Welcome to About Foss

The Stables
  Sculptures 1
  Sculptures 2
  Mirror & Benches
  Tables 1
  Tables 2


Out of Africa
  Sculptures
  Benches
  Tables 1
  Tables 2


The Forest & Tundra
  Sculptures
  Tables


Plains & Pastures
  Sculptures
  Benches
  Tables


The Homefront
  Sculptures 1
  Sculptures 2
  Sculptures 3
  Sculptures 4
  Tables


The Garden
  Outdoor Welded
  Steel Sculptures


Commissioned
 Artwork


Executive Office
 Furnishings


                                      

 

    

   

Art, Like Nature, Lives On.
As seen in "Equine Vission Magazine "Horses in Art"

Capture the beauty forever. When you first lay eyes upon a beautiful piece of handcrafted art, you should feel that very emotion – the desire to possess it. When you take your first look at the sculptures of Connie Foss, you will feel it. From earliest times, royalty around the world collected strange animals as pets. Power, wealth and privilege gave them the ability to acquire animals of great beauty, ferocity or rarity. Julius Caesar had a giraffe. Napoleon’s wife Josephine had an orangutan. Ramses II had a lion. Today, horses rank as one of America’s, if not the world’s favorite domestic animals. Horses have an incredibly long history dating back thousands of years. Their first known use was for drawing Mesopotamian war chariots. Horses were long reserved almost exclusively for warfare and transportation for the rich and high born. After Spanish conquistadors brought horses to the New World, Native Americans acquired them from ranches and missions. The rest is history, or at least more history than just cited. Connie's forty-year association with horses was the seed from which her sculpture career emerged. Growing up in Storm Lake, Iowa, with animals, then breeding, raising, training and showing horses during her adult years in Missouri, Connie found great models and her inspiration. "Although I have studied with several inspiring instructors, I credit my years with animals as the major factor behind my art. Since animals have enriched my life beyond measure, I am pleased to sculpt them, providing tactile experience to other animal lovers." Since Connie and her husband, Rob, her partner in all things, relocated to Arizona in 1989, she began sculpting in mediums other than wood, and using other models. She now works in wood, clay, and welded steel and her models include everything from giraffes, lions and bulls to dogs and cats. Step in to the Sculpture by Foss studio and you’ve entered the place where imagination takes form. Connie’s exquisite Honduras mahogany horse head mirror commands attention with its sheer majesty. Run your hands down the regal nose of the lead horse in her “Three To Show” bronze, and you feel you are at the Kentucky Derby. Oh, and “Sis, Mom and Me” will lead you to green pastures to watch the legacy live and grow. The variety is fantastic and stretches from the excitement of thoroughbred horses racing to the serenity of a resting foal. If you enjoy the beauty of sculpture, you will love the art of Connie Foss. Whether a lost wax bronze or Honduras mahogany, her tables and free-standing sculptures are magnificent examples of nature’s art, and Connie’s wonderful talent. Most of her works of art are limited edition pieces, and custom sculptures can be commissioned. Sculpture by Foss is the place. The place where you can “Capture the beauty forever.”

"Style" Lost Wax Bronze Sculpture

      


"Art is something created by man that lends depth to our lives.  Art is shaping the best possible bridge between what one person feels and what another can share."

     
Connie in her studio
"Though I sculpt primarily in wood and lost wax bronze, I also enjoy welded steel which allows me freedom to utilize intuition and the happy accident. I sometimes enjoy creating sculptures that are suggestions and not detailed replicas of nature.  My steel sculptures are sketches, drawings in steel that capture the spirit of the animal or human form, utilizing negative space.  They are loose, spontaneous, bold and unlabored, resulting from an improvisational approach. I like to think that I reduce imagery to a few lean lines for the greatest impact...that there is an absence of the unnecessary and a presence of only what is truly needed."

Back To Top Of Page 

© 2005, Sculpture by Foss and Connie Foss , All rights reserved.
This site was designed by K.G. Wells
This website is best viewed at 800x600 Internet Explorer 5.5+


 
Connie Foss sculpts and carves nature's beauty from magnificent horses, african animals and creatures of the forest, to our beloved dogs,cats and other domestic pets. They take the form of tabletop sculptures, floor sculptures, bronze tables, mahogany wood benches and other beautiful home furnishings and collectibles for the animal and art lovers alike.