Working with clay for the last thirty years. Her development as a ceramic artist has been greatly enhanced by taking various courses. Her work is currently on display and available in Vancouver, Whitehorse and now the Artisans Galleria in Steveston. She has given workshops in Fort Smith, the Northwest Territories and Edmonton. Billys work focuses on hand-built sculptures finished with the Japanese technique of raku firing. Her deep appreciation of the West Coast is reflected in the way she combines pottery and driftwood. Billy's work is highly decorative and very unique.




Born in Hong Kong, she first learned free style Chinese painting at the Hong Kong Art Centre a little over a decade ago. After immigrating to Canada in 1999, she dedicated herself to the study of Chinese painting. She has taught both children and adults throughout the Lower Mainland, and has exhibited her paintings at various galleries in Richmond, Port Moody and Vancouver. Some of her paintings have been selected for publishing in England and for advertising in local articles.
Her free style painting is based on simplicity, speed control with no preliminary sketches. Using minimal and versatile brushstrokes to complete every painting on thin rice paper is most challenging. Flora and fauna express the creation of symmetry and asymmetry in nature. Her colour palette is cool yet sensuous. Bringing untrammeled, composition designs on rice paper are the key symbols of my free style approach.




Marjorie Young has been involved in creative arts throughout her life. She began painting and drawing as a child, and acquired skills in photography, print making, jewellery design and construction, and graphic design along the way. She has been and is currently an active member in the Federation of Canadian Artists, the Burnaby Arts Council, and most recently, the Richmond Arts Council. Her watermedia work is influenced by a blend of Asian and Western techniques and subject matter. Her most recent work is a watercolour series, Watermargins, depicting water birds and shorelines.




Born and raised in Vancouver, Sara now resides in Richmond. She is a self taught potter who has explored the medium of clay for 6 years.
She loves hand building and is always experimenting and trying new ideas and techniques. She likes to decorate her pieces with vibrant stamps, carving & texturing. Sara won first place in the Fraser Valley Potter's Guild 2007 show for her hand build wood textured platter entiled "tree at home"