Artist Information:
Ames Guyton
Jacksonville, FL
United States
Member Since: Jun 2005
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Latest Artist's Video:

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Artist Statement:
Ames Guyton is an architect with Bachelor’s and Master’s degrees from Columbia University in New York City. He has worked for many major architectural firms in New York City and Atlanta including Bauhaus architect Marcel Breuer, one of the founders of Modern Architecture.
In addition to architecture Ames...
Further Information
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Artist Exhibitions:
Ames Guyton's art has been exhibited in many local galleries in Jacksonville and St Augustine, Florida.
The Florida Department of State sponsered a one-man show of his art in the Florida Supreme Court Building in Tallahassee, Florida....
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Artist Galleries:
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Artist Reviews:
Ames Guyton utilizes the latest in computer software technology to create a series of bold digital prints, which are rich in color and abstract in nature. He pushes this new medium to the limits by exploring unique and different visual possibilities through technical software such as CAD, which is designed ...
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Collections:
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Commissions:
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Ames Guyton's Artist Portfolio
Welcome to Ames Guyton's Portfolio.
Ames Guyton is an architect with Bachelor’s and Master’s degrees from Columbia University in New York City. He has worked for many major architectural firms in New York City and Atlanta including Bauhaus architect Marcel Breuer, one of the founders of Modern Architecture.
In addition to architecture Ames has created wood and marble sculpture, has designed over a hundred pieces of furniture, and is a nature photographer. He has photographed many of the buildings designed by Frank Lloyd Wright, and has a special passion for North Carolina waterfalls.
Like most architects he has adapted to the new computer drafting technologies that have been evolving over the last few years. Within this medium he has begun to explore the artistic possibilities of the computer software originally designed for architectural CAD (computer aided design).
The result is a technology-based approach to abstract design. Like the free-hand artist he begins with simple lines, and arcs, rectangles, circles, and ellipses. Using the computer these can be converted into three-dimensional objects such as spheres, cubes, and pyramids; and ultimately very complex forms. Computer tools permit compositions to be mirrored and arrayed to produce even more complexity. Lighting effects most commonly... |
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