Edmund C. Tarbell (1862–1938), "In the Station Waiting Room, Boston," c. 1915, oil on canvas, 24 3/8 x 32 in., Crocker Art Museum, Sacramento, gift of Dr. Joseph R. Fazzano. 1956.7
The title says it all. “All Aboard: The Railroad in American Art, 1840–1955” is the touring exhibition premiering this summer at Vermont’s Shelburne Museum, an institution that has long celebrated various modes of transportation. On view are more than 50 works by major artists who witnessed the railroad’s expansion and impact for themselves. The exhibition is on view through October 13, 2024.
Starting with trains’ emergence as a technological marvel, the project traces the anxiety felt by such Hudson River School masters as Thomas Cole and George Inness about the railroad’s profound impact on nature. Yet colleagues such as Albert Bierstadt were enthralled by the Western landscapes that trains made it easier to reach, while early 20th-century talents such as Edward Hopper, Reginald Marsh, George Bellows, John Sloan, and Jacob Lawrence relished the constant movement of freight and people.
Ben Shahn, Thomas Hart Benton, and others portrayed railroad workers as modern-day heroes, while contemporaries like Georgia O’Keeffe, John Marin, and Joseph Stella stripped the machine forms down to highlight their power. It’s not all roses: the show also explores how railroads damaged Native cultures and contributed to wealth inequality nationwide.
“All Aboard” has been organized by Shelburne in partnership with the Dixon Gallery and Gardens (Memphis) and Joslyn Art Museum (Omaha), where it will appear later.
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.
The Cannery Lady – First Heroic Monument Honoring Working Women, Non-Military, Antioch, CA, Elizabeth MacQueen, bronze, painted bronze, stainless steel, concrete ,18 x 5 x 8’; Elizabeth MacQueen
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The Window, Emma Kalff, oil on panel, 24 x 24 x 1in; Abend Gallery
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Evening Awaits, John Budicin, oil, 9 x 12 in; Huse Skelly Gallery
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Swine Song, Sandy Scott, bronze #18/100, 9.5 h x 9.5 w x 6.5 deep; Artzline.com
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.
John Cosby (b. 1955), "Walking Avalon," 2020, oil on canvas panel, 12 x 16 in.
An Art Collection Profile >
Celeste and Graham Gilles were both raised in California by parents who owned, in her words, “beautiful contemporary plein air art, so for us to start collecting and appreciating it together was easy.” Celeste particularly recalls admiring a tonalist nocturne painted by the California master Granville Redmond (1871–1935), which depicts Lover’s Cove on Catalina Island. Her maternal great-grandparents had purchased it directly from Redmond to “help out their artist friend,” as they were all part of the deaf community in Los Angeles.
Celeste and Graham Gilles
Today most of Celeste and Graham’s artworks depict Catalina Island, where her family has a long history, or Laguna Beach; a few are related to another scenic area nearby, Santa Barbara. All, Celeste says, are “locations we love and appreciate.” Represented in their collection today are such talents as Carl Bretzke, John Budicin, Hiu Lai Chong, John Cosby, Kathleen Dunphy, Aimee Erickson, Andy Evansen, Jeremy Harper, Willis Heaton, Debra Huse, Ryan Jensen, Paul Kratter, Peggi Kroll-Roberts, Daniel Marshall, Terry Miura, Dan Mondloch, Michael Obermeyer, Colin Page, Joe Paquet, Jesse Powell, Ray Roberts, Frank Serrano, Jeff Sewell, Matt Smith, J. Ken Spencer, Bryan Mark Taylor, Wendy Wirth, and Jeff Yeomans.
Celeste has been the driving force behind the couple’s art collection. “There is,” she explains, “not a single piece on our walls that I don’t have some personal connection to, or a story about. My first clear memory of purchasing plein air art was at what is now called The Wildside Show, which benefits the Santa Catalina Island Conservancy. John Cosby’s ‘Last Light’ reminded me so much of how Avalon’s Crescent Avenue looks before the crowded day boats arrive. It’s a perfect representation of how light should be painted.”
Cosby is connected to yet another superlative, the only painting Celeste and Graham have purchased online, sight unseen. That moment came in 2020, when The Wildside Show went virtual due to the pandemic. Celeste recalls, “I was already so familiar with John’s work that I knew I would love his ‘Walking Avalon,’ which depicts the direct path I take home; in fact, our family home is vaguely represented in his painting.” She wisely bought an early-access ticket to the show specifically so she would not miss the opportunity to buy “Walking Avalon,” and when she later picked it up at Cosby’s studio, she was not disappointed. Then Celeste felt “even more lucky to have it when John mentioned that another collector had wanted it but had not purchased the early-access ticket!”
