflections that much more intense. I’ve attempted to recreate my emotion of being wide eyed and gob smacked from the memory in my head of this beautiful sight so many years ago. The canvas was prepared with masked off sections of multicolored textures in alcohol ink. Using the drip method of the isopropyl alcohol, a tiny needle nose bottle was used to deliver drops in selected locations to create the shapes and dried immediately with a hair dryer so the continuing chemical process was terminated when the development was acceptable."
- Alene Sirott-Cope
Prints are produced on demand on stretched canvas, acrylic plexi, or giclee fine art paper in a variety of sizes here in the United States.
Contact ArtLifting for larger size options.
Hobe Sound, Florida
“The vivid, colorful and bright hues of my medium inspire me and others to appreciate the value of the natural spectrum of color and how it can affect one’s mood and outlook. It has become a whole and creative healing process for me.”
Alene Sirott-Cope (she/her/hers) has had Type 1 Diabetes since college and has dealt with significant health implications, including open-heart surgery and limited walking capabilities.
Alene’s creative style combines her graphic design experience with technology and a dash of mixed media. She is an experimenter who seeks new techniques, always willing to venture into the unknown. The alcohol ink technique she employs allows her to relax while producing immense beauty in a short amount of time.
Alene has been a professional graphic designer, potter, art director, art educator, and fine artist. Her work has been featured in The Boston Globe, The Crafts Report, Art Calendar, The Nashua Telegraph, The Lowell Sun, Funeria Art, Polymer Cafe Magazine, 1000 Dog Portraits, The NH Chronicle, a book titled “Pigments of Your Imagination," and HGTV’s “That’s Clever.”
She writes, “Art is a great healing process for me, and I need to have some kind of creative process in order to keep me physically and mentally active. With the aid of ArtLifting, I know that the validation of any kind of compensation makes this endeavor even more rewarding.”
ArtLifting champions artists impacted by disabilities and housing insecurity by connecting their art with socially-conscious customers . Learn more here.