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Up and Coming Artists: Three to Watch

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Jason Drake (b. 1955), “The End of Summer,” 2017, egg tempera on panel, 20 x 30 in., Private collection

The first thing you notice while viewing a painting by Jason Drake is the palette. His neutral tones and limited range of colors complement his naturalist style, which is clearly inspired by the pared-back yet poignant paintings of Andrew Wyeth. Surveying Drake’s oeuvre, it also becomes apparent that he is most at home outdoors. Nature seems to be where he and his subjects can breathe a bit easier, where freedom and reverie are welcome.

As simple and pure as the outdoor settings can be, Drake’s paintings are not merely recordings of nature’s beauty and fleeting moments. Rather, his works present the landscape as a backdrop to a central character’s narrative, and they are often filled with symbolism. Take the painting “The End of Summer,” in which a young girl clothed in white is enjoying an exultant moment on a bright day. She closes her eyes and sings, unaware of anyone or anything around her, including the flock of geese following her lead. They seem to be silent, except for the second bird, who is not keeping time with the rest. Perhaps the birds are not literal, but rather represent an aspect of this girl’s story. Only the artist knows for sure, and with a title that signifies a season passed, we are left to ponder.

With so much thought, observation, and reflection behind each piece, it is clear why Drake’s paintings frequently cause viewers to pause. The layers of meaning and sense of timelessness behind the “simple” surface suggest the artist’s main motivation for creating. “Art has the power to move us,” Drake says, “and a painting’s composition carries the ability to capture our thoughts and emotions. I have found that things, objects, hold deep meaning for us because we put them into the context of our own experiences. I want people to sense a deep spark rather than a quick flash when viewing my compositions. I am not trying to sensationalize or be sentimental in the subjects I choose. I want to represent real lives, real things, and real places that have beauty in and of themselves.”

Jason Drake Drake is represented by Blowing Rock Frameworks & Gallery (Blowing Rock, NC) and Collins Galleries (Orleans, MA).

FineArtConnoisseur.com
Kate Kilpatrick-Miller (b. 1971), “Off the Highway,” 2016, oil on canvas, 32 x 40 in., Trove Gallery (Park City, UT)

Kate Kilpatrick-Miller makes oil paintings that explore themes of both stillness and movement, often symbolically representing bygone seasons of life or current moments of vitality and momentum. Nostalgia, contemplativeness, and melancholy are as present in her imagery as feelings of rhythm, flow, and energy. This confluence of calm and activity is, according to the artist, the heartbeat of both the human and artistic experience.

Falling somewhere between stillness and movement are Kilpatrick-Miller’s depictions of cars, especially vintage ones. Her painting “Off the Highway” features a fire-engine red Pontiac Chieftain from the 1950s, once a popular means of transportation, now a retired relic. The artist’s use of sepia tones surrounding the vehicle gives us a greater sense that we are back in time, and, although the car now sits abandoned in a field, we are reminded of its continuing aesthetic and historic value. “Vintage cars in particular appeal to me visually because of their contour and color,” the artist says. “The car in the field may carry a certain melancholy because it is no longer used as a mode of movement, but it also carries a proud heritage.”

Kilpatrick-Miller’s sensitivity to the passage of time is apparent in all of her subject matter. Whether it’s a collection of shoes from years past, a memorial mural to her hometown’s baseball team, or a vignette of a child’s tricycle, it’s clear that the artist pays close attention to and appreciates the stories that surround her. Kilpatrick-Miller brings this worldview to the community projects she spearheads in her hometown of Helper, Utah. She is currently working on “The Faces of Helper” series — recording locals’ stories about their heritage while painting their portraits — as well as a collaborative interactive mural project to support local tourism.

Kate Kilpatrick-Miller is represented by K2 Gallery (Helper, UT) and Trove Gallery (Park City, UT).

Wildlife art by Anni Crouter - FineArtConnoisseur.com
Anni Crouter (b. 1963), “Kol’s Noble Stroll,” 2018, acrylic on canvas, 36 x 36 in., Available from the artist

Anni Crouter has been painting portraits of wild and domestic animals for more than 30 years. Her artistic calling began during childhood, when she was continually surrounded by animals. Growing up on a farm with a father who was a veterinarian, she spent countless hours in his clinic and was communicating through art before she could read or write. Her mother and both of her grandmothers strongly encouraged her artistic tendencies, and she began to sketch what was available in her immediate surroundings: horses, barn cats, dogs, birds, and more.

