Home Blog Page 16

44th Annual Buffalo Bill Art Show & Sale

0
Painting by Santiago Michalek on the runway during the 2024 Live Auction
Painting by Santiago Michalek on the runway during the 2024 Live Auction

This year’s Buffalo Bill Art Show & Sale features more than 100 contemporary Western artists in mediums such as oil, watercolor, pastel, and bronze. These pieces will be available to view at the Buffalo Bill Center of the West in Cody, Wyoming, for a 5-week exhibition before being sold at auction on Friday, September 19.

Robert McFarland, "End of the Ride," watercolor, 18 x 27 in.
Robert McFarland, “End of the Ride,” watercolor, 18 x 27 in.

A virtual gallery and printed catalog are available before the auction, and bidders who cannot attend in person may register to bid by phone or leave absentee bids on their desired pieces.

Jim Bortz, "Silent Symphony," oil, 24 x 16 in.
Jim Bortz, “Silent Symphony,” oil, 24 x 16 in.

Guests are invited to register by visiting buffalobillartshow.org, where they can also access the auction galleries, shop for small works online, and see the full schedule of events. Registration is required for all events, and attendance is limited. New patrons and collectors are welcome.

John Potter, "We Three Chiefs," oil, 24 x 36 in.
John Potter, “We Three Chiefs,” oil, 24 x 36 in.

Patrons of the Buffalo Bill Art Show & Sale (BBAS) will enjoy a full week of artful activities in Cody, including art sales, lectures, and painting workshops:

  • Buy-it-Now Sale – through September 19. This wall sale of 60 additional small works accompanies the live auction gallery. These pieces are also available in person and online.
  • Live Auction Exhibition – through September 29. More than 100 pieces of artwork in all mediums are on display in the Buffalo Bill Center of the West. The entire exhibition will be available to purchase in the live auction on Friday, September 19.
  • Painting on the Porch with Michael Ome Untiedt – September 15 to 17. A 3-day painting workshop for amateur-to-advanced painters. Includes instruction and fellowship with Untiedt, a 20-year returning BBAS artist.
  • Colorful Canvases with Sally Maxwell – September 18. A half-day scratchboard workshop for beginner-to-advanced scratchboard artists and painters. Includes instruction and fellowship with Maxwell, a returning BBAS artist.
  • Lunch & Lecture – September 18.
  • Buffalo Bill Art Show & Sale Live Auction – September 19. The week’s flagship event. All artwork from the Live Auction exhibition will be available for purchase. The evening includes a gourmet dinner, open bar, and silent auction.
  • Quick Draw & Sale – September 20. A favorite event for locals and visitors alike. Patrons watch as 30 Buffalo Bill Art Show & Sale artists complete entirely new works in only 90 minutes. These pieces are immediately offered in a live auction while patrons enjoy a catered brunch.
Jessica Garrett Lawrence painting during the 2024 Quick Draw
Jessica Garrett Lawrence painting during the 2024 Quick Draw

Organized by the Cody Country Chamber of Commerce, the Buffalo Bill Art Show & Sale strives to support established and emerging Western artists, engage patrons of the arts, and enliven the Cody community with events that provide education and entertainment. The proceeds from sales and events benefit the artists, the Buffalo Bill Center of the West, Cody Country Chamber of Commerce, and local arts organizations.

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

Modeling Women: Female Artists and Models at Chesterwood

0
Margaret French (later Cresson), "Girl with the Curls," c. 1920, marble, 20 in. high, Chesterwood, bequest of Margaret French Cresson, NT 73.45.1431; photo: Gregory Cherin
Margaret French (later Cresson), "Girl with the Curls," c. 1920, marble, 20 in. high, Chesterwood, bequest of Margaret French Cresson, NT 73.45.1431; photo: Gregory Cherin

Located in the scenic Berkshire Hills of western Massachusetts, Chesterwood was the summer home, studio, and gardens of the American sculptor Daniel Chester French (1850–1931), best known for his Seated Lincoln in Washington, D.C. The site has just completed a
four-year renovation of the French family residence, designed by architect Henry Bacon and completed in 1901. At last, visitors are able to see the house’s second floor, which currently features a three-room exhibition titled “Modeling Women: Female Artists and Models at Chesterwood.”