For the last several years, all of the Gilles’ acquisitions have been through The Wildside Show or exhibitions mounted by the Laguna Plein Air Painters Association (LPAPA), where Celeste started volunteering in 2013, first on its Invitational planning committee, and then on its board of directors, where she currently serves as vice president. LPAPA, she notes, “has given me the opportunity to know all of our artists well — relationships I treasure.” The couple have even hosted some artists at the Catalina family home while they paint for The Wildside Show, among them Aimee Erickson, Willis Heaton, Debra Huse, Michael Obermeyer, Colin Page, and Lisa Skelley.
Jesse Powell (b. 1977), “Last Light in Avalon,” 2013, oil on canvas, 16 x 24 in.
One of Celeste and Graham’s favorite works is Jesse Powell’s “Last Light in Avalon,” which she calls “a magical painting of Catalina.” It was purchased at LPAPA’s Invitational in 2014, when Celeste “was not particularly familiar with his work.” She says, “It was early in our collecting, and the painting was way over what we had budgeted, but I just couldn’t let it go. I have never thought once again about how much we paid; in fact, I don’t even remember. Now it hangs prominently above the fireplace in our living room, and whenever our fellow art lovers come over in the evening, I will dim the lights over the painting and show them how its colors change. It’s stunning!” She was deeply touched when Powell later “gave us the small study he made for ‘Last Light in Avalon’, which we also display near the fireplace.”
Celeste says her friendship with Aimee Erickson has grown during the artist’s several visits to Catalina: “I particularly love the way she viewed the island upon seeing it for the first time. She is still in awe of its beauty, a feeling I share every time I am there, too.” Not surprisingly, one of the Gilles’ favorite Laguna paintings is Erickson’s “Before Sunrise,” which won Best in Show at LPAPA’s 2017 Invitational.
Speaking of LPAPA, Celeste and Graham deeply admire the collections of their friends Toni and Steve Kellenberg and Mary Linda and Jay Strotkamp; both couples are also LPAPA supporters who have been profiled in Fine Art Connoisseur. Celeste laughs, “Graham does not think we have any more wall space, but after his first visit to the Strotkamps’ house, he now understands why I argue this point. Every few years I rehang everything, and every time I find new appreciation. But hanging a new purchase is always challenging. In 2021 we bought a Carl Bretzke painting that just sat on the floor until about a month ago. I could not figure out where to hang it, but then it occurred to me that the frame was all wrong. So I had it reframed and then knew right where it should go!”
Looking toward the future, Celeste says she has commissioned a couple of paintings. “Though I love them now, my initial reaction was never what I was expecting, so it would have to be under unique circumstances for us to commission again.” Interestingly, the Gilles own no works by historical artists, but “we aspire to get there,” Celeste confides. “And I hope that someday I don’t have to arm-wrestle my siblings for the Redmond.” That would indeed be an ideal acquisition, bringing together artists of very different eras who revere the astounding natural beauty of Southern California.
Dave English, “An Eagle’s View,” Oil, 12x16 in., First Place Overall, $600 Cash Prize
We’d like to congratulate Dave English for winning Overall First Place in the April 2024 PleinAir® Salon, judged by Curator and Art Connoisseur Richard Montoux.
“I found that this piece was well realized mastering elements such as the clouds, the atmosphere, the light, the perspective, and the composition,” Montoux said of “An Eagle’s View.”
Dave English on “An Eagle’s View”
“The 2021 Driggs Plein Air Festival started with stormy weather that was to clear out the following day. Light is everything in a painting so I wanted to portray the dramatic view of the iconic Grand Teton from Table Mountain by capturing the breaking light when the storm dissipated. To do this, I climbed the long 7-hour, 6.5-mile hike to the 11,000 ft. Table Mountain, in the storm.
“I spent that night listening to the voice of the Almighty as a severe lighting storm filled with thunder, downpours, grapple, and wind lasted all night long. The following morning, I rose to such a green, cold, wet environment that it was as if the mountain had its first drink of water for the year.
“Right on cue, the storm started breaking and shafts of morning light illuminated the Grand Teton through the parting clouds. All morning long I scrambled to capture the light, values, and colors as fast as I could while the sporadic sunlight opened and closed on the peak. A mist rose from the valley floor offering a design element of soft edges vs. the hard edges of the mountain.
“I observed an eagle soaring below and thus was the inspiration for the title, ‘An Eagles View.’ I finished the painting by strategically inserting the eagle in the composition to add interest and perspective. I was fortunate to be favored with the view and light that I had hoped for because light is everything to a successful painting.”