Crouter’s love of animals and art continued to develop in tandem, and after a brief attempt at pursing veterinary medicine herself, she realized she could better serve her subjects through her artistic talents. Crouter eventually married a veterinarian, and today she has a studio space in the same building as his practice. “He fixes them and I paint them,” the artist writes of their synergistic relationship and shared love of animals and art.

Although Crouter paints architectural subjects, landscapes, and florals as well, it is her wildlife work that has brought her the most recognition in recent years. Finding the subject matter to work from is often the hardest part of Crouter’s practice. She frequents the Detroit Zoo in her home state of Michigan — the tiger pictured in “Kol’s Noble Stroll,” a longtime favorite of the artist, lived there until his recent passing — and has traveled to zoos around the country in pursuit of such species as the clouded leopard, polar bears, and African wild dogs.

The artist first began painting in oils and acrylics, but now paints primarily in watercolors. Although she minored in art during college, she credits her breakthrough as a painter, particularly in color, to her ongoing study with mentor Jim Ames. “I’ve been studying with Jim for more than 24 years,” Crouter says. “A teacher at the Flint Institute of Arts, Jim is a master at color theory and has devoted his life to the subject. My growth as a painter has accelerated exponentially under his guidance.” Whether in color or form, Crouter’s subjects leap off the canvas and speak of her enduring dedication to the domestic animals and wildlife she has loved since childhood.

Anni Crouter is represented by Mackinac’s Little Gallery (Mackinac Island, MI) and Twisted Fish Gallery (Elk Rapids, MI).


This article originally appeared in Fine Art Connoisseur magazine (subscribe here).

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Paintings That Represent the Backbone of Our Nation

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Dean Mitchell paintings - FineArtConnoisseur.com
Dean Mitchell, "Trailer Park Scatter," watercolor, 22 x 30 in.

Ethnic Art Gallery, Kansas City, Missouri
Through June 9, 2018

This new exhibition of Dean Mitchell’s work includes a mix of both urban and rural settings.

The rural scenes deal with isolation and poverty in the modern world. The paintings are of places and spaces of the working class — the backbone of our nation, whose voices and spaces are often rarely looked upon as places of beauty and power. The romantic myth of the American Dream, fragmented in despair, has become even more visible through the daily lives of those seeking a better tomorrow.

Dean Mitchell paintings - FineArtConnoisseur.com
Dean Mitchell, “Urban Cyclist,” watercolor, 12 x 14 3/4 in.
Dean Mitchell paintings - FineArtConnoisseur.com
Dean Mitchell, “Dumpsters,” acrylic, 10 x 15 in.
Dean Mitchell paintings - FineArtConnoisseur.com
Dean Mitchell, “I Am Joseph Northern,” watercolor, 20 x 30 in.
Dean Mitchell, “New Orleans’s Napoleon House,” watercolor, 15 x 10 in.

For more information: https://ethnicartgallerykc.com


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Learning From Luxury and the May/June 2018 Issue of Fine Art Connoisseur

Fine Art Connoisseur, May/June 2018
Cover art by Casey Baugh

We are all in this together. Everyone who reads Fine Art Connoisseur believes not only in representational art, but also in the talent, training, rigor, and dedication required to attain excellence in this field. Though the artists appearing in this issue are generally faring better than their counterparts did, say, 40 years ago, it’s still not easy for them to get noticed or make a living, so I’m always keeping an eye open for kindred spirits in other cultural sectors from whom we might borrow ideas.

Recently I learned about the Michelangelo Foundation for Creativity and Craftsmanship, established in 2016 to preserve master craftsmanship by celebrating artisans’ capacity to make something of lasting beauty with their hands. The foundation supports people who make — for example — lace, leatherwork, haute couture, crystal, musical instruments, and porcelain, though there are many more products involved. Based in Geneva and initially focused on Europe, the foundation was created by Johann Rupert, the founder of Richemont, the Swiss-based group that owns such luxury brands as Cartier, Van Cleef & Arpels, Montblanc, Alfred Dunhill, and Chloé. His co-founder is Franco Cologni, who had previously established the Cologni Foundation for Artistic Craft Professions, which is focused only on Italy.

