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An Art Collection Favorite: Go Tell Alice

Art Collection - Judith Linhares (b. 1940), "Go Tell Alice," 2022, oil on canvas, 35 1/2 x 26 in., Courtesy of the artist and P.P.O.W., New York City
Judith Linhares (b. 1940), "Go Tell Alice," 2022, oil on canvas, 35 1/2 x 26 in., Courtesy of the artist and P.P.O.W., New York City

Art Collection Spotlight > Ever since Dennis Elliott met the artist Judith Linhares in 1978, he has followed her work, along with the white rabbit she has frequently included in her paintings. Like Alice who chased that animal down the hole into Wonderland, Elliott, a prolific artist himself as well as the founder of the International Curatorial Studio Program (ICSP), has followed the progression of scenes Linhares paints and produces in her Brooklyn studio.

Dennis Elliott, Founder & Board Member of International Curatorial Studio Program. Photo: Ann Feldman
Dennis Elliott, Founder & Board Member of International Curatorial Studio Program. Photo: Ann Feldman

“Much of her work is a bit like what you’d find in Wonderland, as if Lewis Carroll might have constructed his stories in paint,” says Elliott, who in 1994 founded ICSP, an influential nonprofit which, to date, has brought some 2,500 mid-career artists from 88 countries to New York City for residencies.

While Elliott has long admired the fantastical nudes for which Linhares is best known, he has developed a particular penchant for her still lifes. This work above, “Go Tell Alice” (2022), represents exactly what Elliott most admires about Linhares’s canvases. “It’s very lush, it’s radiant, it’s easy to like, it’s delicious,” he says. “I consider her flower paintings second only to Van Gogh’s, though I have to admit I like hers even better.”

Although Linhares has had a successful career as an artist and teacher since she moved to New York from her native California in the 1970s, she has long been regarded as “an artist’s artist,” Elliott observes. But with a solo show at Florida’s Sarasota Art Museum in 2022, multiple shows and ongoing representation at the New York gallery P.P.O.W., and a solo show in 2023 at London’s Massimodecarlo, Linhares is increasingly known to a wider public.

Elliott particularly admires her ability to paint still lifes from memory. “In that sense, this painting and others are very un-still life,” he says, noting that it wasn’t until the early 1990s that she embraced the genre as one of her preferred forms. “With this particular work by Judy, there are references that draw people into the painting right away.” He points not only to the rabbit, seemingly about to hop off the canvas, but also the depiction in a corner of an iconic photograph that shows the late abstract painter and actress Deborah Remington playing a set of bongos.

“I happen to know that Deborah was a hero of Judy’s, and she likes how this photo of her represents a significant kind of freedom. What could sum up freedom more than playing the drums on a hot day on a Southern California beach with not much on?”

As a painter who describes his own canvases as “featuring forms that often look like things floating in outer space,” Elliott admires Linhares’s ability to carefully construct paintings. “She is like Van Gogh in that way,” he says, “for she understands how to develop space on a canvas and then be very attentive to brushwork. She’s always conscious of the position of the painting and where the edges of the canvas are.”

Having watched her progression over the decades, Elliott knows that paintings of hers that may look easy and spontaneous are, in fact, the result of weeks of work. “Nothing of hers is done in an afternoon. She paints and erases and takes paint away and then adds paint again. It’s a process.”

Elliott confesses that it took years for him to admire still lifes by any painter. “It came with age,” he recalls. “Normally, as a young snotty grad student at what’s now called the California College of the Arts, where coincidentally Judy was studying at the same time, though we didn’t know each other, I would have been dismissive of the genre. Now, I find great, radiantly colored still lifes like this one to be sources of solace, to be contemplative. All of Judy’s paintings provide that for me.”

View more art collection spotlights here at FineArtConnoisseur.com.

“Cathedral Wash” Captivates Salon Judge

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PleinAir Salon art competition - Kyle Ma, “Cathedral Wash,” Oil, 36x36 in.
Kyle Ma, “Cathedral Wash,” Oil, 36x36 in.

We’d like to congratulate Kyle Ma for winning Overall First Place in the October 2024 PleinAir Salon art competition, judged by Ned Mueller.