Chesterwood - Modeling Women 2025
Left to Right: Evelyn Beatrice Longman at work on the Horsford Doors for the Wellesley College Library. Collection of the Loomis Chaffee Archives, Loomis Chaffee School, Windsor, Connecticut; Margaret French Cresson in the Chesterwood Studio with her portrait of Daniel Chester French, 1934; Audrey Munson, 1915. Photograph by Arold Genthe. Genthe photograph collection, Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division.

Curator Dana Pilson has selected 37 sculptures and paintings—many never exhibited—that highlight the key roles played by French’s female models. They included Hettie Anderson (a pioneering African American model), Julia Swift Gilbert, and Audrey Munson (considered America’s first “supermodel”).

The project casts particularly strong light on two female artists active at Chesterwood: French’s protégée Evelyn Beatrice Longman (1874–1954) and his daughter Margaret French Cresson (1889–1973).

Details at a Glance:
“Modeling Women”
Chesterwood, in Stockbridge, Massachusetts
chesterwood.org
through October 31, 2025

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

Virtual Gallery Walk for September 5th, 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.

Hollyhock Cottage, Laurie Hendricks, oil on canvas board, 16 x 12 in., Laurie Hendricks Art

***

Magnolia Still Life, Matthew Bird, varnished watercolor on paper on ACM panel, 30 x 22 in., Matthew Bird

***

Afternoon Glitters, Debra Reid Jenkins, oil on linen, 20 x 40 in., J Petter Galleries

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.

“Shades of Gray” Returns

0
American Tonalist Society - Susan Lynn, "A Walk in the Woods," watercolor and gouache, 11 x 14 in.
Susan Lynn, "A Walk in the Woods," watercolor and gouache, 11 x 14 in.

The American Tonalist Society is presenting a painting exhibition in which reverence for nature is manifest in limitless and lovely shades and majestic glory. Mist-laden dawn, purple-edged marshes, sun-dappled creeks, and assorted scenes that expand the tradition of tonalism are on view at Ballard’s Fine Art in Sheridan, Wyoming, September 4 through October 12, in “Shades of Gray: III.”

Bill Farnsworth, "Solstice II," oil on linen, 16 x 20 in.
Bill Farnsworth, “Solstice II,” oil on linen, 16 x 20 in.

This exhibition features the ATS Signature Artists for 2025, over 30 invited artists chosen for their excellence in keeping the tonalist tradition alive through a variety of contemporary interpretations. Many of the 2025 Signature Artists are from the Western part of the United States. They were selected based on the quality of the work and their dedication to the genre. This collection of paintings, in various media, evoke the mood and mystery of Tonalism through an excellent blend of traditional and contemporary styles.

American Tonalist Society - Thomas Kegler, "Night Fishing, 2 Thessalonians 3:16," oil on panel, 12 x 18 in.
Thomas Kegler, “Night Fishing, 2 Thessalonians 3:16,” oil on panel, 12 x 18 in.

Participating Artists: Daniel Ambrose, Jacob Aguiar, Michael Albrechtsen, D. Eleinne Basa, Ben Bauer, Clint Bova Nancy Bush, Richie Carter, Brent Cotton, Kevin Courter, Mary C. Erickson, Bill Farnsworth, Marc Hanson, Charlie Hunter, Thomas Kegler, Erik Koeppel, Shawn Krueger, Shanna Kunz, Kim Lordier, Susan Lynn, David Lidbetter, John MacDonald, Denise Mahlke, Jennifer Moses, Deborah Paris, Ken Salaz, Hillary Scott, Dennis Sheehan, Brian Sindler, Seth Tummins, Anna Wainright, Rachel Warner, Liane Whittum, Justin Worrell, and others.

