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Wildlife Snapshot: Elkby Naomi McCavitt
27" x 31" Framed Art Frame
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Sepia Squash Iby Naomi McCavitt
27" x 22" Framed Artwork Frame
Sepia Squash IIby Naomi McCavitt
27" x 23" Framed Artwork Frame
Wildlife Snapshot: Owlby Naomi McCavitt
28" x 32" Framed Artwork Frame
Wildlife Snapshot: Grizzlyby Naomi McCavitt
32" x 28" Framed Artwork Frame
Classical Landscape Triptych Iby Naomi McCavitt
30" x 42" Framed Artwork Frame
Classical Landscape Triptych IIby Naomi McCavitt
30" x 42" Framed Artwork Frame
Classical Landscape Triptych IIIby Naomi McCavitt
30" x 42" Framed Artwork Frame
Flora & Filigree Iby Naomi McCavitt
30" x 42" Framed Artwork Frame
Flora & Filigree IIby Naomi McCavitt
30" x 42" Framed Artwork Frame
Waterbirds & Cattails IVby Naomi McCavitt
25" x 31" Framed Artwork Frame
Charcoal Equestrian Portrait Iby Naomi McCavitt
25" x 32" Framed Artwork Frame
Charcoal Equestrian Portrait IIby Naomi McCavitt
25" x 30" Framed Artwork Frame
Charcoal Equestrian Portrait IIIby Naomi McCavitt
25" x 30" Framed Artwork Frame
Charcoal Equestrian Portrait IVby Naomi McCavitt
27" x 32" Framed Artwork Frame
Japanese Cranes Iby Naomi McCavitt
25" x 28" Framed Artwork Frame
Japanese Cranes IIby Naomi McCavitt
25" x 28" Framed Artwork Frame
Japanese Cranes IIIby Naomi McCavitt
25" x 28" Framed Artwork Frame
Japanese Cranes IVby Naomi McCavitt
25" x 28" Framed Artwork Frame
Pen & Ink Bear Iby Naomi McCavitt
25" x 30" Framed Artwork Frame
Pen & Ink Bear IIby Naomi McCavitt
24" x 31" Framed Artwork Frame
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Naomi McCavitt was born in Richmond VA. She has lived in many places including Phoenix, San Francisco, New York, and Seattle, before settling down back in her home town. She started making art as a child when her parents graciously allowed her to draw on, cut up, and otherwise rearrange her picture books. Since then she’s had many jobs including working in almost every position in the restaurant industry and teaching art to students of all ages from 5th graders to University students. In her spare time she always made art compulsively. She thinks that is the only criteria for calling yourself an artist and the definition of success in the arts; making work compulsively. She says it's nice when one gets paid for his/her art but not always necessary. Naomi’s work has gone through many iterations and awkward stages. While she feels humbled to look at her old work and notice her own naivety, she has recently come to really appreciate the stupid or clumsy parts of a piece of artwork. She thinks of old art as her version of the Navaho spirit line. Framed Naomi McCavitt art have become so popular that they are found in many people’s homes and also with many collectors. She’s using resources from the past for their aesthetic value. By rearranging these resources, she’s able to tell new stories where nature resists cataloging by clumping together in orgiastic defiance, where colonizers and conquerors are dwarfed by hot wilderness, where aristocrats levitate from their thoroughbreds.