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An American Icon Unveiled

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Clark Hulings, “Spanish Shawl,” 1984, oil on canvas, 30 x 20 in. (c) Clark Hulings 2016

Posted: Thursday, 29 September 2016 11:55AM

Andrew Webster Reporting

An extensive array of paintings, drawings, ephemera, historical insights, and resources from one of America’s greatest realist painters will soon be available for public consumption. Collectors take note!
 
Award-winning and revered American realist Clark Hulings is always on the tip of the tongue when discussing this country’s most influential and celebrated representational painters. “For the first time, The Hulings Estate is making available its extensive catalogue, documentation, and information about the artist’s art and career, for the benefit of collectors, dealers, curators, and his legions of fans” they suggest. “Hulings’ wife, Mary, and daughter, Elizabeth, have dedicated countless hours to organizing the artist’s material, including sales records and provenance, personal journals and letters, images of the artist and his works in context, and historical data and ephemera. Now they are sharing this treasure trove of information through a robust new online platform, and offering direct support in licensing, authentication, appraisals, and sales advisory services.
 
“The vibrant new Clark Hulings website takes viewers on a journey of Hulings as an artist and a man of his time; why he painted what he did; and why those works matter. It is a valuable resource for anyone who wants to learn about, buy, sell or track a work by Clark Hulings. The site showcases pieces from all periods of his 60-year career, one can register to receive information about original work, and there’s a store with giclées, prints, and catalogues for those who are not in the market for an original, but would like to own a Hulings in some form.
 
“In addition, Elizabeth will create a new post every week featuring a different work, with information that hasn’t been published on the web before. These posts will include Clark Hulings’ own writings—what he had to say about various paintings and situations—and she will add her own anecdotes. Sometimes, the blog will work the other way. She will post an image of something that she wants to learn more about. “The Clark Hulings site is also a resource for me,” said Elizabeth. “I hope that people will share information so I may continue to build toward a complete catalogue raisonée.”
 
“With the unveiling of Clark Hulings’ archives, his wife and daughter honor his legacy and continue to solidify his position in the canon of American artists. “It is my responsibility to ensure that my father is recognized long-term in the canon of master American painters. I’m pursuing museum retrospectives, actively participating in the marketplace, and serving as a resource to collectors, dealers, curators, and aficionados,” said Elizabeth.”
 
To learn more, visit Clark Hulings.
 
This article was featured in Fine Art Today, a weekly e-newsletter from Fine Art Connoisseur magazine. To start receiving Fine Art Today for free, click here.
 

From the Inside

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Colin Fraser, “Glimpse,” 2016, (c) Mira Godard Gallery 2016

Posted: Thursday, 29 September 2016 11:53AM

Andrew Webster Reporting

Paintings are like windows into another word – an individual’s unique interpretation and representation of their experience. These elements are visited more literally during a solo exhibition in Canada.
 
Opening October 22 and running through November 12, Mira Godard Gallery in Toronto, Canada is proud to be hosting a solo exhibition featuring the works of Colin Fraser.
 
Fraser is known for his tightly rendered paintings of domestic interiors, often with open windows revealing a vast landscape beyond. Crisp and clean, each work has a compelling stillness, timeless allure, and beautiful range of color.
 
To learn more, visit Mira Godard Gallery.
 
This article was featured in Fine Art Today, a weekly e-newsletter from Fine Art Connoisseur magazine. To start receiving Fine Art Today for free, click here.
 

Take This Walk in the Wild

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Edward Aldrich, “Touching the Sky,” oil, (c) Evergreen Fine Art 2016

Evergreen Fine Art in Colorado is excited to showcase a number of recent paintings by renowned wildlife painter Edward Aldrich this fall. What can collectors expect?
 
Trained at the Rhode Island School of Design, painter Edward Aldrich has possessed a keen talent for representing wildlife since an early age. At 26, the burgeoning artist was juried into the Society of Animal Artists and since then his paintings have been widely collected. Today, paintings by Aldrich can be found at the Leigh Yawkey Woodson Art Museum, the National Wildlife Art Museum, and the Rockwell Museum. Further, his paintings have been auctioned at Christie’s and the Buffalo Bill Auction.
 
