Iris Scott

Iris Scott has been painting without brushes since 2010. Armed with surgical gloves, Iris enjoys feeling the paint, and almost sculpting the thick texture onto her canvases. As soon as she tried oil finger painting in 2010 Iris knew she wanted to make this unexplored medium a career.

She has poured more than 10,000 hours into the art form. Hundreds of paintings later, and nearly a decade of brush-free painting behind her, Iris’ work has been featured in Forbes, Barron’s, Business Insider, USA Today, NowThis, CBS New York, and American Art Collector Magazine.

Iris had her first solo show in New York city in March 2018, her originals ship worldwide.

Biography

Iris Scott was born in 1984 to two hippies on a small farm near Seattle, WA. They named her after the Greek goddess of the rainbow. Both her mother and father worked at home self employed. Mom taught piano lessons and tended the gardens, while Iris’ father supported the family, building custom cabinets in a shop attached to the house. As a young girl Iris had ample time to be alone with her own mind, left to play and entertain herself without a screen or numerous toys.

American Artist Iris Scott Painting
American Artist Iris Scott Painting

View Iris Scott Paintings

The home was nestled at the end of a long driveway, in a clearing surrounded by lush mossy evergreen woodlands. Iris and her little sister had no shortage of pets, they grew up playing with their dogs, cats, bunnies, horses, ponies, parrots, lizards, goats and chickens. Summers were spent barefoot, digging caves in the hillside, building tree houses in the woods, and creating pottery from clay they unearthed.

On rainy days, of which there were many in Seattle, Iris holed up in her bedroom, pouring over how-to-draw books borrowed from the library. Emulating her parents, and following their modeling of “practice, practice, practice”, Iris tackled art by first teaching herself the rules of drawing realistically. She copied photos and paintings from an early age, learning the rules so that one day she could break them.


 

Artist Iris Scott Website