Liane Whittum, "Meadow Sunset," oil on panel, 12 x 16 in.
Liane Whittum, “Meadow Sunset,” oil on panel, 12 x 16 in.

Founded in 2016, the American Tonalist Society curates a biennial show devoted to a style of painting defined in the 1800s as primarily landscape and reverential toward nature, with a spiritual gloss. Painters working in this style create a mood, rather than a story, through the tonal quality of a chosen color. In 2019, the American Tonalist Society curated its first show at the iconic Salmagundi Club, dubbed “one of the grandest exhibitions that has graced these walls,” by Tim Newton, former president of the club.

With nature, atmosphere, emotion, a sense of place, and an ethereal palette at the core of their creations, the exhibiting artists will showcase approximately 60 works. A variety of sizes will be on display (up to 40 inches wide), and landscapes/seascapes are the principal subject matter. American Tonalist Society artists work primarily in oil, with pastel, watercolor, and drawing media also represented.

For more details, please visit www.americantonalistsociety.com.

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

We Say Goodbye to Ned Jacob, Artist, Mentor, and More

2
Edmund “Ned” Werner Jacob, 1938-2025)
Edmund “Ned” Werner Jacob, 1938-2025); Obituary details courtesy of everloved.com

Edmund “Ned” Werner Jacob, 86, passed away peacefully on August 24, 2025 in Franklin, NY at home surrounded by his granddaughters.

Ned was born in Elizabethton, TN, on November 15, 1938 to German parents Edmund Kurt Jacob and Sophie Theresa (Reimer) Jacob. Ned was an enigmatic, larger-than-life, and magnetic person who did things on his own time and in his own way. After high school, Ned hitchhiked to Browning, Montana. From there on out, he lived a life that was beautiful, bold, brilliant, and brave. Nomadic in nature, Ned was always traveling, and had roots in many places including the Rocky Mountain States, the Southwest, and Maine.
A perpetual student of life, Ned spent his years painting and drawing, traveling the world, and sharing his many celebrated stories, knowledge, and wisdom with others. He dedicated his life to his art and was known not only for his incredible technical skill but for his amazing mentorship, which he shared passionately.

“Ned set the foundation for the modern plein air movement,” said Publisher Eric Rhoads. “It was his high standards that trained many of the most important artists alive today, and his impact will be felt for generations.”

Ned Jacob painting en plein air in Africa
Ned Jacob painting the Maasai tribe in Kenya, Africa

Artist Linda Tippetts shared, “As Ned’s student at a workshop on Flathead Lake, Montana (in the late 1970s), his influence permeated my thirst for knowledge – not to mention being in the presence of a master.”

“Mama Pamoja na Mtoto,” drawing by Ned Jacob
“Mama Pamoja na Mtoto,” drawing by Ned Jacob

Ned is survived by his grandchildren, Emma Finley-Jacob of Stuttgart, Germany, Lauren Finley-Jacob and Kendall Finley-Jacob of Franklin, NY, and his great grandson River Jacob Story. In Egg Harbor City, NJ his sister Carol (Jacob) Farrell, niece Joanne (Farrell) Sabo and nephew Jonathan Farrell. Ned was preceded in death by his son, Ronald Edmund (Jacob) Finley, his brother Richard Jacob, both of his parents, and countless mentors and friends that he held dear.

Ned will be remembered for many things, but mostly for his profound artistry, charming intellect and wit, unwavering integrity, and deep love and loyalty for those close to him. His presence and wisdom were gifts to everyone who knew him.

