Home Blog Page 12

A Contentious Legacy: Paintings from Soviet Ukraine

0
Natalia Korobova, "Noon," 1970, Oil on canvas, Mead Art Museum. Gift of the Jurii Maniichuk and Rose Brady Collection.
Natalia Korobova, "Noon," 1970, Oil on canvas, Mead Art Museum. Gift of the Jurii Maniichuk and Rose Brady Collection.

Art Exhibition: “A Contentious Legacy: Paintings from Soviet Ukraine”
Through January 4, 2026
Amherst College
Amherst, Massachusetts
www.amherst.edu

From the organizers:

“A Contentious Legacy” engages with the visual culture of Soviet Ukraine and showcases paintings, which were created between the 1960s and 1980s and displayed at official state-sponsored exhibitions of the era. The project explores the stylistic diversity as well as universally Soviet and uniquely Ukrainian dimensions of this legacy. Its ambiguous position between art and propaganda prompts an examination of the extent of genuine expression and artistic integrity allowed by the state system of art production in Soviet Ukraine.

Soviet Ukraine art - Hryhorii Bonia, "Lenin in Shushenskoe Village," 1985, Oil on canvas. The Museum of Russian Art, Minneapolis. Gift of the Jurii Maniichuk and Rose Brady Collection.
Hryhorii Bonia, “Lenin in Shushenskoe Village,” 1985, Oil on canvas. The Museum of Russian Art, Minneapolis. Gift of the Jurii Maniichuk and Rose Brady Collection.

The exhibition marks the Mead’s inaugural presentation of paintings from the Maniichuk-Brady collection, acquired in 2020. Jurii Maniichuk was a Ukrainian American lawyer who lived and worked in Kyiv in the 1990s, shortly after the fall of the Soviet Union. As art from the Soviet period became obsolete in the newly independent Ukraine, many works—not only of minor artistic value but also top-tier ones—faced the risk of being lost, damaged or destroyed. Maniichuk made it his mission to preserve the finest pieces he could find across the country. With the help of expert art historians and critics, he acquired nearly 180 large-scale paintings that illustrated the thematic and stylistic diversity of the official art of late Soviet Ukraine. Today, the Mead hosts a portion of this collection, with the Georgia Museum of Art in Athens and the Museum of Russian Art in Minneapolis being other stewards. A Contentious Legacy brings together eleven paintings housed at the Mead with eight works traveling from Minneapolis.

Ivan Shapoval, "Morning of My City (Sumy)," 1975, Oil on canvas. Mead Art Museum. Gift of the Jurii Maniichuk and Rose Brady Collection.
Ivan Shapoval, “Morning of My City (Sumy),” 1975, Oil on canvas. Mead Art Museum. Gift of the Jurii Maniichuk and Rose Brady Collection.

The majority of the featured paintings were created by artists from places that have been severely affected by, or occupied during, the ongoing Russian invasion of Ukraine, including the regions of Kharkiv, Zaporizhzhia, Luhansk, and Donetsk. With the Soviet past being glorified and weaponized by the Russian government in its attempts to erase Ukraine’s identity, on the one hand, and many Soviet buildings and artworks being destroyed in Ukraine as collateral war damage, on the other hand, “A Contentious Legacy” reflects on the complex afterlives of this legacy in the present moment.

Soviet Ukraine art - Mykhailo Antonchyk, "Triumph of Women," 1965, Oil on canvas. The Museum of Russian Art, Minneapolis. Gift of the Jurii Maniichuk and Rose Brady Collection.
Mykhailo Antonchyk, “Triumph of Women,” 1965, Oil on canvas. The Museum of Russian Art, Minneapolis. Gift of the Jurii Maniichuk and Rose Brady Collection.

View fine art auctions, exhibitions, and more events by the month on our calendar page at FineArtConnoisseur.com – updated daily!

Virtual Gallery Walk for November 14th, 2025

0
Friday Virtual Gallery Walk

As part of our effort to continue to help artists and art galleries thrive, we’re proud to bring you this week’s “Virtual Gallery Walk.” Browse the artwork below and click the image itself to learn more about it, including how to contact the gallery.