Evergreen Fine Art in Evergreen, Colorado, will host a solo exhibition of Aldrich’s recent works this fall opening on October 1. Via the gallery webpage, “Edward Aldrich is an artist dedicated to reaching beyond the realistic rendering of wildlife and the natural world. He is convinced that conveying the inherent being of an animal is integral to his work. His style breathes life into his subjects and invokes the viewer into feeling that he or she is actually a witness to the scene. The viewer is not left to simply look and appreciate, but is drawn into experiencing the essence of what is depicted. In short, his is an art of feeling as well as portrayal.”
 

 
To learn more, visit Evergreen Fine Art.
 
This article was featured in Fine Art Today, a weekly e-newsletter from Fine Art Connoisseur magazine. To start receiving Fine Art Today for free, click here.
 

This is a Milestone

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Paul Murray, “San Jose Church,” pastel, 17 x 15 in. (c) PSNM 2016

Posted: Thursday, 29 September 2016 11:47AM

Andrew Webster Reporting

The Pastel Society of New Mexico is celebrating a milestone this year with a much anticipated and highly acclaimed event. Collectors and art connoisseurs will want to take a look!
 
Celebrating 25 years of anything is something to note, especially when it involves an organization like the Pastel Society of New Mexico. This year, the organization mounts the 25th installment of its National Pastel Painting Exhibition with prizes totaling more than $10,000.
 


Iva Morris, “Rest Stop,” pastel, 26 x 36 in. (c) PSNM 2016

 
Juried by Gil Dellinger, Jen Evenhus, and Janis Krendick, this year’s exhibition will feature 143 paintings selected from nearly 300 total entries. The exhibition will showcase works by 84 artists representing 15 states, and one from Spain!
 


Marilyn Drake, “Flea Market Find,” pastel, 16 x 12 in. (c) PSNM 2016

 
Judge Casey Klahn will review the accepted works and award prizes to be announced during the Opening Reception and Award Presentation on Saturday, October 29 at the Hispanic Arts Center at EXPO New Mexico.
 
To learn more, visit The Pastel Society of New Mexico.
 
This article was featured in Fine Art Today, a weekly e-newsletter from Fine Art Connoisseur magazine. To start receiving Fine Art Today for free, click here.
 

Feathers, Fur & Fins: Animal Art is Thriving

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CRAIG BLIETZ (b. 1956), Leicester’s Earth, 2015, tempera and oil on panel, 9 x 12 in., private collection
CRAIG BLIETZ (b. 1956), Leicester’s Earth, 2015, tempera and oil on panel, 9 x 12 in., private collection

As fellow residents of Earth, animals have always fascinated humans, especially the artists among us. Thus many creatures appear in prehistoric cave paintings, and today the desire to depict them endures, actually stronger than ever. This season is an ideal time to learn why, thanks to an array of superb exhibitions on view across North America.

Among the nest is the 56th annual exhibition of the Society of Animal Artists (SAA), appearing at the Houston Museum of Natural Science September 23–January 1. A total of 121 artists have been juried in, and after this show closes in Houston, 60 of its works will travel as part of SAA’s Art and the Animal exhibition during much of 2017; these venues are the Hiram Blauvelt Art Museum (Oradell, NJ, January 21–March 12), Sternberg Museum of Natural History (Hays, KS, March 25–May 12), and Museum of the Shenandoah Valley (Winchester, VA, May 27–September 4). When the show opens in Houston this September, SAA will present its Lifetime Achievement Award to the sculptor Kent Ullberg, whose work was illustrated in the marine article in the August 2016 issue of Fine Art Connoisseur. This is only the third time SAA has bestowed this prestigious honor in its 60-year history.

 

This is an excerpt from “Feathers, Fur & Fins: Animal Art is Thriving”. Find the full article in the September / October 2016 Edition of Fine Art Connoisseur Magazine.

Read the Full Article Now

Featured Artwork: George Gallo presented by Rich Timmons Fine Art Gallery

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“California Hills”

Oil on Canvas
30 x 48 in.

Rich Timmons Fine Art Gallery

http://www.gallocollection.com/

About the Artist:
George Gallo is an American original. On every level his paintings can be seen as a search for 
visual perfection and an excursion into the wonders of the American landscape. Just as the French Impressionists pursued light and form, George Gallo builds upon Impressionist theory and practice. But while Gallo’s works may refer to the historic movement, his paint explorations are filtered through decades of modernistic concepts and approaches. Clearly the Abstract Expressionist movement of the Post War period has made its impact on the artist. George’s work is about spontaneity. His version of the landscape explodes with color and palette knife application, clear references to the American brand of expressionism. He offers us a feast for the eye at every turn.