“Leningrad Night” by Ned Jacob
“Leningrad Night” by Ned Jacob

“I had the good fortune of meeting Ned Jacob early in my career,” said T. Allen Lawson, “and I was extremely lucky to have been able to spend a great deal of time with him over several decades. Ned’s ability to draw and his dedication to the importance of drawing was apparent and to watch Ned draw was pure magic. Drawing is important, very important. It is the foundation on which everything else is built, and it is what gives the painter the freedom to explore their interests. To me, above all, was Ned’s clarity of thought. His ability to orchestrate the central theme of a painting, arranging the main elements of a subject into an organized hierarchy, was the power of Ned’s art. He was like a poet distilling his vocabulary into the exact, essential words — that is what has resonated with me most throughout my forty plus years of painting.”

“Ixabi Elder, Morocco” by Ned Jacob
“Ixabi Elder, Morocco” by Ned Jacob

Lorenzo Chavez tells us a friend of his shared the book “Sacred Paint: Ned Jacob” by Sandra Dallas with him when he was in high school, in the late ‘70s: “It was the most influential book I had seen at that time and still is after all these years,” Lorenzo said. “His art and life had a major impact in my life’s decision to go into the arts. I was so lucky to meet Ned Jacob, to see his works in the local fine art galleries, take a workshop with him at the Arts Students League of Denver, and to attend several life drawing sessions with him and other artists at his studio. His art and his life was and always will be a major inspiration and I am so grateful to have met my art hero, Ned Jacob.”

“Ned has been a treasured friend and mentor for over 35 years,” shared Marla Brenner. “Through our friendship, I’ve observed a man who held his standards high and loved his friends deeply. His kindness and generosity knew no bounds whether with students, friends, or complete strangers in need of his attention. You can tell a person by the community they build. Ned’s community has been a devoted family of amazing human beings. I will miss knowing he is still traveling this earth.”

“Blood Warrior with Coup Stick” by Ned Jacob
“Blood Warrior with Coup Stick” by Ned Jacob

In lieu of a traditional memorial service, Ned’s granddaughters will take an honorary road trip to visit places Ned loved. A celebration of life will take place along the way, on October 10th at 5:30pm at Nedra Matteucci Galleries in Santa Fe, New Mexico. Along the route, his granddaughters will be stopping in with old friends and students to collect stories for an oral history project on the life and adventures of Ned Jacob. To attend the celebration of life, or to participate in Ned’s oral history project, click here.

In lieu of flowers: Please consider a donation to this Art Scholarship in Memory of Ned Jacob.

View the flipbook “Ned Jacob: Drawing Inspiration from the World” here.

Peek Inside Fine Art Connoisseur, September/October 2025

0
Fine Art Connoisseur, Sept/Oct 2025
Fine Art Connoisseur, Sept/Oct 2025

Preview the September/October issue of Fine Art Connoisseur magazine, including the cover artist, feature articles, and other highlights.

On the Cover

MIKEL DONAHUE (b. 1956), “Move-In Ready” (detail), 2025, acrylic on illustration board, 20 x 12 1/4 in. (overall), on view this season in the 20th annual Quest for the West Art Show and Sale at the Eiteljorg Museum (Indianapolis).

Get this issue of Fine Art Connoisseur here.

Features

Artists Making Their Mark: Three to Watch
We highlight the talents of Elena Bria, Nathalie Lapointe, and Norberto Perez.

Jeffrey C. Legg: Master of Light & Shadow
By Max Gillies

Botanical & Floral Art: In Full Bloom
By Kelly Compton

Church’s Wonders of the New World and Old
By Dorothy Heyl

Emma Stebbins: Sculpting a Legacy
By Leslie Gilbert Elman

In Provence, a Big Year for Cezanne
By Sharon Flescher

In Newport, an Athenaeum Remains Up-to-Date
By Thomas Connors

Fully Open: The V&A’s Thrilling Next Act
By Louise Nicholson

Do You Speak Art?
By Daniel Grant

Art in the West
There are at least 10 great reasons to celebrate the American West this season.

Great Art Nationwide
We survey 11 top-notch projects occurring this season.

Collector’s Guide to the Massachusetts Coast & Islands

Get this issue of Fine Art Connoisseur here.

