Artist Spotlight | Go Figure – Artist Cheryl Elmo

The artwork of Cheryl Elmo captures the human experience through the simplicity of everyday moments.

Go Figure is a collection of Cheryl’s artwork that focuses on human connections, capturing something special in an otherwise ordinary moment in time.

These everyday moments made special will be featured in the main gallery of the Aiken Center for the Arts through November 30. Come and immerse yourself in the different perspectives awaiting you in this thoughtful exhibition.

Cheryl first picked up a paintbrush when she was 6 or 7 years old, and she has been painting ever since. She tried many other mediums but always came back to watercolors. She loves to see the water on the page — the differences in the colors enamored her, and she is still painting with watercolor today.

“Painting is my passion and fuels my happiness,” says Cheryl. She starts painting at 5 am and continues through the wee hours of the evening. What is important to her about her art is that she’s painting the human connection. “I am influenced by people in their momentary emotional interactions and challenged to tell their everyday life stories. Figures in my stories are anonymous and familiar, where I witness a moment and work to develop a relationship between the art and viewer,” explains Cheryl.

It’s about capturing a moment, an expression, and sharing the story of these anonymous characters, giving us a glimpse into another person’s perspective. She wants viewers to become a part of that story, to see something they would normally pass by, to appreciate the beauty of that moment.

An important turning point in her artistic career came years later with two serious episodes of cancer. She continued to develop her artistic resume with watercolor societies and local venue shows while fighting cancer with the same passionate drive she has for painting. Fully recovered, this experience influenced her devotion to capture each living moment by painting prolifically in her distinctive style while striving to communicate that each moment in life is a treasure.

Cheryl’s style and application of watercolor gives the medium a new and unique visual quality, with a balance of fluidity and structure. Her work is very distinctive — she puts down layer upon layer of paint, and as the work develops, figures and objects emerge with a puddle-like quality. This unique handling of the watercolor has evolved over the course of her life as a painter, creating an unusual style reminiscent of the Impressionists yet influenced by a modern-day edginess.

For the last decade of her artistic journey, Cheryl has had numerous single artist shows, been represented in multiple galleries, and received multiple awards while fine tuning the development of her contemporary approach to watercolor. She continues to build relationships in Bethlehem and Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, New York, and South Carolina while maintaining her signature status and gaining acceptance into prestigious shows.

Artist Spotlight | Go Figure - Artist Cheryl Elmo | Palmetto Bella

Picture of Palmetto Bella Staff

Palmetto Bella Staff

Staff writer for Palmetto Bella Magazine
Picture of Palmetto Bella Staff

Palmetto Bella Staff

Staff writer for Palmetto Bella Magazine

In the know

Related Stories

A New Year – A New Beginning | Palmetto Bella

A New Year – A New Beginning

There is a new day dawning Not just a new day — a whole new year! Masks an accessory of the coronavirus, Symbolic of the 2020 annus horribilis This new year 2021 stands before us like a storybook waiting to be rewritten. Let us plan to approach this new year with 20-21 vision. Ready to see clearly, to meet this creative challenge. Let us not only plan to do things differently but “to make a difference.” This experiment has no expiration date. If you falter in your dedication, You have the option of endless renewal. One is easily defeated when you give up trying. Strive to be more observant of

Read More »
PHOTO of the MONTH: MARGARET WARREN | Palmetto Bella

PHOTO of the MONTH: MARGARET WARREN

And why, you may ask, is this man consigned to drinking his coffee under the breakfast table? He is a college professor, faithful husband, Navy officer, survivor of the sinking of the Block Island during World War II, family man, father of 3, and gentleman farmer. And the latter is how he ended up in the Warren substitute for a doghouse. You see, the Warrens at that time had a barn and a pony but no fenced paddock. Early every morning, my father would lead the pony out of the barn, up the driveway, past the house, and out to the front lawn. There he would tether the pony for

Read More »
Celebrating the Beauty of the Natural World through Artwork | “Outside and Around Us” | Palmetto Bella

Celebrating the Beauty of the Natural World through Artwork | “Outside and Around Us”

Artwork provided by Aiken Center for the Arts, used with permission Plein air painting is about leaving the four walls of your studio behind and experiencing painting and drawing in the landscape. An upcoming exhibition at Aiken Center for the Arts, “Outside and Around Us,” features plein air artwork by local artists Al Beyer, Bill Daniel, Sally Donovan, and Andrew Murphy from December 3, 2020 through January 29, 2021. For these artists, there is something about being in the environment as they paint that is important to them. It is more than simply painting outside; there is value from being in the open air. They are offered the opportunity to

Read More »
Lights of St. Mary’s | Palmetto Bella

Lights of St. Mary’s

On the frosty eve of Bethlehem, hazy nimbus of lamplight on cobblestones leads to the open doors of St. Mary’s. Within, eternal flame of brooding majesty burns above the ornate cupola. Towering pillars, angled arches, patterned concentric circles lofting above the altar — silent hints of the complexity of church history. Lambent stained windows and shadowed mosaic encircle the faithful with biblical messages. Ruby poinsettias amid pine-scented greenery flank altars ablaze with candles shedding their muted pools of empathy and bright sparks of hope this Christmastide. A tree-wrapped manger filled with new straw portends the good works of a parish to welcome the Christ Child! Lusty chorus of ancient carols

Read More »