At first it seems ironic that the executives who cultivated a global demand for European luxury goods are now worried about sustaining the artisans who make those very goods. Accidentally, you see, they have created a monster, as Rupert once explained to The New York Times: “What’s not fun anymore is going to Bond Street or Fifth Avenue or Via Montenapoleone where the shops and product all look the same, and have done for the last 30 years, because all the smaller, independent artisans have been pushed out by the retail rentals.”

Exactly. One obvious symptom of globalism is homogeneity. It is much easier to manufacture and distribute worldwide just a few kinds of Cartier watches, to name one example of a luxury good. Cartier is a revered brand and everyone everywhere will ultimately want to associate themselves with its prestige. But where does that leave a small-scale creator of bespoke watches back in France or Switzerland or Italy?

OK, let’s transfer these same questions to the world of fine art. Now that Larry Gagosian has 17 — yes, 17 — galleries around the world selling the same roster of 135 artists in total, where does that leave other artists? After all, it’s much easier to buy a name brand (like Jean-Michel Basquiat) than to take an aesthetic and financial risk on an artist not so prestigious, right? Sound familiar? Actually, I am not here to pick on Gagosian or his artists, some of whom are fantastic. Instead, I think that some of the Michelangelo Foundation’s objectives might just pertain to our corner of the art world.

Specifically, the foundation seeks to rekindle public esteem for craftsmanship, to create spaces and opportunities for masters and students to come together, to promote draftsmanship, to save old-school crafts from oblivion, to identify emerging craft professions, and to build links with museums that engage directly with the public. I see many parallels here. Most importantly, the foundation seeks to put human beings back in the center of the conversation, and ultimately to foster a cultural movement built around the values of handmade creativity. Folks, this is especially urgent in our era of artificial intelligence and 3-D printing, when every mass manufacturer is laying plans to replace its human workers with robots. At this rate, it’s only a matter of time before fine art is directly impacted by robots, too. But that does not necessarily have to happen.

Bluntly speaking, the luxury goods world has picked up this flag because their suppliers and workers are declining in number and quality, and also because well-designed luxuries made by real people have every reason to cost more than robot-produced ones, thus giving them a completely understandable competitive advantage.

If you care to muse on how this worldview might help our kind of fine art, visit michelangelofoundation.org and fondazionecologni.it/en, browse around, and see which of their strategies might make sense to copy into your community. Moreover, let’s all work together to remind others — collectors, youngsters, bloggers, curators, whomever — that handmade art really is different, better, more meaningful. The prices we charge are so worth it when you consider all the stories and heritage behind and within what we do.

Fine Art Connoisseur, May/June 2018

Fine Art Connoisseur May/June 2018 Contents

Something New in Realism
By Vanessa Francoise Rothe

Classical Furniture American Style
By William J. Miller

Celebrating America’s Great Collectors

Walt Gonske painting featured in Fine Art Connoisseur
Walt Gonske, “Along the Sangre de Cristo Range”

Walt Gonske Looks Back
By Kelly Compton

City/Country: The Studio Homes of Daniel Chester French
By Karen Zukowski

Gather Ye Rosebuds While Ye May
By Kelly Compton

Great Art Everywhere

Artists Making Their Mark: Three to Watch

Betsy Ashton art, featured in Fine Art Connoisseur
Betsy Ashton, “Mahyar Afshar”

Betsy Ashton: Portraying Immigrants’ Stories
By Peter Trippi

Download the May/June 2018 issue here, or subscribe to Fine Art Connoisseur today so you never miss an issue.


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Featured Artwork: Vladislav Yeliseyev

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City in Gold
21 x 14 in., watercolor on paper
$2400 available from artist
Artist Studio online Spring Sale: Works under $500, ends May 15, 2018

Traveling the world allows Vladislav Yeliseyev (Vlad) to see his subjects from different cultural, emotional and uncommon angles. Vlad paints equally in studio and en plein air.
“When I work in the studio I remember my emotions but have less distraction and more time to work on details and abstract aspect of scenery.”