This is to say that the paintings of George Gallo owe their power to an artist so aware of past accomplishments. The paintings indeed celebrate the American landscape just as the Hudson River painters paid special tribute to the land in the mid 19th century. Gallo’s works display an ability to unleash the dynamics of color and emphasize what Cezanne called “form” or the underlying structure of a work of art.

Art which has endured through time is both highly innovative and skillfully accomplished. The landscapes of George Gallo certainly meet that criteria. He is a painter whose work excites the senses and makes us realize that quality art, will extend and excite through the ages.


Rich Timmons Fine Art Gallery

3795 Route 202, Doylestown, PA  18902

[email protected]

www.gallocollection.com

267.247.5867

 

Dancing With the Stars

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William Merritt Chase, “Carmencita,” 1890, oil on canvas, 80 x 50 in. (c) Metropolitan, New York 2016

Posted: Thursday, 22 September 2016 12:36PM

Andrew Webster Reporting

The parallels between music and art are often explored, whether the artist is traditional, modern, or contemporary. The Denver Art Museum has a current show that celebrates dance in American art.

The Denver Art Museum is host to a rhythmic and fun exhibition, featuring an eclectic range of outstanding works of art, for just one more week. On view through October 2, “Rhythm & Roots” is an innovative exhibition that explores the subject of dance in American art.

Including some of the biggest names in our country’s art history, such as George Caleb Bingham, William Merritt Chase, and Arthur F. Mathews, the exhibition is sure to be a joy for all ages and aesthetic leanings. Among the artworks are representations from nearly every major art movement since the mid-19th century. About 90 paintings compose the exhibition.


George Caleb Bingham, “The Jolly Flatboatmen,” 1846, oil on canvas, 46 x 56 in.
(c) National Gallery of Art, Washington 2016

The museum reports, “The exhibition portrays dances throughout America’s diverse community, from the sacred dances of indigenous North Americans, to Irish jigs, and Spanish flamencos. About 90 paintings, photographs, sculptures, and costumes relating to American dance from 1830 to 1960 will be on view.

“The exhibition examines how dance moved to the public stage, showing new American dances, dance in the club, and artists’ historic fascination with and depiction of performers. Paintings in the exhibition feature iconic American dancers such as Isadora Duncan, Katherine Dunham, Fred Astaire, and Josephine Baker, as well as Spanish dancer Carmencita Dauset Moreno, and Russian ballerina Anna Pavlova.

“Rhythm & Roots also demonstrates the interaction between visual artists, dancers, and choreographers. Works on view by artists such as Isamu Noguchi and Andy Warhol highlight collaborations with acclaimed dancers such as Martha Graham and Merce Cunningham.”

To learn more, visit the Denver Art Museum.

This article was featured in Fine Art Today, a weekly e-newsletter from Fine Art Connoisseur magazine. To start receiving Fine Art Today for free, click here.

A Cutting-Edge Genre’s Best

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Martin Wittfooth, “Gathering,” oil on canvas, 64 x 32 in. (c) Abend Gallery 2016

Posted: Thursday, 22 September 2016 12:32PM

Andrew Webster Reporting

How do you define “imaginative realism”? Renowned artist James Gurney has suggested that it is the realistic depiction of something that one can only imagine. Perhaps it’s something more? This Denver gallery investigates during a major group exhibition.

Abend Gallery in Denver, Colorado, is the proud host of a large group exhibition that seeks to explore the cutting-edge genre of imaginative realism. Highlighting many of the genre’s best artists, “Inner Visions” was curated by Patrick and Jeannie Wilshire, Directors of IX Arts, and features works by more than 70 artists.


David Cheifetz, “Angel of Creation,” oil on canvas, 40 x 30 in. (c) Abend Gallery 2016

The gallery describes the wide potential of the genre, suggesting that it “combines classical painting technique with postmodern narrative subjects, focusing on the unreal, the unseen, and the impossible, offering visions of humanity’s mythic past, its unexplored future and, in some cases, the terrifying present.”


Luke Hillestad, “Full Hearts,” oil on canvas, 29 x 32 in. (c) Abend Gallery 2016

As exciting and stimulating as the theme is, perhaps the greatest feature of the exhibition is the artists included, who range from the burgeoning to the experienced and beyond. Among them are Luke Hillestad, Boris Vallejo, Michael C. Hayes, Scott Burdick, Rick Berry, Annie Stegg, Jody Fallon, and many more.