Dave English, “Yellowstone Falls,” 10 x 14 in., plein airDave English, “Rabbit Brush,” 12 x 16 in., plein air
“Most of my plein air paintings are simple gouache or oil studies that record, values, colors, masses, and designs to act as reference reminders for finished work in the studio, not for public viewing,” Dave said. “However, plein air festivals cause one to push the work to a more polished state. Sometimes that means two or three sessions in the same light (or maybe spending the night waiting for the right light).”
Study for “Redfish Lake,” gouache, 4 x 6 in.Dave English, “Redfish Lake,” 24 x 36 in., studio
Dave continued, “My process in plein air painting is finding and organizing the masses in an interesting way to support a subject or ‘main show,’ always mindful to apply the foundational principles of successful painting, i.e. solid design, composition, values, color, and draftsmanship. Just like our bodies, without these ‘bones’ a painting falls apart. These foundational principles apply regardless of media, subject, style, or genre. Finally, ‘light,’ and how it’s recognized, how you apply or edit, and emphasize it is everything.”
Dave English, “Canyon Runoff,” 10 x 10 in., plein air
About the Artist: Dave English is a landscape, wildlife, and western artist who has been painting professionally for over 45 years. He attended Utah State University as an Illustration major learning from masters Glen Edwards, Put Putman, Harrison Groutage, David Grove, Bruce Wolfe, Bob Peak, Mark English, and many more top illustrators of the day. Dave went on to illustrate for the entertainment, editorial, and advertising industries for many years and has received recognition for his illustrations and fine art alike with numerous awards from the New York Society of Illustrators and various design conferences to different fine art shows and plein air events. His work is found in many permanent and private collections nationwide. Presently Dave dedicates his time to teaching workshops and painting landscapes, wildlife, and western subjects in a variety of mediums from his Idaho studio where he continues to observe, study, learn, and create.
About the PleinAir Salon:
In the spirit of the French Salon created by the Academie des Beaux-Arts in Paris, this annual online art competition, with 11 monthly cycles, leading to the annual Salon Grand Prize winners, is designed to stimulate artistic growth through competition. The competition rewards artists with $50,000 in cash prizes and exposure of their work, with the winning painting featured on the cover of PleinAir® Magazine.
Winners in each monthly competition may receive recognition and exposure through PleinAir Magazine’s print magazine, e-newsletters, websites, and social media. Winners of each competition will also be entered into the annual competition. The Annual Awards will be presented live at the next Plein Air Convention & Expo.
The next round of the PleinAir Salon has begun so hurry, as this competition ends on the last day of the month. Enter your best art in the PleinAir Salon here.
Jennifer Balkan, “Thoughts in Green and Blue (Study for Thoughts in Grey, One),” 2023, oil, acrylic paint pens, acrylic and spray paint on panel, 24 x 18 in.
The Wausau Museum of Contemporary Art is presenting recent works by Jennifer Balkan (b. 1970), who grew up near New York City and is based in Austin. On view, “Thoughts in Between” features figurative paintings with deftly managed coloration and thought bubbles derived from comic books that let us know the subject is actively thinking.
Jennifer Balkan, “Thoughts in Blue, Three,” 2023, oil, acrylic, and spray paint on panel, 30 x 20 in.
“My newest body of work has been a journey that started in 2019 after I lost my dog companion and then took a turn once the pandemic struck, as I picked up another medium during isolation, fueling me to consider drawing in a way that would live side by side with painting,” Balkan said. “Within this time period, I created ‘Pandemonium,’ figurative paintings with graphic elements reminiscent of comic book art of the 1960s.
“I wanted to continue this thread where the viewer sees the subjects as actively thinking and the figures communicate across canvases — on a wall. I also wanted to merge my new obsession with paint pens with my beloved oil paint. Together on spray-painted elegant damask patterns, I intended it to evoke thoughts of mural art I imagined these images as those band and theater flyers I grew up seeing in Manhattan, posters layered on top of one another, peeling away, causing me to think about the sometimes-ephemeral nature of images.
“The thought bubbles illustrate the active thoughts of my subjects and the shared thoughts between subjects, between canvases. The individual portraits and figures have fully chromatic faces but live within limited and selected color palettes, monochrome and duochrome — playing with the psychological impact of isolating color.”
Also included is a group of works proposing a world in which dogs are the active thinkers, with humans along in supporting roles. “The highly chromatic dog paintings offer a world in which the dogs are subjects, and their humans reside in their world, encapsulating the closeness that is between dogs and humans,” Balkan said. “The dogs here are the active thinkers who draw the viewer’s attention. Chroma is pushed heavily adding to the dreamlike sentiment of these works.”
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.