Columns

  • Frontispiece: Théo van Rysselberghe
  • Publisher’s Letter: What China Taught Me
    By Eric Rhoads
  • Editor’s Note: Something Big on the Horizon
    By Peter Trippi
  • Favorite: Peter Harrington on E.H. Shepard
  • Off the Walls
  • Classic Moment: Deborah Chabrian

Published six times per year, Fine Art Connoisseur is now a widely consulted platform for the world’s most knowledgeable experts, who write articles that inform readers and give them the tools necessary to make better purchasing decisions.

Fine Art Connoisseur‘s jargon-free text and large color illustrations are attracting an ever-growing readership passionate about high-quality artworks and the fascinating stories around them. It serves art collectors and enthusiasts with innovative articles about representational paintings, sculptures, drawings, and prints — both historical and contemporary, American and European. Fine Art Connoisseur covers the museums, galleries, fairs, auction houses, and private collections where great art is found.

Subscribe art magazines - Fine Art Connoisseur

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

Something Big on the Horizon: “A Temple to the People’s Art”

1
The Lucas Museum of Narrative Art is under construction in Los Angeles’s Exposition Park.
The Lucas Museum of Narrative Art is under construction in Los Angeles’s Exposition Park.

From the Fine Art Connoisseur, September/October 2025 Editor’s Note:

Something Big on the Horizon

For well over a decade, we’ve been keeping a hopeful eye on the development of the Lucas Museum of Narrative Art. Co-founded by the renowned filmmaker George Lucas (b. 1944) and his wife, investment manager Mellody Hobson (b. 1969), this is going to be — according to its website — “the world’s first institution Fine Art Connoisseur, Sept/Oct 2025dedicated to the exploration of narrative art, celebrating illustrated storytelling across eras and cultures.” It goes on to say that the museum will show us “how narrative art influences societies — shaping beliefs, communicating values, inspiring imagination, and creating communities. We empower people to engage with artworks through the compelling stories they tell.”

That all sounds promising, and this September we gained some insights when 6,000 fans packed a room at San Diego’s annual Comic-Con International jamboree. Moderated by actor Queen Latifah, that panel discussion featured Lucas himself, Lucasfilm executive design director Doug Chiang, and one of the museum’s board members, Oscar-winning filmmaker Guillermo del Toro. The audience was treated to photos of the gigantic building under construction, design renderings of its interiors, and highlights from the permanent collection.

Lucas called the museum “a temple to the people’s art” and noted, “Society cannot exist without a common belief system. And that’s where illustration is vital to show you what that means in everyday life.” Latifah concluded, “The connection that I hear in our various conversations is emotion — an emotional connection that the art evokes from you… I think when people step into this museum, they will be emotionally affected by it.”

For now, the museum is scheduled to open in 2026 at the center of its own 11-acre campus in Los Angeles’s Exposition Park, near the Natural History Museum and University of Southern California. Designed by architect Ma Yansong of MAD Architects (with Stantec as executive architect), the 300,000-square-foot building will feature not only galleries, but also two theaters and spaces for learning, events, dining, and retail.

The Lucas Museum has had its share of challenges over the years. Its earlier efforts to build in San Francisco, then Chicago, were rebuffed, and there have been numerous changes in staff leadership. For centuries, very rich people have constructed very large buildings (in California alone, there’s the needlessly steroidal Hearst Castle at San Simeon), so the eye-watering scale of this new structure is not particularly interesting.

What should excite art lovers is the founding couple’s collection of “more than 150,000 objects.” Naturally some of these are in the Lucas Archive, with its original props, models, costumes, and vehicles from such productions as Star Wars and Indiana Jones. Their presence will guarantee huge attendance for the rest of the 21st century, and that’s great. More intriguing, however, are the holdings of everything from “ancient murals to original illustrations,” including comics, children’s books, magazines, cinema, animation, and digital media.

