About me
Anjali Patel
Indian-born Abstract Artist, Anjali Patel is on a lifelong mission to inspire her viewers through the power of visual storytelling. The Toronto-based abstract painter brings an extensive mastery of a mix of influences, imagery, color theory, and subject matter to each of her paintings. She specializes in creating abstract landscapes and paintings using acrylics on canvas.
Inspired mostly by surrealism and expressionism movements, she expresses through colors, brushes strokes, dots, and mark lines. Anjali strongly believes that everyone can paint and make this world a more beautiful place. The reason she loves to share all her easy techniques of making paintings on YouTube. She has revealed that painting and playing with paints is like therapy and meditation. In her words, “Art is a very relaxing and very satisfying process.” Moreover, her works evoke an emotional response to life experiences that resonates with the viewer.
Anjali is hyper-creative and is best known for her extraordinary artistic abilities, which have made her one of the most innovative artists of futuristic arts. She studied fine arts in college to add to her natural gifting of art. She is passionate about her career as an artist and strongly believes that art is means of self-exploration for both the artist and the art lover.
Anjali exhibits her original artworks with outdoor exhibitions like artist network, queen west art crawl, Toronto artisan, and cabbage town shows. Her paintings are also available on her website [https://anjalifineartist.com/]
Etsy shop, and Shopify. Asides from her love for painting, she also is a yoga instructor and enjoy the flow of yoga in her paintings too.
Anjali exhibits her original artworks with outdoor exhibitions like artist network, queen west art crawl, Toronto artisan, and cabbage town shows. Asides from her love for painting, she also is a yoga instructor and enjoy the flow of yoga in her paintings too.
[Note – All the pictures of furniture's are taken from Pinterest and edited with paintings just to give an idea of how paintings go with the walls and furniture's.]