A Still Life, 2024, Patricia Schappler, oil on cradled board, 36 × 48 in; 33 Contemporary
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Ladybird, Lisa Kovvuri, oil on aluminum, 16 x 20 in; Lisa Kovvuri
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Copper Pot, David Leffel, oil, 14 x 18 in; Artzline.com
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.
Carl Rungius (1869–1959), "Morning Mist (Harlow Triptych)," c. 1930, oil on canvas, 47 x 79 1/2 in., JKM Collection, National Museum of Wildlife Art, Jackson, Wyoming
Wildlife Art on View > The Briscoe Western Art Museum in San Antonio is set to open a major loan exhibition titled “Survival of the Fittest: Envisioning Wildlife and Wilderness with the Big Four,” through September 8, 2024.
On view will be more than 50 works created by a quartet of masters who rewrote the book — so to speak — on the painting of wildlife worldwide. They were the German-American artist Carl Rungius (1869–1959), the Germans Richard Friese (1854–1918) and Wilhelm Kuhnert (1865–1926), and Sweden’s Bruno Liljefors (1860–1939).
Part of a remarkable generation, they are especially admired for their unprecedented ability to show creatures in their natural habitat, integrating them into the greater whole rather than isolating them like anatomical specimens.
These works have been borrowed from the only two museums anywhere that own masterpieces by every member of this elite: the Rijksmuseum Twenthe in Enschede, Netherlands, and the National Museum of Wildlife Art in Jackson, Wyoming.
Located along the San Antonio River Walk, the Briscoe’s main building was constructed in the 1930s as a public library. After an extensive renovation, the museum opened in 2013. The institution is named in honor of the late Texas Governor Dolph Briscoe, Jr., and his wife, Janey Slaughter Briscoe, who envisioned a museum that would share the story of Western heritage and the extraordinary people behind it. The institution has recently produced the first publication surveying its growing permanent collection.
How do you find inspiration? Carrie Lacey Boerio: For me, flowers are the ultimate visual inspiration with their exquisite colors and forms. Emotionally, they offer me even more. I spent much of my youth at my aunt and uncle’s nursery and greenhouse. It was a place of natural beauty and unconditional love. This converges with my love of color to make me inspired by every garden and bouquet I see. I paint my own flowers from life and take hundreds of reference photos everywhere I go.
How did you develop your unique style?
Carrie Lacey Boerio: As a self-taught artist, I seek instruction and experiment on my own. To paint the radiant, stained-glass colors in flowers, I’ve discovered the intensity of acrylic inks on a white canvas. In oils, I start with saturated transparent color or apply it as a glaze at the end. I learned combining realism with abstraction in my compositions feels most natural. My flowers are lovingly observed in detail, while the backgrounds are invented or abstracted to support the emotion of the work. My painting process is a meditative one where I enjoy the luxury of taking my time and delighting in my subject. The more I look, the more I see.
Carrie Lacey Boerio, The Stage Is Set, acrylic ink on canvas, 15 x 30 in; 2022; available through artistCarrie Lacey Boerio, Fresh-Picked Tulips, oil on canvas, 24 x 36 in; 2023; available through artist
“Malibu Mountains,” Laurie Hendricks, oil on canvas, 18 x 36 in; available through artist
Laurie Hendricks: There is nothing like painting from life. I enjoy traveling and painting the landscapes, to try and capture the light on the hills, water, buildings and people. Paintings are like short stories to me, they communicate a feeling, a memory, a place to use your imagination. These paintings are my impressions, I hope you enjoy them.
“ Busy Day at DCA,” Catherine Hillis, watercolor, 21 x 14 in; available at the Transparent Watercolor Society Annual Exhibition at the Kenosha Museum, WI
Catherine Hillis:Busy Day At DCA: The interior of Reagan National Airport by Catherine Hillis, was the 3rd place winner overall in the December 2023 PleinAir Salon. Hillis is fascinated by the interplay of light and reflections and the beauty in an everyday scene that is often ignored.
Conversations In An Irish Bar: This painting will be featured in the “Interiors Exhibition” at Calloway Fine Art in Washington, DC from June 22 – July 20, 2024. Exploring light and reflections along with an excellent story all make for this rich watercolor painting.
Morning Hustle: This interior of National Airport in Washington, DC, was the Best Building winner in the November 2023 PleinAir Salon. The magnificent architecture and the play of light and reflections present rich subject matter for this artist.
“Conversations In An Irish Bar,” Catherine Hillis, watercolor, 19 x 13 in; available at Calloway Fine Art, Washington, DC“Morning Hustle,” Catherine Hillis, watercolor, 18 x 13 in; available through the artist
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