Along Taylor Creek Trail, Roland Lee, watercolor, 14 x 22 in, Roland Lee

***

Patagonia Woods, Freya Grand, oil on canvas, 60 x 48 in.; Freya Grand

***

Silence Uplifts Our Soul, Kathleen Kalinowski, oil on linen, 24 x 24 in.; Kathleen Kalinowski

***

Precipice, Lee Copen, oil on linen, 24 x 36 in.; Lee Copen

Want to see your gallery featured in an upcoming Virtual Gallery Walk? Contact us at [email protected] to advertise today. Don’t delay, as spaces are first come, first served, and availability is limited.

The Honest Eye: Camille Pissarro’s Impressionism

0
Camille Pissarro, "Hoar-Frost, Peasant Girl Making a Fire (Gelée blanche, jeune paysanne faisant du feu)," 1888. Oil on canvas; 36 1/2 × 36 3/8 in. Hasso Plattner Collection at the Museum Barberini. Image courtesy akg-images/Laurent Lecat
Camille Pissarro, "Hoar-Frost, Peasant Girl Making a Fire (Gelée blanche, jeune paysanne faisant du feu)," 1888. Oil on canvas; 36 1/2 × 36 3/8 in. Hasso Plattner Collection at the Museum Barberini. Image courtesy akg-images/Laurent Lecat

The Denver Art Museum is presenting a major exhibition of works by Camille Pissarro (1830–1903) that provides an overview of the artist’s illustrious career and examines his singular role within the Impressionist movement. “The Honest Eye: Camille Pissarro’s Impressionism” is the first major U.S. museum retrospective of the artist’s oeuvre in more than four decades.

Co-organized by the DAM and the Museum Barberini in Potsdam, Germany, the exhibition brings together more than 80 paintings from nearly 50 international museums and private collections, alongside six works from the DAM’s holdings. On view through February 8, 2026, The Honest Eye will feature landscapes, cityscapes, still lifes, and figure paintings, showcasing the breadth of Pissarro’s oeuvre and the various influences that shaped his practice as he responded to the social and political environment of the day.

Camille Pissarro, Self-Portrait (autoportrait), 1873. Oil on canvas; 21 7/8 × 18 1/8 in. Musée d’Orsay: Donation Paul-Emile Pissarro, 1930. Image courtesy akg-images/Laurent Lecat
Camille Pissarro, Self-Portrait (autoportrait), 1873. Oil on canvas; 21 7/8 × 18 1/8 in. Musée d’Orsay: Donation Paul-Emile Pissarro, 1930. Image courtesy akg-images/Laurent Lecat

“Through this exhibition, we hope visitors will explore Pissarro’s ability to capture everyday life in a way that elevates the mundane, while understanding the pivotal role he played in shaping the Impressionist movement,” said Christoph Heinrich, Frederick and Jan Mayer Director. “After our successful collaboration for ‘Claude Monet – The Truth of Nature’ in 2019, we’re thrilled to partner with the Museum Barberini again to bring important examples of Pissarro’s work to audiences in the U.S., including significant international loans, some of them have never been shown in this country before.”

Camille Pissarro, "The Garden of Les Mathurins, property of the Deraismes Sisters, Pontoise (Le Jardin des Mathurins, Pontoise, propriété des soeurs Deraismes)", 1876. Oil on canvas; 44 5/8 × 65 1/8 in. The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City, Missouri: Purchase: William Rockhill Nelson Trust. Image courtesy akg-images / De Agostini Picture Lib. / J. E. Bulloz
Camille Pissarro, “The Garden of Les Mathurins, property of the Deraismes Sisters, Pontoise (Le Jardin des Mathurins, Pontoise, propriété des soeurs Deraismes)”, 1876. Oil on canvas; 44 5/8 × 65 1/8 in. The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City, Missouri: Purchase: William Rockhill Nelson Trust. Image courtesy akg-images / De Agostini Picture Lib. / J. E. Bulloz

