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Ellen Mayer

Ellen was born in New York City. Her work has appeared in group and solo shows at Papp Gallery, Midoma Gallery and A.I.R. Gallery, New York City. Ellen Mayer has also exhibited at the Lycian Theater, Sugarloaf, NY, Varga Gallery, Woodstock, NY, Winslow Therapeutic Center "Healing with Horses" Warwick, NY, Harness Racing Museum, Goshen, NY, Howland Cultural Center, Beacon, NY, Newburgh Art Gallery, Newburgh, NY, Painter's Gallery, Cornwall, NY, Hambletonian Fine Art Show and Competition, Sugar Loaf, and many others.

Englewood, NJ Hospital Emergency Room Installation

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Ellen Mayer a New York Artist who recently moved to Wayne, N.J. was inspired by her daughter-in-law, a PA in emergency at Englewood Hospital to create this painting, Titled: (Holding On).  Dedicated to the first responders during the Covid crisis.  It is a permanent installation In Englewood Hospital Emergency Room.
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2016 Hudson Valley International Film Festival

On Saturday August 27, 2016, my work was featured at the 2016 Hudson Valley International Film Festival: 

Ellen Mayer was born in NYC and started her career as a fashion Illustrator in Manhattan at the young age of 18. 
She has been a working artist ever since, Her paintings have been shown all over NYC and other places. 
She currently has a 10 foot by 22 foot permanent installation in Indianapolis. 
An award winning painter, Ellen has found a love for photography and capturing people and places. 
Ellen incorporates her love for painting and art into her photos. She captures the true grit of life.

See More Images Here:

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The Hope Murals Project

The Hope Murals Project

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'Know there is hope' - Cancer survivor Ellen Mayer's winning mural to become permanent part of NYC landscape

'Know there is hope' - Cancer survivor Ellen Mayer's winning mural to become permanent part of NYC landscape

Ellen Mayer of Chester has enjoyed an incredible amount of luck in her life. When she was only 18, just out of high school, she was waiting in line with more than 50 other people, portfolio in hand, to be interviewed for a job in fashion. She was on her lunch hour, and figured she had nothing to lose. She was asked to illustrate something — and, just like that, she got the job.

More recently, the bubbly Bronx transplant won the Lilly Oncology on Canvas Art Competition with a painting brought to life at a special event held Oct. 23 in the Vanderbilt Hall at Grand Central Station. There, four designers, 60 paintbrushes, 10 gallons of paint, and a whole community transformed her art into the giant New York Hope Mural, an expression of hope in the face of cancer.

“I got there five minutes late in the pouring rain and traffic," she said. "All these people were waiting for me to do the first stroke before anybody else could begin to paint."

She was then whisked off to be interviewed by such news icons as CNN and Times Business. Everyone waited while she dried her rain-drenched hair. It made her grin to hear “Take one!” and “Take two!” from the videographer.

As she walked to and from the many different events she was obliged to attend, she regretted her decision to wear heels that day. But she enjoyed being treated to lunch, staying with her husband in a hotel, and attending the gala dinner.

“Now I know what it's like to be famous,” she said. “It was fun but exhausting.”

Mayer's mural was completed through a paint-by-number transfer on large panels worked on three at a time and later assembled. She was surprised to see so many people lining up just to paint a few strokes. But those strokes will be part of history, embodied in a permanent work in a permanent New York City location.

Mayer said anyone who has been affected by cancer, either directly or through someone they know, can submit artwork to the Lilly Oncology on Canvas Art Competition. In 2010 and in 2012, her paintings in oils and acrylic traveled around the country and throughout Puerto Rico.

Here's another example of Mayer's famous luck — she survived a very rare form of cancer called gastrointestinal stromal tumor, or GIST, which affects the digestive tract.


Mayer called her winning mixed media painting “Balancing Act." It depicts a female figure balanced on a bright yellow ball, her hands on the sides of her head. Abstract figures appear in vertical lines on either side of the central figure, whose expression is one of peace.

Mayer said she wants people to look at her painting and "know there is hope.”

“Cancer is a balancing act with your mind and body," she states in the narrative accompanying the work. "I am cancer free, but the balancing act never ends. Each CAT scan, twitch of pain or thought can put me out of balance. Could my cancer be back? I'm strong, emotionally and physically now. I became confident that I will survive — until that moment of doubt enters my mind. Then I know I have to rebalance. Even if I have stuff pulling me to one side, I hold my balance. Cancer made me stronger, made me more aware of balancing life! Life is good! I balance my grandson in my arms; that helps a whole lot!”

Life after cancer
For ten years now, the Lilly Oncology on Canvas Art Competition and Exhibition, presented by Lilly Oncology and the National Coalition for Cancer Survivorship, has brought to light the journeys people take after they receive a cancer diagnosis. To celebrate the 10th anniversary of the competition, the Hope Murals Project transformed 10 pieces of art from past competitions into 10 murals in 10 cities across the United and Puerto Rico.

