A warm and friendly outdoors man with a flair for humor and satire, Worrell is energized by the elements in life that surround him. He maintains two full-time studios, one in Santa Fe and one in Texas. His studio on the banks of the Llano river in Art, Texas is a synthesis of New Mexico, Texas, and designs inspired by his life-long passion for archeology.

He is presently writing a book about his years of educational, business, emotional, and spiritual dealings in the fascinating world of fine art and is continuing such writings as appear in his book Voices From The Caves - The Shamans Speak.

"People ask me, 'What do these ancient paintings mean?' I don't know. What does a Helen Frankenthaler mean? What do R.C. Gormans and Doug Wests and Fritz Scholders and Mimbres' pots mean? Why do we consider ourselves so different from past peoples? Maybe they, too, painted for the same reasons that we do. They can't come forward, and we can't back up so we can never really know. What beauty lies within this mystery!

"I have always had an involvement with the Land. I came from the Land, must return to the Land. There is an inescapable obligation to the Land, an unavoidable, unexplainable co-existence with it. I have had a life long love affair with the Land which has compelled me to draw it, paint it, sculpt it, to reshape its substances into vessels and microcosmic portraits of the land itself, and either due to convention, a lack for a better word, or wistfulness of some sort, I label this minute rearrangement of the Land 'Art'."

Bill Worrell's art career spans more than thirty years. He holds a Bachelor of Arts degree in sociology with a minor in English from Texas Tech University and a Master of Fine Arts degree in painting and drawing with a minor in sculpture from the University of North Texas.

During eighteen years of college and university teaching he held a doctoral fellowship at the University of North Texas, was Associate Professor of Art at Odessa College, and was Professor of Art at Houston Baptist University. He taught classes in sculpture, ceramics, art appreciation, jewelry, painting, and drawing.

At his home and studio on the banks of the Llano River in the Texas Hill Country, Worrell now enjoys a successful career as sculptor and painter. Executed in various sculptural, paint, and print media, his works are copyrighted interpretations of the ancient pictographs found in abundance along the confluence of the Lower Pecos River with the Middle Rio Grande, on what is now the border of Texas and Mexico.

Worrell's work can be found in fine art galleries and collections across the United States, as well as in private and corporate collections worldwide. He has been a featured artist in more than one hundred one-man shows and exhibitions and in numerous two-man and group exhibitions. His seventeen-foot, three-inch monumental bronze entitled "The Maker of Peace", owned by the State of Texas, overlooks the ancient Fate Bell rock shelter at Seminole Canyon State Historical Park between Langtry and Comstock, Texas, west of Del Rio.

 

Worrell Gallery
103 Washington Ave
Santa Fe, NM 87501
505-989-4900
worrellgallery.com

—————————————

Sandstone Cellars Winery
211 San Antonio Street
Mason, TX 76856
325-347-6140
www.sandstonecellarswinery.com

—————————————

Exposures Gallery International
561 Highway 179
Sedona, Arizona 8633
800-526-7668
exposuresfineart.com