“Wow, this fine work of art covered everything that I think goes into making a great painting: concept, design, color and, in this case, atmosphere, as it is a landscape painting,” Ned said. “The idea of the arroyo leading our eye back into the middleground and background; the great drawing skills and arrangement and shapes of the rocks, dirt and bushes – their chroma and temperature so beautifully orchestrated and giving us the beauty of that violet mountain and little group of clouds. What is there not to like about this masterpiece!”

About Kyle Ma:

Kyle Ma (b. 2000) developed a love for art at an early age after being exposed to the works of the old masters through museums and art history books. Kyle says that painting allows him to express his viewpoint of our world. In 2010, Kyle moved with his family to Austin, Texas where he began to seriously study oil painting under Elizabeth Locke. Here, Kyle learned the importance of having a solid foundation in the fundamentals to be a successful representational artist. Kyle also took workshops around the country with master artists to further his art education.

Kyle holds a BS in Geology from the University of Texas at Austin but the success of his first solo show (Wilcox Gallery, 2016) encouraged him to choose to pursue art as a career. He enjoys painting en plein air since it allows him to be immersed in the landscape during the process of creating. Kyle believes it reinforces the idea of making careful observations and seeking to understand these observations, a skill Kyle feels is extremely important in art.

Kyle’s work has been exhibited in numerous solo and group exhibitions around the country, and has received several awards including the gold medal in the 30th annual Oil Painters of America National Show. Additionally, Kyle is a Signature Member of Oil Painters of America, Plein Air Painters of America and member of Salmagundi Club. Kyle was also featured in Southwest Art Magazine, Art of the West Magazine, Fine Art Connoisseur, Western Art Collector Magazine, and American Art Collector Magazine. Kyle teaches workshops around the world and has presented at Plein Air Convention and Portrait Society of America’s conference. “Painting, to me, is an extremely passionate experience. I paint as much as I can, and hope that I can communicate with the viewer what I saw and how I felt each time that I pick up a brush.”


About the PleinAir Salon Art Competition:

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 art competition 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.

Featured Artwork: Marcia Holmes

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“Iris Enfurled in Blue,”Marcia Holmes, oil on canvas, 36 x 36 in; available through the artist

Marcia Holmes: Continuing an expressionist series of Iris paintings in oil is my current focus. Having a representational floral inspiration is the lead to let the gestures flow in an imaginative field of luscious color and free interpretation. Having painted the Iris from life in Monet’s gardens almost ten years ago, I’ve revisited that path, pulled from realism to paint my contemporary take on nature. Private Commission bookings are available.

To see more of Marcia’s work, visit:
Website 
Instagram
The Degas Gallery in New Orleans, LA 

oil painting of abstract flowers
“Iris Reflections (Commission),” Marcia Holmes, oil on canvas, 60 x 48 in; Private Collection
oil painting of abstract flowers
“Champagne Iris,” Marcia Holmes, oil on canvas, 36 x 36 in., Private Collection

Two Big Talents in Tennessee

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Lisa Gleim (b. 1971), "Mountain Nomad," 2024, pastel on Smoky Mountains map, 30 x 30 in.
Lisa Gleim (b. 1971), "Mountain Nomad," 2024, pastel on Smoky Mountains map, 30 x 30 in.

Lisa Gleim & Michael Griffin Customs House Museum & Cultural Center
Clarksville, Tennessee
customshousemuseum.org
through early January, 2025

This season the Customs House Museum & Cultural Center is bringing the great outdoors inside with two solo exhibitions:

Lisa Gleim (b. 1971), "Mountain Nomad," 2024, pastel on Smoky Mountains map, 30 x 30 in.
Lisa Gleim (b. 1971), “Mountain Nomad,” 2024, pastel on Smoky Mountains map, 30 x 30 in.

Up first is “Lisa Gleim: Keeper of the Animals” (through January 1), which highlights this Georgia artist who works in oils and pastels. The show stems from her having previously won the People’s Choice Award during an American Women Artists exhibition at the Customs House, and now she is presenting 18 wildlife scenes. All relate to Native American lore and involve her application of paint to the surfaces of maps and boards, which are fascinating in their own right.

Michael Griffin (b. 1979), "Heights of Switzerland," 2021, oil on linen, 37 x 31 1/2 in.
Michael Griffin (b. 1979), “Heights of Switzerland,” 2021, oil on linen, 37 x 31 1/2 in.

