About WildWind
Artist
Sonya
Spaziani
Playful meandering dust-devils; winds
brushing through wild manes; and fierce winds of an impending thunderstorm
blowing down the face of a mountain range… are some of the experiences that
inspired the name WildWind. WildWind is the pencil art of Sonya, depicting
western and wildlife scenes of our great American west. Raised on a ranch,
Sonya was immersed in the lure of the great outdoors~ the hard work, the dust,
the mud, the uncluttered beauty of nature in both the green rolling pastures
of the Willamette Valley, as well as when among the pungent sagebrush of the
high desert country in eastern Oregon.
"The immense awe that passes through my Soul
as I watch wild horses rest in cloud shadows where the winds play upon their
wild manes, is indescribable, and so fuels the fire to attempt to capture
those kind of unforgettable images through my drawings."
Besides capturing the beauty of the American west
through her art, Sonya enjoys team roping, riding, cattle drives, camping/hiking,
and observing the mustangs of the high desert basin. You can read about her
outdoor adventures in her journal. The wide open
spaces, the pristine unspoiled rugged beauty of the high desert, the unpredictable
weather, the vast wildlife, the big open and unspoiled skies, and the few
remaining shadows of what was once the old American West provide her with
inspiration for her drawings. Residing in the foothills of the Cascade Mountain
range with her husband who is both her motivator in her art, and photographer
of many of her subjects, they travel together gathering pictures for her work.
Sonya believes the Soul of the old west
still lives as evidenced on working ranches, and felt through quiet shivers
when in old ghost towns where dust, wind whispers, and tumbleweeds are the
only inhabitants. Through her art she attempts to capture the inner essence
of what once was, though now just a whisper on the wind.
Strictly self-taught, Sonya enjoys the challenge
of capturing the intimate details of both western and wildlife art. She primarily
uses fine point mechanical pencils, and has found that black and white or
sepia tones do not distract the eye, but rather the contrasting tones illuminate
the detailed beauty of the subject. Recently incorporated into her artwork
in 2005, is the use of authentic wild horse mane-hairs to detail through paint,
the structures of horse hair. 20% of the proceeds of the sales of the artwork
with wild horses goes to wild horse protection organizations such as Return
to Freedom, and Wild Horse
Sanctuary as recommended by the American
Wild Horse Preservation Campaign.
"It is inspirational to
live in a place where ways of the old west can still be found, and its spirit
living on in sheltered pockets of humanity. There are secret areas where one
can see for miles without interruption by a barbed wire fence; where wildlife
is still abundant, and the winds blow where they will..."
See you where the wild winds blow, Sonya
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