On the fine art front, we now know that the inaugural displays will contain masterworks by the 20th-century illustrators N.C. Wyeth and Jessie Willcox Smith; paintings by such African American talents as Ernie Barnes and Robert Colescott; and a masterwork by Frida Kahlo. Strangely unmentioned so far is the trove of Norman Rockwell paintings that Lucas exhibited at the Smithsonian American Art Museum in 2010. Nor have we heard anything about his 19th-century art treasures by such academicians as Lawrence Alma-Tadema. We fully understand the museum’s need to lead with popular names like Star Wars, so we’re happy to sit back and learn more later.

We promise to keep Fine Art Connoisseur readers posted on this exciting project, which could help a big international audience appreciate storytelling’s crucial role in visual art — past, present, and future. We wish everyone at the museum well as they apply their finishing touches in the year ahead.

What are your thoughts? Share your letter to the Editor below in the comments.

Download the current issue of Fine Art Connoisseur here.


Sign up to receive Fine Art Today, the free weekly e-newsletter from
Fine Art Connoisseur magazine.

Featured Artwork: Mimi Jensen

0
shadows in a red background
“Sunset”, Mimi Jensen, oil on canvas, 30 x 40 in; available through Andra Norris Gallery. A conversation cast in silhouette and shadow upon a wall bathed in the sunset's glow.

Mimi Jensen: Mimi Jensen expands upon a recurring theme, Silhouettes and Shadows, where time feels suspended, encouraging viewers to pause and create their own narratives of what was, as well as what may be. For 30+ years, Jensen’s paintings have been exhibited extensively throughout the US, featured in multiple national publications, and reside in hundreds of collections worldwide.  Her most recent award is the Grand Prize in American Women Artists 2025 Online Exhibition. See Award URL below.

To see more of Mimi’s work, visit:
Instagram
Website
Gallery

shadow of a women leaning against a railing
“Anticipation”, Mimi Jensen, oil on canvas, 30 x 40 in; available through Andra Norris Gallery. Contemplating new beginnings, inspired personally, experienced universally.
“The Window”, Mimi Jensen, oil on canvas, 30 x 30 in; available through Andra Norris Gallery. Inspired by a passing glance. Featured in San Francisco’s “The DeYoung Museum Open”

Featured Artwork: Carol Strock Wasson

0
orange tree with purple sky
"Gloam", Carol Strock Wasson, oil, 16 x 16 in.

Carol Strock Wasson: I painted this piece in the studio after observation and memories of that time of day when the world softens and the light slips into memory. I wanted to capture that fleeting pause between day and night. Using my understanding of color theory, I let the landscape speak in whispers—shadow stretching across field and sky, warmth lingering at the edges.

Carol’s work is deeply inspired by the rural landscapes of her home, where she focuses on color, shape, and design in both the plein air tradition and studio settings. While she is widely recognized for her expertise in pastel, her artistic repertoire also includes oil painting and monotype prints.

To see more of Carol’s work, visit:
Instagram
Website
Facebook

Featured Artwork: Cynthia Inson

0
blue sky with clouds
"Wake Up Call", Cynthia Inson, oil, 12 x 12 in.; Nedra Matteucci Galleries

Cynthia Inson:

Processing information.

Making your thoughts and sight into a piece of artwork.

Because it is work, excellent fulfilling and thrilling work, but work.

The subject for me is always the visual world, the sky around me, air, distance, and light. “Reading” that and working with it in my mind, starts a process of interpretation, a thoughtfulness that eventually turns into a painted piece. The challenge becomes expressing that moment/thought/experience in time with paints, brushes, palette knives and putting paint onto canvas that expresses that impression of the moment.

To see more of Cynthia’s work, visit:
Website

gray and blue clouds over orange horizon
“Soft Pillow Mornings”, Cynthia Inson, oil, 12 x 12 in.; Nedra Matteucci Galleries
large cloud sky above trees and horizon
“Blinded by the Light”, Cynthia Inson, oil, 12 x 24 in.; Nedra Matteucci Galleries

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.