Bethany fields artist profile v2

Bethany Fields

Unison Colour Associate Artist

bethanyfieldsblog.com

About:

Bethany Fields is an American contemporary artist known for her pastural and reminiscent works in pastel.

Bethany graduated from Texas Tech University with a BFA in Theatre. She went on to perform professionally and continued honing her skills in composition and design for a creative web series in Burbank, CA, near Hollywood.

She worked as a professional lifestyle and commercial photographer for 15 years and began painting full time in 2014.

In 2016 and again in 2017, Bethany had the honor of exhibiting at both the Salmagundi Club and the National Arts Club in New York, NY, where her work was selected for ongoing exhibits at the Butler Institute of American Art in Youngstown, OH.

She travels for art societies and workshops, blogs weekly at bethanyfieldsblog.com, and produces her own Youtube channel, focusing on teaching and demonstrating her pastel techniques.

Bethany is a proud 7th generation Texan, and she and her husband of 17 years are raising their three children in Amarillo, TX.

She paints daily in her home studio and is an active member of the American Impressionist Society, American Women Artists, and is a Signature member of both The Degas Pastel Society, and the Pastel Society of America.

Blogs by Bethany Fields

  • No blogs from this artist, yet...

Colour Chart Guidance

We believe the colours in our web based colour chart are a faithful representation of our pastel range. But with any colours portrayed on the internet, there’s a whole heap of variables which mean that what you see, may not be what we see. That said, there’s some things that can be done to mitigate some of the variance.

Mobile phone and tablet screens tend to be pretty good for colour, so they’re always worth using, when viewing our colour chart.

We hate to say it, but cheaper computer displays, including laptops, can be rather hit and miss, in both colour and contrast, so they might not reveal the depth of the colour, as well as the true tone.

If you’re really keen on getting your computer up to speed on colour representation, you can use a calibration device to reach your display's fullest potential.

With all that said, if you think we’re way off the mark with any of the colours then, by all means let us know, and we’ll give it another shot.