Also on view is “Michael Griffin: A Wandering Palette” (through January 5), which focuses on this native and resident of Nashville best known for landscape oil paintings. At 16, Griffin spent seven weeks backpacking through the American West alone, and later he studied with such masters as Scott Christensen, Ralph Oberg, and Matt Smith. Over the years he has traveled widely, painting scenes in Tennessee, the Carolinas, Wyoming, Canada, Europe, Barbados, and Costa Rica.

 

Salisbury Sees Private Art Collection

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Art Collection - Claude Monet, “La Seine à Argenteuil,” 1877, Oil on canvas, 25 1/2 × 36 1/4 inches
Claude Monet, “La Seine à Argenteuil,” 1877, Oil on canvas, 25 1/2 × 36 1/4 inches

Waterworks Exhibition Brings Masterpieces from Private Art Collection to Salisbury, North Carolina

Waterworks Visual Arts Center has announced a yearlong exhibition of paintings and sculptures from the private collection of the late New York philanthropists Julian and Josie Robertson.

“Never Before Seen…Modern Masterpieces” will include forty works by 28 leading European modernists, including such greats as Kandinsky, Monet, Picasso, and de Kooning. Spanning more than a century of art history, the exhibition will introduce viewers to several pivotal movements from French Impressionism to Abstract Expressionism. The show is on view through August 30, 2025.

Paul Signac, “Port-en-Bessin – Les rochers du Calvados,” 1883, Oil on canvas, 17 3/4 × 25 inches
Paul Signac, “Port-en-Bessin – Les rochers du Calvados,” 1883, Oil on canvas, 17 3/4 × 25 inches

Julian and Josie Robertson began collecting art in the 1980s, after Julian founded the hedge fund Tiger Management. His success with Tiger not only enabled the couple to build their collection, but also to become two of the nation’s top philanthropists. Together, the Robertsons supported a wide range of causes, including medical science, education, the environment, and the arts, as well organizations combatting poverty.

Although many of these initiatives were national or even global in scale, the Robertsons never forgot Salisbury, the town where Julian was born and raised. It was here that he learned the importance of community from his parents, Blanche and Julian Robertson, both of whom were active members of the town’s church and civic life. Blanche was also instrumental in the establishment of Waterworks as a regionally recognized organization in the late 1970s.

View more art collection profiles here at FineArtConnoisseur.com.

Virtual Gallery Walk for November 22nd, 2024

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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.

South Kaibab Descent, John Lasater, oil on linen, 30 x 40 in; Grand Canyon Conservancy’s Celebration of Art

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Abundance, Jean Chambers, oil, 14.5 x 24 in; Artzline.com

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American Spirit, Frank DiVita, bronze, 14 x 10.75 x 9.75 in; Artzline.com

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Her Water Garden, Kathleen Kalinowski oil on linen, 24 x 30 in; Kalinowski Fine Art

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Ideas In Waiting, Brian McClear, oil on canvas, 48 x 48 in; Brian McClear

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Deep Woods, Albert Handell, oil, 28 x 28 in; Albert Handell

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.

Dawn Whitelaw: A Journey Through Art and Teaching

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Artist Dawn Whitelaw / Fine Art Connoisseur Lifetime Achievement Award
Artist Dawn Whitelaw painting en plein air

At Realism Live recently, Eric Rhoads and Peter Trippi awarded artist Dawn Whitelaw with the Fine Art Connoisseur Magazine Lifetime Achievement Award. Enjoy the following presentation that honors her journey:

Early Influences and Education

Dawn Whitelaw was born in 1945 to a mother who painted and wrote poetry, and a father who was a surgeon with a strong artistic side. Even her younger brothers are creative to this day.

While painting didn’t come into Dawn’s life until later, she was a ‘maker’ from very early on. Eventually, her father offered to pay for her college education in the arts, but with the agreement that Dawn would also pursue training as a teacher, which she says was “out-of-the-box thinking for a girl in the 60’s.”

She went on to earn a BA at Nashville’s Christian-focused Lipscomb University, LU, in 1967. There, she met Clay Whitelaw, with whom she later married and had their daughter, Benja.

And despite the fact that she swore she’d never teach, it turned out to be something she truly has a passion for to this day.

