331 Pacific Avenue, Bremerton
On the corner of 4th & Pacific
Laurie Barmore
abstract expressionist painter
Washington artist Laurie Barmore is an abstract expressionist painter. Developing her own techniques with an underlying structure and layers, Barmore’s work is rich with texture, color, and movement and has been described as “visual poetry”. Poetry, in fact, inspires her work, as well as a rich love of the forms and designs found in nature and the deep core questions and human experiences shared by all.
Barmore was born in New York and moved to California at the age of five. Her teen years were spent living in the coastal mountains of Santa Cruz, and she passed many wonderful hours on horseback or exploring the forest behind her house with her dog. These experiences fundamentally influenced her developing way of seeing color, light, and pattern in the textures of the forest. Family camping trips and beach excursions were also instrumental in developing her love of the natural world.
In college she earned her BS in Nursing. After graduation she married and went on to raise a family while continuing to work -first in the ICU and more recently in the Recovery Room, and is now retired. Although throughout Barmore’s life she had explored various art forms, it was in her thirties that she experienced an increasing desire to paint. She enrolled in her local community college and spent several years studying drawing, painting, and color theory. It wasn’t until she left school and ventured out on her own that she gravitated toward an abstract style. She discovered abstract painting was a way for her to let go and find a freedom of expression. Working in her specialty in nursing was very exacting and fit with her meticulous nature. But in her art, she desired to create and express from a deeper inner emotional place. An abstract painting style allowed her to do that.
Barmore’s work has been influenced by Georgia O'Keeffe for her organic forms, Vincent Van Gogh for his movement, energy, and vibrating color, and Joan Mitchell for her lyrical line.
She has shown her work in art festivals, juried exhibitions, and restaurants. In 2017 she participated in her first museum group show at the Triton Museum in Santa Clara. She is currently represented by Gallery 1202 in Gilroy, CA, and is a member artist in the Collective Visions Gallery in Bremerton, WA.
Her work is in personal collections across the United States and in Canada.