A Russian émigré Vlad, came to the United States in the 1980s equipped with a classical art education from Moscow School of Art and a Master’s Degree in architecture. Now, Vlad is a signature Member of American Impressionist Society and National Watercolor Society. His work can be found in private and corporate collections worldwide, as well as featured in national and international publications.

The most recent honor Vlad received was First Prize for his quick draw painting at the prestigious Olmsted Plein Air Invitational in Atlanta. Jurors were Booth Western Art Museum Executive Director Seth Hopkins, renowned artist Kenn Backhaus ,and Tim Newton, chairman of the board and CEO of The Salmagundi Club. Vlad’s was also awarded Best Urban Landscape Prize at the same event.

Critics have noted his bold brushwork, expert loose color passages, and crisp well edited calligraphy in his paintings. With painstaking use of limited brushwork in his art, Vlad creates paintings which give a sense of depicted objects rather than their bold presentation at the same time maintaining the transparent colors unique to watercolor and very powerful brushstrokes. He is also a master of the textural quality of things, you can almost touch the walls and feel the rough stones bathing in the sun. His love for classical music energize him during the work almost like being a source of inspiration lending him sensitive and poetic angles of alternative look at reality surrounding us. “Every painting is like a poetry, the less words wasted the more powerful message it conveys.” Says the master.

Email: [email protected]
WEBSITE: https://yeliseyevfineart.com/
FACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/ArtistYeliseyev/

Vladislav is represented by:
LePrince Fine Art Gallery
184 King St, Charleston, SC 29401, Phone (843) 442-1664

Stakenborg Fine Art Gallery
1545 Main St., Sarasota, FL 34236, Phone (941) 487-8001

Susan Powell Fine Art
679 Boston Post Road, Madison, CT 06443, Phone (203) 318-0616

Troika Gallery
9 S. Harrison St., Easton, MD 21601, Phone (410) 770-9190

Galleria Silecchia
20 S Palm Ave., Sarasota, FL 34236, Phone (941) 365-7414

Events 2018
Yeliseyev Studio Open Doors, August 5 and November 4, 2pm – 4pm
Forgotten Coast Plein Air Invitational, Apalachicola, FL May 4-13, 2018
Cashiers Plein Air Festival Cashiers, NC July 18-22, 2018
Mountain Maryland Plein Air—Judge, Cumberland, MD September 24-30, 2018

A Dance of Organized Chaos and Passion

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Fine art oil paintings - FineArtConnoisseur.com
Laurie Meyer, “Limone e Lime,” oil on canvas, 12 x 12 in.

”Second Course: Laurie Meyer Solo Exhibition”
May 4 – 31, 2018
Meyer Vogl Gallery
Charleston, South Carolina

From the gallery:

Think of the energy of a restaurant kitchen — its beautiful dance of organized chaos and passion. Artist Laurie Meyer is emboldened and excited by that energy, and for her upcoming solo exhibition, she’s bringing it to the canvas with a series of kitchen-inspired paintings.

Meyer, who co-owns Meyer Vogl Gallery, says, “By selecting a kitchen scene for a painting, I am assured a figurative piece full of gesture and energy. The glow of the warm lights and the neutrals of the stainless steel offer incredible colors as well. I love a traditional chef in white with warm lights, surrounded by the coolness of the restaurant kitchen interiors. There are many stories implied by the interior of a restaurant!”

Fine art oil paintings - FineArtConnoisseur.com
Laurie Meyer, “Zero George,” oil on linen, 24 x 30 in. “Zero George inhabits a space that is the opposite of a castle, one of the most charming inns of Charleston,” Meyer says. “The space is small, but the energy of the chefs and staff is huge. I was moved to paint both.”

“If you have been to Italy, and better still, if you have been to the island of Ischia, you connect easily with the chefs,” Meyer says. “The two in Limone e Lime prepared the finest authentic dishes each day at the Castillo Aragonese, and we loved them.”

Works include the interiors of Charleston restaurants and kitchens, culinary memories from recent travels abroad, as well as scenes from her own kitchen.

For more information: meyervogl.com


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1st Spring Best of America National Juried Exhibition

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Pamela Newell oil paintings
Pamela Newell, “Pensée,” oil on linen board, 11 x 14 in.

