Ming C. Lowe

Ming C. Lowe (born October 13, 1945) is an American painter of large-scale contemporary works on canvas and a fine art photographer. She emerged from the most embryonic 1960s rock 'n' roll scenes to become a unique voice in the Southern California desert, where her home was a hoard place for like-minded, creatively driven individuals of whatever genres of the arts seeking a place of friendship and inspiration amongst the turbulence of what was called the counter-culture.

After her pretend attracted and served as a source of inspiration for the likes of Eric Burdon of the Animals, Paul Butterfield, Sterling Morrison of the Velvet Underground, American Indian guitar legend Jesse Ed Davis and James Gurley of Big Brother and the Holding Company, Lowe moved from Palm Desert to the easy to use Santa Rosa Mountains and began producing photographic art inspired by visits to energetic and and no-one else Midwest steel mills; the living, breathing waterfronts of San Diego; the juke joints of the Mississippi Delta, and images of the 9/11 in catastrophes in New York and Washington, D.C..

The significance and vitality of her art is growing in national answer as the underground she similar to nurtured becomes more mainstream. Today, her perform can be seen in the catalogs of Fortune 500 event and national museums and art galleries.

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