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Angie Sellars Art Collections

Shop for artwork from Angie Sellars based on themed collections. Each image may be purchased as a canvas print, framed print, metal print, and more! Every purchase comes with a 30-day money-back guarantee.

Artwork by Angie Sellars

Each image may be purchased as a canvas print, framed print, metal print, and more! Every purchase comes with a 30-day money-back guarantee.

About Angie Sellars

Angie Sellars Artist Angie Sellars grew up in the foothills of the Bull Mountains near Roundup, Montana, USA. Her creativity and imagination were fed by endless days of playing in the backwoods and when it was too cold to be outside, her time was spent drawing, painting, and creating.

She received several awards throughout high school for various art work, including scholarships to Montana State University Bozeman which she attended for a year before transferring to Montana State University Billings. She majored in Art Education focusing on watercolor and later oil and acrylic.

Throughout the years of raising a family, she has continued to pursue her love and passion for art, whether it be doodling with her children or endless late nights painting while babies slept. She is the proud mom of two boys, 24 and 21, and her 4 1/2 year old daughter. Her children are her life and her inspiration for much of her work. Angie has volunteered with several art school projects in her community and she and her sister opened a store featuring their art work and homemade jewelry as well as other gifts. She has painted and drawn many subjects from realistic to dreamlike surrealistic, ever evolving as life does. She has worked in pencil, charcoal, pastel, watercolors, oil painting, and acrylic and has painted on everything from canvas's, feathers, mailboxes, to murals. She has had her work published on the cover of Rocky Mountain Rider Magazine.

Angie has participated in several art shows and groups including Roundup Memorial Hospital and Clinic, Roswell Fine Arts League, Yellowstone Art Museum Art Auction, Montana State Fair, several motorcycle rallies, and various other local businesses. She has donated several pieces for various fund raisers for her local nursing home to donated feathers for fallen soldiers' families. In 2015, she and her sister hosted a local Art Walk in their hometown of Roundup, Montana during the Fourth of July activities, which they plan on growing and expanding in the upcoming years. They also are doing projects such as 'Paint in the Park,' encouraging others in the community to be involved in the Arts.

For the last couple of years, she has been working with acrylic painting on feathers found locally in her native state of Montana. Subjects range from local wildlife and flowers to commemorative feathers for fallen soldiers. She also continues to paint on canvas and some multimedia work, where she has more freedom for creating dreamlike, surreal images... she calls these her 'Me Pictures,' as they are more self expressive than room allows on a feather. Currently, she is 'collaborating' with her 4 1/2 year old daughter to create work.. Her daughter Irelyn paints the background, and Angie creates an image from her daughter's work.

In 2017, Angie's art work was selected for the Downtown Billings Art Project which included her art being permanently placed on a downtown traffic utility box, located at Montana Ave. and 30th St. in Downtown Billings, MT, the largest city in Montana. The box displays three works that are a part of the 'Mother/Daughter collaboration" project she continues to work on with her daughter, Irelyn.

Each piece, whether it be a realistic rendering or more surrealistic, is intended to reach in and 'Tickle your Soul.' Angie uses a lot of symbolism in her work. For example, many of her pieces have a dragonfly, either quite visible or very hidden somewhere within the piece. To Angie, the dragonfly represents endurance, and inner strength to always keep trying, to keep moving forward. Each piece of her art comes from the heart to reach in, to let the viewer feel, believe in oneself, see the beauty in the simple, and sometimes the heartache (her more surrealistic work), but to always continue forward, always keep hope.