Dawn Whitelaw teaching art

First Steps Into the Art World

Dawn augmented her LU training by taking printmaking and sculpture classes at George Peabody College, which is now part of Vanderbilt University. Having trained primarily in graphic design, she duly landed a job creating pen-and-ink illustrations for the Yellow Pages.

Next came employment in a small advertising firm, then a stint as interim art director for a Nashville magazine. In 1987 she decided to “up her own game” by attending workshops all over the country. She was an enthusiastic and quick learner. On the side, Dawn taught as an adjunct at LU through 1999.

Mentorship and Artistic Growth

In the following years, Dawn took workshops with Raymond Everett Kinstler, whom today she describes as her mentor. She says, “I can’t even tell you how he shaped my path as a painter. I asked him, ‘How can I be a better portrait painter?’ And he replied, ‘Get out and paint the landscape.’ And that led me down another wonderful path.”

A visit to Dawn’s studio will reveal that she paints not only landscapes and portraits but also interiors, architectural paintings, still life, and even abstracts and experimental works.

Today most of the paintings she sells via galleries are landscapes — some created entirely en plein air. Dawn is unapologetically devoted to a late-19th-century aesthetic that highlights the way light and colors capture our eye.

"Farmhouse Fragments" by Dawn Whitelaw
“Farmhouse Fragments” by Dawn Whitelaw

Connecting with Portrait Subjects

When it comes to portraiture, Dawn says that along with sketchpads, paints, and brushes, one needs to bring sensitivity. Kinstler taught her the importance of aspects such as the way subjects tend to hold their head or posture, or what topic makes their eyes light up. Whenever possible, Dawn travels to meet her sitters, sketching them on site, taking reference photographs, talking with them about their interests, and seeing the clothes and backgrounds they prefer.

She brings the same attentiveness to detail to her landscapes. She says, “You might see a pretty scene, but what was it that made you want to paint it? The more you can connect personally and emotionally with the subject, the more it carries over to the canvas.”

Portrait painting of Lloyd Richards, by Dawn Whitelaw
Portrait painting of Lloyd Richards, by Dawn Whitelaw

Continuous Learning and Inspiration

Although Dawn continues teaching, she still attends workshops offered by others and is inspired by her peers and students alike. She says, “I learn more than just what the teacher is teaching, but also how students react to different approaches. This experience fine-tunes my own teaching.”

Dawn’s approach reminds us that learning never ends — there is always more growth ahead, no matter how talented one already is.

Dawn Whitelaw is a member of the Plein Air Painters of the Southeast, the Chestnut Group, Portrait Society of America, Oil Painters of America, and the Artist’s Fellowship. She has been featured as faculty for Plein Air South and the Plein Air Convention and Expo. In 2016, the American Impressionist Society elected her to Master status and she has a painting in the permanent collection of the Rahr-West Art Museum.

"Like a Vapor" by Dawn Whitelaw, Fine Art Connoisseur Lifetime Achievement Award
“Like a Vapor” by Dawn Whitelaw

From Fine Art Connoisseur

It is our pleasure to present Dawn Whitelaw with the Fine Art Connoisseur Magazine Lifetime Achievement Award.

See more from the artist at www.dawnwhitelaw.com.

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

American Art from the DeMell Jacobsen Collection

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American art - Play at Dark - Allan Rohan Crite
Allan Rohan Crite (American, 1910–2007). "Play at Dark," 1935, oil on canvas board. Courtesy of the Thomas H. and Diane DeMell Jacobsen PhD Foundation.

The Asheville Art Museum has announced the opening of “American Made: Paintings and Sculpture from the DeMell Jacobsen Collection,” which was initially scheduled for October 17 but briefly delayed due to Tropical Storm Helene. “American Made” is on view now through February 10, 2025.

Basket of Apples - William McCloskey
William J. McCloskey (American, 1859-1941). “Basket of Apples,” 1896, oil on canvas. Courtesy of the Thomas H. and Diane DeMell Jacobsen PhD Foundation.

From the museum:

With more than 80 paintings and sculptures, American Made traces the evolution of American art from the colonial era to the early 20th century, bringing together masterpieces from the renowned DeMell Jacobsen Collection.