Born on the island of St. Thomas in what was then the Danish West Indies (now the U.S. Virgin Islands) to French Jewish parents, Pissarro spent time in Caracas and La Guaira, Venezuela, before settling in Paris in 1855. There, he became acquainted with a group of young artists who were challenging the traditional modes of painting and would eventually go on to birth the Impressionist movement. A versatile artist, Pissarro embodied the role of insider, contributing to the establishment of Impressionism as a coherent avant-garde phenomenon while maintaining his artistic independence as he eschewed his peers’ choice of upper-class subject matter to depict scenes of the mundane. The Honest Eye reflects this dichotomy, while selections from Pissarro’s letters provide insights into his artistic process and worldview more broadly.

Camille Pissarro, "Hoar-Frost at Ennery (Gelée blanche à Ennery)," 1873. Oil on canvas. 25 3/4 × 36 3/4 in. Musée d'Orsay: Legs Enriqueta Alsop au nom du Dr. Eduardo Mollard, 1972. Image courtesy akg-images / De Agostini Picture Lib. / G. Dagli Orti
Camille Pissarro, “Hoar-Frost at Ennery (Gelée blanche à Ennery),” 1873. Oil on canvas. 25 3/4 × 36 3/4 in. Musée d’Orsay: Legs Enriqueta Alsop au nom du Dr. Eduardo Mollard, 1972. Image courtesy akg-images / De Agostini Picture Lib. / G. Dagli Orti

“Pissarro was a true architect of the impressionist movement. His colleague and friend Cezanne called him ‘the first impressionist.’ The only artist to present work at all eight Impressionist exhibitions in Paris, Pissarro was a defining figure whose oeuvre captured a changing society in the throes of industrialization, straddling the rural and urban in his depictions of daily life,” said Clarisse Fava-Piz, Associate Curator of European and American Art before 1900.

The exhibition traces four decades of Pissarro’s career, illustrating the evolution of his practice from his early years in the Caribbean and South America, to his time in Paris at the dawn of the Impressionist movement, to his family life in Éragny, and his later years depicting the cities and harbors of northern France.

For more information, visit www.denverartmuseum.org.

View fine art auctions, exhibitions, and more events by the month on our calendar page at FineArtConnoisseur.com – updated daily!

Bob Ross Paintings Break Record, Benefit Public Television

0
Auctioneer Aaron Bastian, Director of Fine Arts at Bonhams San Francisco.
Auctioneer Aaron Bastian, Director of Fine Arts at Bonhams San Francisco.

Offered by American Public Television (APT), the trio of Bob Ross paintings achieved a combined total of $662,000, with APT pledging to direct its net proceeds toward supporting public television stations nationwide.

More from Bonhams:

The first of three original paintings by beloved Joy of Painting host and American artist Bob Ross (1942–1995) achieved remarkable results during Bonhams’ California & Western Art sale, which concluded on November 11, 2025 in Los Angeles. Leading the trio was Ross’s 1993 “Winter’s Peace,” which sold for $318,000, setting a new global auction record for Bob Ross. This new record, more than doubles the previous one held by Bonhams. Together, the three works totalled $662,000.

Bob Ross paintings - Winter's Peace
Bob Ross, “Winter’s Peace,” 1993, estimated at $30,000 – 50,000

The works attracted exceptional interest, generating hundreds of registrations – more than twice the usual number of registrations for a California & Western Art sale. All three Ross paintings saw spirited competition, with participation from a total of 356 bidders across online, phone, and in-room channels.

Bob Ross paintings - Home in the Valley
Bob Ross, “Home in the Valley,” 1993, estimated at $30,000 – 50,000

The remaining two works by Ross in this landmark auction also achieved exceptional results. “Home in the Valley,” painted on-air in 1993, sold for $229,100, more than four times its high estimate. Rounding out the works was “Cliffside,” painted in 1990, using Ross’s signature Wet-on-Wet Technique®, which sold for $114,800, more than double its high estimate.

