ARTWORK BY ANNELIES M. DYKGRAAF - ENJOY IMAGES AND STORIES THROUGH ART of my life growing up in Africa, of different cultures, of uniting cultures. My art is the expression of me - have fun getting to know me!
About Me
- Annelies Dykgraaf
- Jacksonville, Florida, United States
- Annelies M. Dykgraaf was born in Nigeria, West Africa and spent her first eighteen years in rural areas where her parents lived and worked as missionaries and teachers for 40 years. She holds a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree with a minor in French, from Calvin College in Grand Rapids, MI. Annelies studied during her Junior year on scholarship with the Cleveland Institute of Art in Lacoste, France. She is a board member of the Beaches Fine Art Series and functions in the role of Visual Arts Coordinator. She is also a founding member for both JCAAA (Jacksonville Consortium of African American Artists) and The Art Center Cooperative, Inc.(TAC), a Not-for-profit Co-op of artists. She is the Current President of the Art Center.
Wednesday, August 08, 2012
Wednesday, June 13, 2012
Thursday, April 26, 2012
THE ART CENTER:The Art Center Cooperative, Inc.: Embracing Our Differences 2012
THE ART CENTER:The Art Center Cooperative, Inc.: Embracing Our Differences 2012: Annelies Dykgraaf's art was chosen to be posted on one of several bill boards in Sarasota, Florida to celebrate the annual event Embracing O...
Tuesday, April 24, 2012
Friday, February 17, 2012
Embracing Our Differences
My acrylic painting titled "Red Yellow Black and White" was selected! 'We are pleased to inform your art submission to Embracing Our Differences 2012 has been selected for display on the Sarasota bay front during the months of April and May 2012. Your submission is one of 45 selected from over 2,300 entries received from 48 countries and 38 states.' www.EmbracingOurDifferences.org
Thursday, October 27, 2011
Patrons of the HeArts, Artscapade 2011
Wednesday, August 10, 2011
Purchased a New House in May
Through Our Eyes Feb. 24 - May 7, 2011
In its 18th year, fueled by dialogue resulting from the film, For Colored Girls, and the original 1970s choreopoem, For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide When the Rainbow is Enuf, African American artists presented work eploring the complexities of various relationships. Here are the two paintings I exhibited with this exhibit at the Ritz Theatre and Museum, 829 N. Davis St., Jacksonville, FL
Wednesday, April 20, 2011
Friday, January 21, 2011
Gallery 1037, Reddi Arts, Jan-Feb 2011
Monday, November 15, 2010
A Unified Community | jacksonville.com
A Unified Community jacksonville.com
Written by Lee McDonald
Annelies Dykgraaf is an artist who continues to inspire me because she produces work that reflects a vision that I believe in and because she lives a life that makes a difference in our community. She is truly an artist that does not see color; at least not in the way that most of us do. She was born in the Nigerian revolution to American missionary parents, her mother worked throughout her career in a particular language within a specific tribal group. Her father worked as together they gave their lives to a people making a difference in a community different from the one that they grew up in.
Annelies is one of the founders of the Art Center Cooperative here in Jacksonville; I remember an early organizational meeting in a home in Arlington where ideas were shared from different generations and different races for getting started on building something new that would be a cooperative effort where artists could gather and express new ideas. Annelies is this month's featured artist at one of the two galleries the Art Center currently runs. The exhibition is called "Touch;" the focus is on the importance of touch across the racial divide that in itself will produce a community cohesion that brings new and exciting opportunities for all those who share the space.
Written by Lee McDonald
Annelies Dykgraaf is an artist who continues to inspire me because she produces work that reflects a vision that I believe in and because she lives a life that makes a difference in our community. She is truly an artist that does not see color; at least not in the way that most of us do. She was born in the Nigerian revolution to American missionary parents, her mother worked throughout her career in a particular language within a specific tribal group. Her father worked as together they gave their lives to a people making a difference in a community different from the one that they grew up in.
Annelies is one of the founders of the Art Center Cooperative here in Jacksonville; I remember an early organizational meeting in a home in Arlington where ideas were shared from different generations and different races for getting started on building something new that would be a cooperative effort where artists could gather and express new ideas. Annelies is this month's featured artist at one of the two galleries the Art Center currently runs. The exhibition is called "Touch;" the focus is on the importance of touch across the racial divide that in itself will produce a community cohesion that brings new and exciting opportunities for all those who share the space.
Friday, November 05, 2010
Monday, October 04, 2010
Images of Dignity, Aug 31 - Oct. 2, 2010 at the Karpeles Manuscript Museum
Thursday, August 26, 2010
Monday, August 16, 2010
Jacksonville Zoo Mural project by the Art Center
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)











































