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    • Playa Venao 2016
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    • Disney
    • Australia, 2009
    • Surfer's Paradise
    • Kuranda
    • Cairns
    • Daintree
    • Alice Springs
    • Uluru/Ayers Rock
    • Sydney
    • The Blue Mountains
    • Hunter Valley
    • Sailing The Grenadines, 2007
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Ed Obermeyer

Street Address
Virginia Beach, VA
757-513-4689
Artist/Painter

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Ed Obermeyer

  • edobermeyer.com
  • Edward A. Obermeyer
  • Paintings
  • Popular Photos For Sale
  • Exhibitions
  • Blog
  • 2025 May thru August Surf
  • January thru April Surf and Bird Photos 2025
  • 2024 Photos September thru Dec.
  • 2024 Surf and Bird Photos
  • Sept.-Dec. Surf photos 2023
  • 2023 Surf May thru August
  • 2023 Surf Photos January thru April
  • 2022 September thru Dec. Surf Photos
  • Gardens, Birds, and Flowers
  • Surf Photography 2018 back
  • Playa Venao Panama
  • Contact
  • Travel
    • Playa Venao 2016
    • Playa Venao, March 2015
    • Playa Venao, Panama, July, 2014
    • Disney
    • Australia, 2009
    • Surfer's Paradise
    • Kuranda
    • Cairns
    • Daintree
    • Alice Springs
    • Uluru/Ayers Rock
    • Sydney
    • The Blue Mountains
    • Hunter Valley
    • Sailing The Grenadines, 2007
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edobermeyer.com

Post Edward A. Obermeyer

Aboriginal Modernist Painter

Artist’s Statement

 

My acrylic paintings reflect my deep passion for all things ocean related, and the wonderful world of gardens and gardening.  After sailing and surfing around the world, I return with newfound enthusiasm and create my complex pattern paintings of those experiences.

 

When asked to describe my style of painting, I often paint a word picture for my clients and tell them that if Vincent Van Gogh were reincarnated as an Aborigine from Australia, was a surfer, and a pinstripe artist, that would be me. A black gesso base coat forms the framework for the patterns that are developed with stripers, daggers, and swirlers, and a host of other custom brush tools.  Through years of diligent practice, I have developed my own signature patterns where I create works of art using dark color patterns that develop into the lighter patterns at the end of each piece. 

 

BFA-VCU and MIS-VCU

Travel and journeys that have inspired

Australia
Australia


 
 

After teaching Aboriginal Culture to my art students for the last few years, I finally had the opportunity to visit Australia and learn about their art and culture .

This Home Page will take you to the nine major areas we visited and show you in pictures and story what we learned at each site. The lessons we learned from our tour guides and the aboriginal people themselves will be used to instruct students in cultural diversity and respect for their land. All Australians have an incredible love of their country and respect for their land and its resources. It was an honor to learn from them about some of their most sacred sites and the making of tools from local resources for hunting and food gathering.

Our journey began in the metropolitan city of Surfer's Paradise, where everything evolves around surfing along the entire coast line. This area was also filled with terrific resources for fishing, boating, and wildlife excursions into the outer reaches of the Queensland area. It makes for a great base camp to go out and explore other areas of Queensland such as Burleigh Heads, the Currumbin Sanctuary, and a host of other amenities far too numerous to state here.

We then ventured to Cairns where we saw magnificent beaches, the Great Barrier Reef, the Cairns Harbor and Lagoon, incredible shops, indigenous boutiques and warm friendly people and great foods. Part of the Cairns experience was a trip to Kuranda where we rode the old train through the rain forest, visited the village of Kuranda, saw amazing butterflies and birds, and then took the sky rail up into the canopy of the forest for some of the most breathtaking views you could ever imagine of the Cairns area. At the bottom of the hill was the Tjapukai Aboriginal Cultural Park where we learned about bush foods, various tools, how to make them for hunting and food gathering, and what the story was behind their art making. I had many discussions with locals who told me about the symbols in their art, how to play the didgeridoo, what the creation time was about and how they communicate these things to people like us and why. We saw tribal dances, men make fire, stories were told, instruments were played, bush tucker was explained for medical purposes, and finally we threw spears and boomerangs.

We left Cairns one day and headed up to spend a night at the Daintree Eco Lodge and Spa which is one of the top 20 in the world. It is in fact, number 13 in the world. According to their brochure, "Daintree Wellness Spa is a unique body, mind and soul experience, harnessing the potent natural forces to create a healing environment unlike any other. The Daintree is 135 million years old and home to the spiritual ancestors of the Kuku Yalanji tribe. With the approval of the Kuku Yalanji elders our spa treatments integrate the wisdom of ancient cultures, medicines, spirtuality and healing."

Alice Springs was the beginning of the true Australia I had always imagined with rugged roads and outback bush gushing forth from some martian like soil of bright red ochre. We talk so much about didgeridoos and culture with the locals. I played with the band on stage, bought original paintings from locals selling them on the streets, and discovered the "wattle", their national flower/bush. We saw great views of the Alice Springs area from atop a mountain and amazing trees with their bark crawling to the ground.

Uluru (Ayers Rock) was the highlight of our trip, where we started at the Lost Camel (our wonderful and exotic futuristic hotel). The colors in the hotel were bright reds, purples, blues, and ochre's fused with a type of Adobe style architecture. Georgia O'Keeffee would have loved this place. We no sooner dropped off the bags and we were out the door for the sunset dinner at Uluru. It rained on the way, stopped, and then formed the most incredible sunset and double rainbow over the rock that anyone had ever seen. They served us champagne and crepes of crocodile, emu, baramundi, and kangaroo. The dinner was followe up with didgeridoo playing and a local astronomer explaining to us how to find the southern cross since the north star is not visible there. You could just reach out and grab the milky way. The following day began and ended with a tour of the rock with our guide "Happy", a local Aboriginal through Anangu Tours.

At Sydney, we stayed at The Rocks at the heart of town at the foot of the huge Sydney Bridge in a very old historic district filled with bustling shops and sky scrapers. From Sydney we toured out to the Blue Mountains and learned about the animals there, saw wild birds and kangaroos, and hands on cave walls that were done 1,600 years ago. Our guide John told us that the Australians never wanted to go back to the way they were and were to keep moving ever forward, so they chose the emu and kangaroo for national symbols. Neither creature can go backwards. We wrapped up our journey at the Hunter Valley and toured the wineries there and tasted phenomenal foods and met great happy people everywhere. This was a journey of a lifetime and I hope you all enjoy the pictures and learn a little something along the way about Australia and the people who live there.

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