Bob Ross (1942-1995) Cliffside, (Painted in 1990.), estimated at $25,000 - 45,000
Bob Ross, “Cliffside,” 1990, estimated at $25,000 – 45,000

The sale marked Bonhams’ first auction featuring works from a collection of thirty Bob Ross paintings offered by APT – the leading syndicator of acclaimed programming for public television stations nationwide. APT has pledged to direct 100% of its net proceeds to benefit APT and PBS member stations across the country.

“We’re thrilled with the results of this auction, which has surpassed our expectations,” said Jim Dunford, President and CEO of American Public Television. “These funds will help local stations continue to serve their communities with impactful programming. We’re deeply grateful to Bob Ross, Inc. for shining a spotlight on the need to support public media, at this critical time.”

“We are delighted with the reception of this first trio of Bob Ross works,” commented Robin Starr, General Manager, Bonhams Skinner. “As anticipated, these paintings inspired spirited bidding, achieved impressive results, and broke global auction records, continuing the momentum we’ve seen building in Ross’s market. These successes provide a solid foundation as we look ahead to 2026 and prepare to present the next group of Bob Ross works.”

The remaining 27 works will be offered across a series of auctions in 2026 across Bonhams salerooms, beginning with three works in the American Art & Americana sale on January 27, 2026 at Bonhams Skinner in Massachusetts. Additional works from the group of thirty will appear in subsequent sales throughout the spring.

Visit Bonhams.com for more information.

View fine art auctions, exhibitions, and more events by the month on our calendar page at FineArtConnoisseur.com – updated daily!

Virtual Gallery Walk for November 11th, 2025

0
Friday Virtual Gallery Walk

As part of our effort to continue to help artists and art galleries thrive, we’re proud to bring you this week’s “Virtual Gallery Walk.” Browse the artwork below and click the image itself to learn more about it, including how to contact the gallery.

Sarah Seated on Backwards Chair, Clarissa Payne Uvegi, oil on canvas, 72 x 36 in; Clarissa Payne Uvegi

***

Combat Seal Diver, Lena Toritch, bronze on black granite, 194 in. H x 30 in. W x 30 in. D, Navy Seal Museum- San Deigo; Lena Toritch

***

Blue Sky Day, Chantel Barber, acrylic on panel, 10 x 8 in; Chantel Barber

Want to see your gallery featured in an upcoming Virtual Gallery Walk? Contact us at [email protected] to advertise today. Don’t delay, as spaces are first come, first served, and availability is limited.

Artist to Watch: LaQuincey Reed

western art - Laquincey Reed, "Bill Pickett and Spradley," 2023, bronze [edition of 10], 18 x 13 1/4 x 7 1/2 in., JRB Art at the Elms (Oklahoma City)
LaQuincey Reed, "Bill Pickett and Spradley," 2023, bronze [edition of 10], 18 x 13 1/4 x 7 1/2 in., JRB Art at the Elms (Oklahoma City)

There is a lot of superb Western art being made these days; this article shines light on a gifted individual.

LAQUINCEY REED (b. 1983) is an Oklahoma City sculptor who casts, at various scales, in bronze or plaster. He has won growing recognition for his Western compositions, which often feature several figures; for idealized personages like Medusa or Tempest & Calm; and for portraits of historical people revered nationally (like Abraham Lincoln) or regionally (e.g., the 19th-century leader of the Southern Cheyenne nation, Black Kettle).

Reed was born in Lawton, 90 miles southwest of Oklahoma City. Because his father served in the military, the family lived in such places as New Jersey, Texas, and Hawaii, but they returned to Lawton in time for LaQuincey to attend high school there. He recalls “always being interested in art, reading comic books and drawing superheroes,” so it was only natural to pursue a B.F.A. in studio art and art history at the University of Oklahoma. There he focused on painting, but a few years after graduation he shifted to sculpture because he relished the challenge of enticing viewers to walk around his pieces.

