Larisa Ivakina Clevenger
Larisa’s discipline extends from water color to oil, wooden icon and etching to mural, interior design to festival posters for Russian festivals and the Tchaikovsky festival. The versatility of her artistic expression is found in landscapes, flowers, nudes, portraiture and religious art.
Major contributions of religious art in New Orleans make her one of the first women to have achieved such in church art. St. Jude Shrine, and the chapel of Our Lady of Guadalupe at St. Vincent de Paul are both graced by murals, icons and large oil paintings in her distinctive style. Earlier this year she completed a series of the 14 Stations of the Cross on mahogany wood in the Iconographic style for Blessed Francis X Seelos Catholic Church in New Orleans.
Seclusion in the Russian mountains led Larisa to paint flowers profusely. She designed interior frescoes for the Marine academy, mosaics and grafito for exterior design and office interiors in her homeland. Her landscapes are in Russian museums and she developed a teaching method that is still being used in public school systems throughout Russia.
America, which is her second country, sees her art at galleries in and around Louisiana. Recent showings have been in San Antonio, Texas; Novorossiysk and Moscow, Russia; St. Francisville, Monroe, Kenner and at the Loyola University law school in New Orleans, Louisiana.
Her costume designs for the play “Degas” in New Orleans received rave reviews.
Larisa is currently available for private lessons and work shops and in the New Orleans area.
Anya Lincoln-Dunn
Larisa’s discipline extends from water color to oil, wooden icon and etching to mural, interior design to festival posters for Russian festivals and the Tchaikovsky festival. The versatility of her artistic expression is found in landscapes, flowers, nudes, portraiture and religious art.
Major contributions of religious art in New Orleans make her one of the first women to have achieved such in church art. St. Jude Shrine, and the chapel of Our Lady of Guadalupe at St. Vincent de Paul are both graced by murals, icons and large oil paintings in her distinctive style. Earlier this year she completed a series of the 14 Stations of the Cross on mahogany wood in the Iconographic style for Blessed Francis X Seelos Catholic Church in New Orleans.
Seclusion in the Russian mountains led Larisa to paint flowers profusely. She designed interior frescoes for the Marine academy, mosaics and grafito for exterior design and office interiors in her homeland. Her landscapes are in Russian museums and she developed a teaching method that is still being used in public school systems throughout Russia.
America, which is her second country, sees her art at galleries in and around Louisiana. Recent showings have been in San Antonio, Texas; Novorossiysk and Moscow, Russia; St. Francisville, Monroe, Kenner and at the Loyola University law school in New Orleans, Louisiana.
Her costume designs for the play “Degas” in New Orleans received rave reviews.
Larisa is currently available for private lessons and work shops and in the New Orleans area.
Anya Lincoln-Dunn