1st Spring Small Painting National Juried Exhibition
National Oil & Acrylic Painters’ Society (NOAPS)
Richland Fine Art Gallery, Nashville, TN
Through May 26, 2018

From NOAPS:

The National Oil & Acrylic Painters’ Society has been showcasing the art of national and international artists since 1991. In response to our growing membership, a new show has been added: the 1st Spring Best of America Small Painting National Juried Exhibition. Members from the U.S., Canada, Mexico, and around the world have been invited to this exciting new exhibit.

Fine art oil paintings - FineArtConnoisseur.com
Juan Cantavella, “Looking Forward,” oil on canvas board, 18 x 14 in.

The show will feature paintings sized 320 square inches or less, and will be held every spring in galleries throughout the United States. This exhibition is in addition to the Best of America exhibit held in the fall, this year celebrating its 28th year at the Eisele Gallery in Cincinnati, Ohio.

Christine Sundquist, “Dawn and the Distance,” oil on canvas, 16 x 20 in.

The Juror of Awards, Dawn Whitelaw, a Master artist with the American Impressionist Society, will select over $15,000 in cash and merchandise awards to be announced at the reception.

Beth Marchant, “Forgotten,” oil on wood panel, 12 x 16 in.

The paintings included in the exhibit will be featured at www.noaps.org and will be for sale through the Richland Fine Art Gallery, www.richlandfineart.com or by calling 615-292-2781.


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A Celebration of Art at Grand Canyon National Park

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A Celebration of Art at Grand Canyon National Park
September 8, 2018 – January 21, 2019

Grand Canyon Association is pleased to announce the 10th Annual Grand Canyon Celebration of Art at Grand Canyon National Park.

Celebration of Art at Grand Canyon is a wonderful tradition at Grand Canyon National Park, providing a vibrant experience for visitors, a venue for artists inspired by the canyon, and a successful fundraiser to benefit a dedicated art venue at the South Rim. Art plays a critical role in the appreciation of our national parks, and this event helps to keep the artistic tradition part of the Grand Canyon experience.

Since its inception in 2009, Celebration of Art has invited participating artists to paint “en plein air” for a week at Grand Canyon. The works produced during this time are shown alongside studio-produced pieces at the historic Kolb Studio in an exhibition and sale that extends for four months.

During the week of September 8-15, 2018 visitors will have the opportunity to watch the 22 painters and 2 sculptors create artwork along the South Rim as they interpret the ever-shifting light and shadow, amazing landforms, and vibrant colors of this vast landscape. In addition, there will be free artist demonstrations scheduled at various locations at the canyon throughout out the week.

On Saturday, September 15 from 8 to 10 am the artists will be participating in a Quick Draw along the South Rim from Verkamp’s to Kolb Studio, with an auction of their work at 11:00 a.m. at the Bright Angel Trailhead.

The Celebration of Art exhibit and sale opens at 11:00 a.m. on September 16, 2018 and will be open daily through January 21, 2019 at the historic Kolb Studio at the South Rim of Grand Canyon. Admission is free and open to the public.

Please visit grandcanyon.org or contact Kathy Duley at [email protected]
or 480-277-0458 for more information.

Featured Artwork: Ginger Gehres

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A Little To The Left
Impala and Red Billed Oxpecker
16 x 20 in., clayboard and colored inks with scratchboard techniques
On exhibition at the International Society of Scratchboard Artists (ISSA) 7th Annual Exhibition, May 4-31, 2018, at the Middletown Arts Center, Middletown, Ohio. Opening reception May 4, 6-9pm.

One of only 16 Master Members of the International Society of Scratchboard Artists (ISSA) and an Associate Member with Distinction with the American Women Artists, Ginger Gehres is a published artist, visual storyteller and art historian who has studied under both nationally and internationally acclaimed artists.

“When I was a very young girl, I thought everyone created art. My Grandmother was an accomplished oil painter, my Mother a professional dancer, and my Father built houses and buildings with sometimes little more than a crude sketch on a napkin,” says Ginger Genres.

Ginger was surrounded by creativity and imagination from the very beginning. Her grandmother put a pencil and paintbrush in her hands as soon as she could hold them.

“When I was old enough to go to school, I came home upset because I discovered that drawing and painting was not what everybody did.”

Thankfully, she was supported in her learning endeavors at home until there were courses for her to take later. When people asked her what she wanted to be when she grew up, she never swayed.