The college graduate then spent seven years assisting on the Oklahoma Land Run Monument, one of the world’s largest bronze sculptures, now located in downtown Oklahoma City. It features 45 figures created by the Oklahoma sculptor Paul Moore (b. 1957), all engaged in varied states of frenzied energy and emotion as the Oklahoma Territory’s unassigned land opened for settlement in 1889. Reed credits this professional Western art experience with teaching him “a lot about the business of sculpture,” including bids, inspections, mold-making, and working on a big scale.

Reed then taught art in public schools, for two years in Oklahoma City and then six more in Jones, a small town 20 miles to the northeast. He “enjoyed helping the kids learn something new or find a new medium they liked. I observed that kids need an objective and to be pushed. If they are rudderless, they more than likely will end up that way after graduating.”

In 2021, Reed began making his own art full-time, and over the years has won important commissions from various Oklahoma universities, as well as the Oklahoma State Capitol and Cleveland County courthouse. Despite the obvious advantages of social media, Reed notes, “Most of my commissions result from word of mouth and from relationships.”

Today Reed is much admired by collectors and curators of art celebrating what he calls “the independence and strength of people in the American West.” His long involvement with the Land Run Monument equipped him to sculpt horses, boots, and other Western accessories, and his knowledge grew further thanks to the students in Jones, who were completely immersed in the Western lifestyle.

Reed says, “That experience made me research Western history even more deeply, especially that of Blacks in the West,” which makes sense given his own bi-racial identity and the fact that a third of the cowboys in what we now call the “Wild West” were Black. “There are so many stories and images unique to the West that have not been explored enough,” Reed declares.

He adds that he is currently “exploring new ways to convey movement, as well as mark-making and texture. I’ve made my own tools, or altered store-bought ones, to further expand my mark-making, and fortunately social media is filled with videos of other artists sharing their own processes in that arena.” As accomplished as he is, Reed is not resting on his laurels, but burnishing his skills in anticipation of the next big commission.

Connect with the artist at www.laquincey.com.


View more western art and artist and collector profiles here at FineArtConnoisseur.com.

Subscribe to Fine Art Connoisseur magazine here for expert advice for art collectors, gallery exhibition news, and more.

PleinAir Salon Winner Gives a “Visceral Sense of Place”

0
PleinAir Salon - Barbara Ortiz, “Nature’s Rhythm,” pastel, 20 x 16 in.
Barbara Ortiz, “Nature’s Rhythm,” pastel, 20 x 16 in.

Please help us congratulate Barbara Ortiz for winning Overall First Place in the September 2025 PleinAir Salon, judged by Abigail McBride, Director of McBride Gallery.

“This piece gave me an immediate and visceral sense of place,” Abigail said. “It pulled me to specific memories of being on a beach with cold water swirling around my ankles, looking out at the view. It has a beautiful outdoor light effect. But what sealed it for me is how the composition leads you back to the distance in an entertaining ride of swirls until you reach the ladder of lines: wave and land. Then a little red rocket of a light house launches you up into the sky and drops you right back down on the shore.”

About the Artist:

Capturing a moment of joyful observation and sharing that moment on canvas through the use of light and shadow, textures and edges in her representational oil paintings and pastel paintings is the reason Barbara Ortiz paints.

She enjoys the challenge of working in plein air. Due to the ever-changing light, holding onto that original visual image and incorporating a sense of weather and time of day takes immense focus. Barbara says “This is my happy place.”

Barbara took life drawing classes in the North Jersey Art Center while in high school. She studied fine art at Monmouth College and Fairleigh Dickenson University.

In 1984, Barbara moved to Cancun, Mexico where she resided until 1994. During that time, she owned and operated an interior decorating business. Upon returning to the United States, Barbara, along with her husband and two children, settled in Florida.

Barbara resumed studying oil painting and pastel. She began painting plein air in 2011. Plein air painting beautifully joined her love of painting with her love of the outdoors.

Barbara has participated in a number of invitational shows and paint outs. She has been recognized with awards for her work in both pastel and oil.


