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34th Annual Celebration of Fine Art

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Fine Art - Robin Damore at work
Robin Damore at work

Entering its 34th year, Celebration of Fine Art is Arizona’s longest-running art show. It gathers 100 wide-ranging artists who spend 10 weeks creating work in front of visitors.

Guests can ask questions while they work and observe demonstrations of woodturning, welding, and glass blowing. The one-acre sculpture garden features nearly 100 pieces, and the cafe serves meals and wine. View a digital version of the program at https://bit.ly/3Su3ix9.

Open through March 24, 2024

Keepsies, Jenny Stewart, oil on canvas, 48 x 48 in; Celebration of Fine Art

More from the organizers:

The Celebration of Fine Art has established a rich history in Scottsdale, attracting thousands of visitors from around the world each year who come to experience the uplifting spirit of connection that is unique to the show. Recognized by its signature “big white tents” and distinctive sculpture garden, the show houses 40,000 square feet of diverse works of art ranging from realist to impressionistic, Western realism, and abstract to contemporary across all mediums from stone to metal, wood to glass, and canvas.

Elizabeth Butler, "Kumquat Safari," 2022, oil and copper leaf on board, 30 x 60 in.
Elizabeth Butler, “Kumquat Safari,” 2022, oil and copper leaf on board, 30 x 60 in.

“Very early on, we recognized that the Celebration of Fine Art was much more than an art show––it was an enchanting place where people would come to be uplifted by the art and the connection,” said Susan Morrow Potje, co-owner and show director. “Over our 34-year history, we’ve consistently heard from visitors and artists that it’s the experience, and spirit of discovery and connection that keeps them coming back. It’s truly a magical place that has to be experienced, as words alone are not enough to describe it.”

Matt Sievers with Visitors at the Celebration of Fine Art
Matt Sievers with Visitors at the Celebration of Fine Art

The Celebration of Fine Art is a juried, invitational show that has come to be recognized for its diverse array of exceptional art, but more importantly for its interactive and uplifting atmosphere that encourages connection between art lovers and artists. It’s the unique atmosphere and opportunity to learn, connect and engage that has made the Celebration of Fine Art a true destination and tradition for a diverse range of art lovers who come to simply admire art or expand their collection.

The show is also home to the ever-popular Art Discovery Series, a live and interactive series in which guests get to learn about the adventures, stories, and processes that shape art. Each week, artists discuss specific topics such as sculpture making, metalworking, jewelry, abstract art, and historic- and culturally influenced art, to name a few.

David Jackson, "Carolina Landing," oil, 18 x 24 in.
David Jackson, “Carolina Landing,” oil, 18 x 24 in.

Throughout the 10 weeks, guests can also catch artist demonstrations of their process, attend an Art Discovery Series, which is held each Friday from 4 p.m. to 5 p.m., walk the outdoor sculpture garden, which features nearly 100 pieces of life-sized and monumental sculpture, and enjoy lunch or wine in the cafe.

The show is open to guests of all ages. Tickets are $10 for adults, $8 for seniors and military, and children under 12 are admitted for free. Tickets are all-event passes, good for the entire 10-week show during which attendees will have the opportunity to see art transform and meet the artists. For those who can’t make it to the show, the Celebration of Fine Art also features artists on its online marketplace.

Fleeting Presence: The Liminal Art of Daniel Sprick

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Daniel Sprick, Self Portrait with Death, 2003-2023, oil on canvas. Collection of the artist.
Daniel Sprick, "Self Portrait with Death," 2003-2023, oil on canvas. Collection of the artist.

Organized by a cohort of sixteen students from the School of Art & Art History at the University of Denver, this exhibition explores formal and thematic tensions in the work of Colorado artist Daniel Sprick.

Daniel Sprick, “Sleeping Flowers (Vanitas),” 2002, oil on canvas. Madden Collection at the University of Denver (2016.1.72).
Daniel Sprick, “Sleeping Flowers (Vanitas),” 2002, oil on canvas. Madden Collection at the University of Denver (2016.1.72).