American art - Charles Ethan Porter (American, 1847-1923). Sunflowers, circa 1880s, oil on linen canvas. Courtesy of the Thomas H. and Diane DeMell Jacobsen PhD Foundation.
Charles Ethan Porter (American, 1847-1923). “Sunflowers,” circa 1880s, oil on linen canvas. Courtesy of the Thomas H. and Diane DeMell Jacobsen PhD Foundation.

Highlights of American Made include:

• Striking portraits by artists such as Benjamin West, Thomas Sully, and Sarah Miriam Peale.
• Majestic landscapes by Thomas Cole, Asher B. Durand, and Jasper Francis Cropsey.
• Still lifes by Severin Roesen, Charles Ethan Porter, and Adelaide Coburn Palmer.

John Frederick Kensett (American, 1816-72). Singing Beach & Eagle Rock, Magnolia, Massachusetts, 1864, oil on canvas. Courtesy of the Thomas H. and Diane DeMell Jacobsen PhD Foundation.
John Frederick Kensett (American, 1816-72). “Singing Beach & Eagle Rock, Magnolia, Massachusetts,” 1864, oil on canvas. Courtesy of the Thomas H. and Diane DeMell Jacobsen PhD Foundation.

Additionally, visitors will encounter captivating genre scenes and works by artists who traveled to Europe, including Mary Cassatt, John Singer Sargent, and Childe Hassam. This remarkable exhibition unites some of the best of American art history in a single collection, that have been on view at institutions like the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Smithsonian American Art Museum.

For more information, please visit www.ashevilleart.org.

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View more art museum announcements here at FineArtConnoisseur.com.

Inaugural Exhibition Highlights Brooklyn Artists

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Tabitha Whitley, "Botanic Luncheon," 2024, oil on canvas; courtesy of the artist
Tabitha Whitley, "Botanic Luncheon," 2024, oil on canvas; image courtesy of the artist

On View through January 26, 2025:
The Brooklyn Artists Exhibition
The Brooklyn Museum, NY
www.brooklynmuseum.org

“Attending the opening, walking through the museum and viewing all the artists’ work with my family, colleagues, friends, and fellow art lovers last weekend, was incredible,” said participating artist Sharon Sprung. “Brooklyn is home. Visit the exhibition soon. It’s a must-see.”

Sharon Sprung, “Emergence," Oil on Panel, 36 x 40 in.
Sharon Sprung, “Emergence,” Oil on Panel, 36 x 40 in.

From the museum:

Uniting more than 200 artists, this major group show highlights the remarkable creativity and diversity of Brooklyn’s populace. The exhibition kicks off our 200th anniversary celebration and carries on the Brooklyn Museum’s tradition of amplifying voices from every corner of our community.

Spotlighting artists who have lived or maintained a studio in Brooklyn during the last five years (2019–24), “The Brooklyn Artists Exhibition” honors the borough’s dynamic present, storied past, and bright future.

Selected by a committee led by esteemed artists Jeffrey Gibson, Vik Muniz, Mickalene Thomas, and Fred Tomaselli, participants represent a full range of disciplines, from drawing and painting to sculpture, video, installation, and beyond. Their creations tackle themes that resonate on both local and global levels—migration and memory, identity and history, uncertainty and turbulence, healing and joy. Together these works capture the vibrancy of both Brooklyn and its artists, who are bound by deep-rooted connections and a shared love of this singular place.

Sophia Wallace, "Swan Series (Black Opal)," 2022, glazed stoneware, image courtesy of the artist
Sophia Wallace, “Swan Series (Black Opal),” 2022, glazed stoneware, image courtesy of the artist

Before you visit, take a virtual tour of the exhibition to get acquainted with the featured artists and their contributions.

Plus, check out highlights and reflections from selected artists in the digital guide on Bloomberg Connects.

Virtual Gallery Walk for November 15th, 2024

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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.

Inspiration, Bonnie McGee, oil on canvas, 24 x 36 in; Grand Canyon Conservancy’s Celebration of Art

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Cold Never Bothered Me, Linda Besse, oil, 14 x 18 in; Linda Besse

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Sombras de la Tarde, George Hallmark, oil, 24 x 30 in; Artzline.com

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Dog Tired, Ron Stewart, bronze, 12 x 12 x 13 in; Artzline.com

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Beach Dance, Rosanne Wolfe, oil on canvas,11 x 14 in; Rosanne Wolfe Fine Art

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.

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