About the PleinAir Salon:

In the spirit of the French Salon created by the Academie des Beaux-Arts in Paris, this annual online art competition, with 11 monthly cycles, leading to the annual Salon Grand Prize winners, is designed to stimulate artistic growth through competition. The PleinAir® Salon rewards artists with $50,000 in cash prizes and exposure of their work, with the winning painting featured on the cover of PleinAir® Magazine.

Winners in each monthly competition may receive recognition and exposure through PleinAir Magazine’s print magazine, e-newsletters, websites, and social media. Winners of each competition will also be entered into the annual competition. The Annual Awards will be presented live at the next Plein Air Convention & Expo.

The next round of the PleinAir Salon has begun so hurry, as this competition ends on the last day of the month. Enter your best art in the PleinAir Salon here.

View more artist and collector profiles here at FineArtConnoisseur.com.

A Vision of Nature

0
American Women Artists - Annette Hammer (b. 1947), "Look Before You Leap," 2024, oil on linen mounted on birch panel, 18 x 24 in.
Annette Hammer (b. 1947), "Look Before You Leap," 2024, oil on linen mounted on birch panel, 18 x 24 in.

The National Sporting Library & Museum (NSLM) is hosting “A Vision of Nature,” an exhibition of 55 paintings, sculptures, and mixed-media installations selected from 531 entries submitted by members of the non-profit organization American Women Artists. The jurors were Shannon Fitzgerald (Mennello Museum of American Art, Orlando), Claudia Pfeiffer (National Sporting Library & Museum), and Robin Knowlton (former AWA executive director).

On view are works that address four themes: love of the land, sporting, animals and wildlife, and country pursuits. These make sense at NSLM, which was founded in 1954 in the heart of Virginia’s horse and hunt country. From its scenic six-acre campus, the museum advocates for conservation of open spaces and waterways.

This is the ninth exhibition AWA has co-organized through its initiative to have 25 museum shows for members over 25 years. The exhibitors will be eligible for more than $30,000 in awards, including a $10,000 Grand Prize sponsored by the Janet & Robert Lee Family Fund.

Info At a Glance:
“A Vision of Nature” – American Women Artists
National Sporting Library & Museum
Middleburg, Virginia
nationalsporting.org
Through March 22, 2026

Visit AWA’s website for the accompanying catalogue and digital version of the exhibition.

View fine art auctions, exhibitions, and more events by the month on our calendar page at FineArtConnoisseur.com – updated daily!

Dance, Caravaggio, and “Boy with a Basket of Fruit”

0
Michelangelo Merisi, known as Caravaggio (1571–1610), "Boy with a Basket of Fruit," c. 1593–95, oil on canvas, 27 1/2 x 26 1/3 in., Galleria Borghese, Rome, Photo: Mauro Coen
Michelangelo Merisi, known as Caravaggio (1571–1610), "Boy with a Basket of Fruit," c. 1593–95, oil on canvas, 27 1/2 x 26 1/3 in., Galleria Borghese, Rome, Photo: Mauro Coen

Eduardo Vilaro looks at bodies all the time. He has to. As artistic director and CEO of Ballet Hispánico, Vilaro watches the company’s dancers at work, how they occupy a space, and how the actual lines of their bodies appear in that space and, thus, animate it. “I’m not a painter, though I love art, but I can say that I always paint spaces,” Vilaro notes, referencing the works he choreographs. “I paint with bodies.”

Eduardo Vilaro, Artistic Director and CEO, Ballet Hispánico Photo: Rachel Neville
Eduardo Vilaro, Artistic Director and CEO, Ballet Hispánico Photo: Rachel Neville

Among his favorite bodies is one depicted by Caravaggio, “Boy with a Basket of Fruit,” that is in the permanent collection of the Borghese Gallery in Rome. It was years ago, when New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art mounted a Caravaggio exhibition, that Vilaro first saw this painting; that was also the first time he’d seen any work by Caravaggio. “To be honest, I was not familiar with Caravaggio before that, even in my fine arts classes in a school run by Jesuits, who really do provide the best full education. But since the moment I saw this work, I’ve not forgotten it.”