“I want to be an artist because that’s all I know how to be inside.”

At 16, she was given the honor of painting the high school mascot, the eagle, on the gym floor, was the art editor of the school paper and started writing and illustrating for a school section of the area’s daily newspaper. This further cemented her course in life.

Commercial art became Ginger’s career. She worked first in newspaper advertising design, promotion and illustration, earning awards for her editorial cartoons. Continuing with advertising design, she joined a large corporation, then spent 12 years as an art director in television, and later worked as a GUI and web designer for another large corporation until a life changing stroke-like episode stopped her in her tracks.

“The family was called in. The doctors weren’t sure if I’d ever walk or talk again. I was only 40 and the single mother of a young child.” Time went by, her then partner (now husband) supported her and helped her to take occupational, physical and speech therapy. Ginger is quick to say she considers herself one of the fortunate ones. Today, even though she still struggles with seizures and chronic migraines, most of her motor skills have returned. During her recovery, ironically one of the recommended rehabilitation skills was art.

Not able to rejoin the daily work force, she decided to “go back to the beginning and paint.”

“Every piece created was a step forward. I discovered scratchboard in 2013 and fell in love with how different the medium was to work with.”

The detail work made scratchboard the perfect choice for her. Scratchboard is traditionally black and white but Ginger also likes to add color to many of her works. It takes longer to create multiple layers of color and scratches and that’s fine with her. All you need to create the work is a craft knife and a scratchboard but many of the artists find themselves exploring and expanding on what and how this medium can be pushed. This includes the tools used. Ginger’s scratchboard work is created on Ampersand Scratchbord and Claybord panels. Her tools range from an x-acto knife, fiberglass brushes, sandpaper, and hand made tools to even tattoo needles at times.

“It just depends on the idea I have in my head and what I think I need to use to get it out and onto the board.”

Memberships:
Master Member: International Society of Scratchboard Artists
Associate Member with Distinction: American Women Artists

Gallery Representation:
The Lemonade Art Gallery, Chocowinity, NC

Recent Awards:
2018:
Laissez Le Bon Temps Rouler (Let The Good Times Roll)
15 x 20 in., scratchboard
FineArtConnoisseur.com Featured Artist, April

Can You See Me Now?
21 x 27 in., scratchboard
Honorable Mention, American Women Artists 2018 Spring Online Show

2017:
Laissez Le Bon Temps Rouler (Let The Good Times Roll)
15 x 20 in., scratchboard
2nd Place, 22nd International Art Ability Exhibition, Bryn Mawr, PA
2nd Place, American Women Artists 2017 Spring Online Show
Highly Commendable, International Society of Scratchboard Artists – Masters Division, Adelaide, Australia

Monkey Business
9 x 12in., scratchboard
First Place, International Society of Scratchboard Artists, 2017 Online Holiday Exhibition, Masters Division

Squabble
12 x 18 in., scratchboard
Published in North Light Books Strokes of Genius 10: Inspiring Subjects (to be published in 2018)

Sunshine On My Shoulder
8 x 10 in., scratchboard
Juror’s Choice, 53rd Annual Fine Arts Show, Washington, NC

View more of Ginger’s work on her website and follow her on Facebook.

Featured Artwork: Kirk McBride

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Old Havana
20 x 16 in., oil on linen
Available at Bishop’s Stock Fine Art and Craft

Kirk McBride found in Havana a wealth of the subject matter he paints, namely street after street of crumbling architecture with wonderful textures and patinas and the classic shapes and lines of the thousands of 1950’s American cars and trucks cruising the streets.

“The hustle and bustle of people in the crowded streets all moving to the constant beat from incredible musicians…I am very fortunate to have spent time in Cuba and was inspired to create a series of paintings of Cuba”, says Kirk.

“I learned how to paint through my travels,” says Kirk. “I have met artists from around the country who have shared their experiences and knowledge with me. I have been able to observe and directly study the paintings of artists I had admired in books and magazines. I have experienced beaches, mountains, deserts and cities that have become the subjects of my paintings. Travel has been the most important part of my education as a painter.”

Kirk is known for the variety of subjects he paints: water and boats, old cars and trucks, city and towns, mountains and deserts. The unifying element in them all is the way he depicts interaction of shadow and light on each surface. He often uses his plein air studies to create larger studio paintings. He has been recognized as a “Signature Member” of the American Society of Marine Artists (ASMA) and the Mid Atlantic Plein Air Painters Association (MAPAPA).