Via the gallery, “‘Imaginative realism satisfies a dual urge in the viewer,’ says co-curator Patrick Wilshire. ‘It meets the viewer’s desire for aesthetic quality and appreciation of technical skill, but also provides the opportunity to experience narrative, character and concept within that technically-skilled framework.’”

“Inner Visions” opens on October 8 and will be on view through November 11. To learn more, visit Abend Gallery.

This article was featured in Fine Art Today, a weekly e-newsletter from Fine Art Connoisseur magazine. To start receiving Fine Art Today for free, click here.

A Still Life Exhibition to Note

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Todd Casey, “Globe and Pumpkin,” oil, (c) Whistler House Museum of Art 2016

Posted: Thursday, 22 September 2016 12:29PM

Andrew Webster Reporting

Although it has been traditionally considered to be a “lesser” genre, contemporary painters continue to explore the range, power, and depth of still life. These modern approaches to the genre form the core of this magnetic exhibition.
 
The Whistler House Museum of Art is proud to be hosting a lovely still life exhibition this fall in Lowell, Massachusetts. Featuring works by artists who are members of the Lowell Art Association — the oldest incorporated art association in the country — “Still Lifes” includes both traditional and contemporary approaches to the genre.
 
More than 50 paintings compose the show, with pictures by Dee Lessard, Todd Casey, Priti Lathia, Deirdre Grunwald, Lisa Movvuri, Mary Rose O’Connell, Helene Levasseur, Jennifer McCalmont, Lucinda Britton, Melody Phaneuf, Meredith Fife Day, Lynne Mehlman, and Mary Minifie.
 


Lisa Kovvuri, “Three for Tea,” oil, (c) Whistler House Museum of Art 2016

 
Via the museum’s president and executive director, Sara Bogosian, “It is so interesting and inspirational to see the varied interpretations of still lifes by the artists of the Lowell Art Association. We invite guests of all ages to experience this impressive and skillful collection of paintings.”
 
The museum adds, “From traditional golden hues reminiscent of the seventeenth-century Dutch masters to dynamic strokes and splashes of color, the works in Still Lifes demonstrate a variety of interpretations of the traditional genre. Unique compositions feature flowers, sculptures, pumpkins, and an array of subjects as the artists pay homage to still life paintings and explore the possibilities of representing objects in pigment.”
                      
“Still Lifes” opens on September 28 with a reception on October 8 from 2 P.M. to 4 P.M. The show will run through November 12, 2016. To learn more, visit the Whistler House Museum of Art.
 
This article was featured in Fine Art Today, a weekly e-newsletter from Fine Art Connoisseur magazine. To start receiving Fine Art Today for free, click here.
 

McMillan Heads to Texas

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Vickie McMillan, “Herd of Elephants,” acrylic on board, 40 x 36 in. (c) Vickie McMillan 2016

Posted: Thursday, 22 September 2016 12:27PM

Andrew Webster Reporting

Renowned wildlife conservation artist Vickie McMillan is overjoyed to mount 35 original paintings at this Texas museum.
 
Lovers of wildlife and exquisite art will want to soon visit Port Arthur’s Art Museum of the Gulf Coast in Texas, featuring 35 original paintings by Vickie McMillan. Visitors have until January 14 to catch a glimpse.
 


Vickie McMillan, “Spotted!,” acrylic on board, 36 x 24 in. (c) Vickie McMillan 2016

McMillan’s aesthetic is particularly noteworthy. Often juxtaposing tightly rendered animals against more abstracted and expressive backgrounds, the paintings offer viewers a wide range of aesthetic interpretation. The museum writes, “Artists Vicki McMillan of the Woodlands (featured in 2014’s prestigious Birds in Art) and local artist and Lamar State College Port Arthur art professor Albert Faggard will share the stage in a celebration of fur, feathers, and scales with a special focus on environmental issues affecting the creatures we share our world with. As part of this exhibition, the Museum will host the 2nd Annual Children’s Art Competition — with a theme of (you guessed it!) wild animals. Vickie McMillan will be giving a gallery talk at 2:30 on October 8th to be followed by a reception for Museum Members and Special Guests.”
 
To learn more, visit the Art Museum of the Gulf Coast.
 
This article was featured in Fine Art Today, a weekly e-newsletter from Fine Art Connoisseur magazine. To start receiving Fine Art Today for free, click here.
 

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