A former dancer himself, the Cuban-born Vilaro (who came to America as a boy in 1969) continues to marvel at the sheer physicality and musculature of Caravaggio’s model. “I always notice the particulars of a gaze, whether it’s a dancer who looks up while on stage or a figure on canvas. This one is inviting a gaze from the viewer.”

Vilaro cites the sheer sensuality of this model, who scholars agree was a 16-year-old friend of Caravaggio’s and fellow painter. “He has his white shirt lowered from the shoulder, which gives a homoerotic feel to it. His neck is thick, but as you follow the lines, it thins and makes for a prominent jawline. His shoulder is muscular and mas-culine, but has a feminine bend to it. The model invites you to look at his whole body. I look at this and ask, ‘What is going on in this young man’s mind?’”

Vilaro is also attracted to the way Caravaggio found his models, using “ordinary” citizens to assume regal poses; some were peasants or, in some cases, prostitutes. “As a man of color, I am fascinated by how Caravaggio utilized people who weren’t considered noble, people who were maybe marginalized. For me, the subject here is experiencing some kind of suffering simply through who he is in life.”

The year 2024 marked Vilaro’s 15th season as Ballet Hispánico’s artistic director, and while he has long remained among the dance world’s most creative forces, he has pushed himself further by choreographing pieces based on artworks, particularly those by Juan de Pareja (1606–1670), the Afro-Hispanic painter who worked closely with Diego Velázquez. Last July, the Met presented several performances of a work it had commissioned from Vilaro; “Buscando a Juan (Seeking Out Juan)” accompanied the museum’s exhibition of Pareja’s art and was created specifically to be presented on its historic patio relocated from the castle of Vélez Blanco.

“The moment I got the commission, I delved into it,” Vilaro recalls. “It was a powerful moment and experience for me, and the chance to work closely with curators. I was able to dive deeply into this man’s life. There were so many connections to my own life, as someone of mixed race. I was able to utilize art as a jumping-off point, a catalyst for something new.”

During a recent teaching term in Venice, Vilaro became entranced with the works of Tintoretto. “This summer, though, I’m going to Rome, where one of my visits will be to see the boy with the fruit again.”

The above article was written by David Masello for Fine Art Connoisseur

View more artist and collector profiles here at FineArtConnoisseur.com.

AAPL 97th Grand National Exhibition

0
Andrew Eccleshall (b. 1967), "Evening Show," 2024, oil on canvas, 36 x 36 in.
Andrew Eccleshall (b. 1967), "Evening Show," 2024, oil on canvas, 36 x 36 in.

The American Artists Professional League (AAPL) is presenting its 97th Grand National Exhibition at the Salmagundi Club, where the organization itself was founded in 1928. On view will be paintings, drawings, watercolors, and sculptures made by more than 90 artists working across the U.S. Most will be for sale.

AMERICAN ARTISTS PROFESSIONAL LEAGUE 97TH GRAND NATIONAL EXHIBITION
Salmagundi Club
New York City
AAPLinc.org/97-gne
November 18–December 5, 2025

The works were juried in by AAPL Signature Members Joel Edwards and Don Taylor, along with Kara Ross of the Art Renewal Center. On November 21, watercolorist and awards judge Frederick Brosen will reveal his choices for over $35,000 in prizes; on December 5, Scott Nickerson will demonstrate his unique approach to portrait painting.

AAPL President Aki Kano says, “AAPL is so proud to organize this exhibition again consisting of high-level contemporary and traditional realists from all over the country. We feel lucky to continue this tradition at the historic Salmagundi Club, the place where AAPL was founded back in 1928.”

View fine art auctions, exhibitions, and more events by the month on our calendar page at FineArtConnoisseur.com – updated daily!

WEEKLY NEWS FROM THE ART WORLD

Fill your mind with useful art stories, the latest trends, upcoming art shows, top artists, and more. Subscribe to Fine Art Today, from the publishers of Fine Art Connoisseur magazine.

  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.