Kirk McBride is represented by many galleries and has shown his work in many solo and two-artist shows (with his wife, Lynne Lockhart). His home and studio are located on Maryland’s Eastern Shore.

Kirk’s work documenting the disappearing fishing industry along the Atlantic Coast is featured in the June/July issue of PleinAir Magazine.

Gallery Representation
Bishop’s Stock Snow Hill, MD
Camden Falls Gallery Camden, ME
Egeli Gallery Provincetown, MA
Main Street Gallery Annapolis, MD
Parker Gallery St Simon’s Island, GA
Station Gallery Greenville, DE
Troika Gallery Easton, MD

Visit Kirk McBride Studio to see more work by Kirk, sign up for his enews and read his blog.
Also follow him on Facebook.

Featured Artwork: R. Gregory Summers

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We’ll Never Turn You Away
11 x 14 in., oil
Mexico and the Rio Grande River as seen from the bluffs of Boquillas Canyon, Big Bend National Park, Texas

Yeah, I know when I’m out there painting I’m supposed to be thinking about color, and comparing brush strokes, things like that, but sometimes you can’t help thinking about what you are looking at.

I arrived early along the Rio Grand and saw this little canoe, which a local used to cross the river and set up a little makeshift stand to sell handmade items to the tourists. I thought it great, and the most of the folks loved it, there was a gal who thought they ought to not be allowed, but that’s another story.

I don’t listen to music as I’m painting outdoors, but that doesn’t keep it from streaming through my head, and into it came songs about ferries and in particular “Ferry Cross the Mercy” by Gerry and the Pacemakers. Great little tune and I thought it so fitting here.

Made me think of those words on our Statue of Liberty on Ellis Island…
“Give me your tired, your poor,
Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free,
The wretched refuse of your teeming shore.
Send these, the homeless, tempest-tost to me,
I lift my lamp beside the golden door!”

We are a land of immigrants, and that is not a bad thing. I love variety in my art, the meals, and people. It keeps life interesting.

“We go outdoors to enjoy the land, or stay inside to avoid it. It is I, an outdoor artist that brings the outside in.”

Born in the Flint Hills, Gregory Summers began his professional career at Hallmark Cards, Inc. A Master Engraver, he now paints primarily “en plein air” across the globe with a limited palette of only 4 colors. Former Vice President of the Greater Kansas City Artists Association, co-founder of the Missouri Valley Impressionist Society, and Brush Creek Plein Air painting competition in Kansas City, Missouri.

Summers is a Signature member of the American Impressionists Society, and the Outdoor Painter Society.

“I am inspired by creation and driven by the experience. I paint the land that I claim to be a part of. It is not to replicate the scene before me, more to bring back a piece of what took me there in the first place.”

2018 Events
Four Arts Sake, group show, Tim Murphy Gallery, Shawnee Msn, KS
American Impressionist Society, Small Works exhibit. Cincinnati, OH
Inaugural Paint St Louis Plein Air, St Louis, MO
Heartland Artist Exhibition, Merriam, KS
OPS Southwest Salon, Rockport, TX
En Plein Air Texas, San Angelo, TX
Augusta Plein Air Festival, Augusta, MO
Plein Air Richmond, Richmond, VA
Juror: Blue Ridge Mountain Plein Air, Blue Ridge, GA
Juror: Escalante Canyon Plein Air, Escalante, UT

2018 Workshops
Big Bend National Park, Terlingua, TX
Lake of the Ozarks, Camdenton, MO
Genessee Country Village, Mumford, NY
Tennessee Valley, Murfreesboro, TN
Blue Ridge Mountain Plein Air, Blue Ridge, GA
Escalante Canyon Plein Air, Escalante, UT
Saugatuck/Douglas, MI
San Angelo, TX

Galleries
Folger Gallery, Midland, TX
Cathy Kline Gallery, Parkville, MO
Mr Miller’s Art Emporium, Saugatuck/Douglas, MI
Rockfish Gallery, Council Grove, KS
Leawood Fine Arts, Leawood, KS

View more of Greg’s work at www.rgregorysummers.com.

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