Mayer's work was chosen from among the thousands submitted. Nine other artists will be honored in nine other major cities.

The New York Hope Mural painted in Grand Central Terminal was presented by Lilly Oncology and the National Coalition for Cancer Survivorship, with CancerCare and the Herbert Irving Comprehensive Cancer Center of Columbia University and New York Presbyterian Hospital. They intend to build a national community art movement.

The three national winners of the 2014 competition were among the hundreds of painters who gathered at Grand Central. More than 100 entries from the 2014 competition were on display.

Mayer describes her work as having “intense, swift strokes of strong dark colors and textures with quick motion and layering of paint, inspired by the feelings of motion and emotion.” Max Beckman's bold black outlines and Edvard Munch's intense emotions “translate the true depth of my feelings about contemporary issues," she said.

The mural had to be painted twice to make the colors as bright as they could be. It will be transported back to Indianapolis for final touch-ups and highlights, then placed in its final location.

- See more at: http://www.chroniclenewspaper.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20141119/NEWS01/141119918/0/SEARCH#sthash.HODNMIWs.InO2lubW.dpuf

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Lilly: Hope Murals Project in Grand Central, “A Balancing Act”

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In The Media - Winter 2014

  

Hope Murals Project in Grand Central, "A Balancing Act" - November 2014
Featured on PACE (Patient Access to Cancer care Excellence) - read article here

Know There Is Hope - November 2014
Featured in The Chronicle - read the article here

GIST Survivor Ellen Mayer Describes Her Painting Called Balancing Act

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Announcing The Launching of the RARE 13 Campaign

b2ap3_thumbnail_rare13posterad.jpg"Intense, swift strokes of strong dark colors and textures with quick motion and layering of paint are the core of my work. Inspired by the feelings of motion and emotion, my hand paints what I feel and incorporates the imbalance in shapes and color I see in life and people. My oils on canvas and acrylic on board paintings, influenced by Max Beckman’s bold black outlines and Edvard Munch’s intense emotions, translate the true depth of my feelings about contemporary issues.


The viewer may recognize in themselves the emotions that the people on the canvas are experiencing, whether it be anger, stress, helplessness, or even joy. The faces of these people show the emotions brought on by events the viewer can not see, but can imagine, depending on their own life experiences.

The strong, bold dark colors with small specks of light colors throughout my paintings, lets you know that there is always a reason for hope, in our everyday lives.

People always ask me where my inspiration is from, I think it is because when they know me I am happy and bubbly, one expects my work to reflect that. I take my experiences from life and put them on canvas. I pick up a brush and paint from my imagination. If you look at my works you always see two things. One is the people in my painting are always looking out at you.....And you never know what they are thinking......you know they look angry, sad, or even relieved that everything will be fine. You as the observer have a chance to decide what is really happening in these paintings." ~Ellen

 

 

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The Hope Murals Project National Art Movement Culminates in Painting Event at Grand Central Terminal on October 23

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Published: October 23, 2014

NEW YORK, Oct. 23, 2014 /PRNewswire/ -- Chester, N.Y., resident Ellen Mayer wears many hats: professional artist, inventor, wife, mother, grandmother, recent college graduate and, as of October 23, muralist. Mayer is also a cancer survivor
and kickboxer who notes, "My true grit helped me stay strong and knock out my cancer."

On October 23, the resolve Mayer has shown throughout her cancer journey will be immortalized in New York's storied Grand Central Terminal as hundreds gather to transform her artwork titled "Balancing Act" into a Hope Mural. The transformation of this artwork — depicting how cancer allowed Mayer to create a new sense of stability in her life — into a 12-by-20-foot mural is part of The Hope Murals Project, a national community art movement aiming to create permanent tributes in 10 cities throughout the United States and Puerto Rico to honor those touched by cancer. The New York Hope Mural is presented by Lilly Oncology and the National Coalition for Cancer Survivorship (NCCS), with CancerCare® and The Herbert Irving Comprehensive Cancer Center (HICCC) of Columbia University and NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital. This initiative was launched to mark the 10th anniversary of the Lilly Oncology On Canvas Art Competition, which is presented by Lilly Oncology and NCCS. The competition invites all residents of the United States and Puerto Rico who have been touched by cancer to express, through art and narrative, the life-affirming changes that give meaning to their cancer journeys. Prizes consist of donations to cancer-related charities chosen by the winners.

Among the hundreds of painters present in Grand Central's Vanderbilt Hall will be the top three national winners of the 2014 Lilly Oncology On Canvas Art Competition. In addition, an exhibition of more than 100 entries from the 2014 competition will be featured.

 

"For a decade, Oncology On Canvas has provided a platform for thousands of cancer survivors, family members, caregivers and healthcare professionals to share their journeys, and for countless thousands more to be inspired by their artwork through exhibitions," said Newt Crenshaw, vice president, Lilly Oncology. "We are excited to bring communities together by bringing this moving artwork to life across the country through The Hope Murals Project."

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