Pomm Impressionisms
Because Pomm’s watercolors were so widely collected, Pomm did not change her styles until she met her husband. As a pilot, Randy took Pomm on many adventures to different parts of the world. Pomm would spend hours in museums and galleries all over the globe. She loved viewing art as much as she loved to paint. She was very influenced by the passion of the old masters in her field. One day she came home and said, “my watercolor fans must wait as I have to release this urge to take on a new style.”
This was the beginning of her feather brush style, a style she created. It had passion, movement and expression that told a more dynamic story. We call this her “gentle passion” period – dramatic yet docile. The demand for these pieces justified the direction, yet she did not leave her watercolor fans behind.
The feather brush style soon evolved into a combination of Impressionism and Realism, a style Pomm likes to call “co-real-pressionism.” This took Pomm’s work to a new level as a master artist. The style incorporates the tender softness of her watercolors with the dramatic compassion portrayed in the emotions of her oil portraits. Her expertise in her skills shows through in her carefully thought out composition and colors, each piece having such an effect on the viewer that they actually feel the sparks of emotion emanating from themselves in viewing the piece of art.