More from the organizers:

Through his adept handling of form, space, color, and light, Daniel Sprick creates hauntingly beautiful paintings rooted in the realism of Dutch artists like Johannes Vermeer. His paintings reflect our world back to us, but it’s a world imbued with hints of melancholy and hidden meaning. Embracing ambiguity, Sprick’s art brings together seeming opposites – life and death, stillness and dynamism, transience, and permanence – transforming our everyday existence into something magical and mysterious.

Daniel Sprick, “Gas Station on Federal Blvd.,” 2016, oil on board. Collection of the artist.
Daniel Sprick, “Gas Station on Federal Blvd.,” 2016, oil on board. Collection of the artist.

Curated by: Lauren Anuszewski, Sydney Barofsky, Alex Blom, Seb Brady, Lexi Ferenzi, Morgan Fleetwood, McKenna Gale, James Grau, Allene Leak, Patrick Lucas, Sydney McCain, Anna McDonald, Claire Motsinger, Andrew Nadeau, Emily Oxford-Pickeral, and Jordan Reed.

Daniel Sprick, “Sight Size,” 2020, oil on board. Courtesy of Gerald Peters Gallery.
Daniel Sprick, “Sight Size,” 2020, oil on board. Courtesy of Gerald Peters Gallery.
Daniel Sprick, “Shadow Flower Still Life,” 2019. Oil on canvas. Courtesy of the artist.
Daniel Sprick, “Shadow Flower Still Life,” 2019. Oil on canvas. Courtesy of the artist.
Daniel Sprick, “In Search of an Honest Man,” 2017-2018, oil on canvas. Courtesy of the artist.
Daniel Sprick, “In Search of an Honest Man,” 2017-2018, oil on canvas. Courtesy of the artist.

Fleeting Presence: The Liminal Art of Daniel Sprick
Exhibition at the Madden Museum of Art
University of Denver, Greenwood Village, CO
On view through May 3, 2024
More details: www.maddenmuseum.com


Portraits with Daniel Sprick is your opportunity to experience portraits through the lens of Daniel’s unique thought process, giving you insights that could transform the way you approach your painting. Learn more about this art video workshop at PaintTube.tv.

The Laughing Cavalier’s 2024 European Tour

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Frans Hals, "The Laughing Cavalier," 1624, oil on canvas, 32 3/4 x 26 1/2 in., Wallace Collection, London
Frans Hals, "The Laughing Cavalier," 1624, oil on canvas, 32 3/4 x 26 1/2 in., Wallace Collection, London

A major retrospective of the painter Frans Hals (1582/84–1666) is traveling through Europe this year and well worth seeing. On view are approximately 50 of his greatest works, many loaned by leading museums that normally don’t let them out. The tour launched at London’s National Gallery, where it closed on January 21. It now heads to the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam (February 16–June 9) and finally to Berlin’s Gemäldegalerie (July 12–November 3).

Born in Antwerp but a longtime resident of Haarlem, just west of Amsterdam, Hals is admired for his bold, impressionistic brushwork and ability to capture the vitality of his subjects — who ranged from stately officials to giggling children — making them truly live and breathe on the canvas. His original approach earned him a reputation equaled only by the likes of Rembrandt in the Netherlands and Velázquez in Spain; not surprisingly, he became an in-demand portraitist among the wealthy citizenry of Haarlem and other cities nearby.

During the 18th century, Hals’s work gradually fell into obscurity, and it wasn’t until the next century that French art critic and journalist Théophile Thoré-Bürger rediscovered it, as well as that of Vermeer. Hals’s expressive, gestural brushwork powerfully influenced the French impressionists, and also Courbet, Manet, Whistler, and Sargent. Almost all of them made pilgrimages to the Frans Hals Museum in Haarlem to admire his portraits of individuals and civil militia groups, as visitors still can today.

Until the 1960s, Hals was regarded as one of the “big three” of 17th-century Dutch art, alongside Rembrandt and Vermeer. More recently, interest has dissipated, so this exhibition will introduce a new generation to his brilliance. Oddly, this is the first Hals exhibition to be staged in Amsterdam, where visitors are warmly encouraged to take the 20-minute train ride to Haarlem, too.

This tour marks the first time the painting illustrated above, “The Laughing Cavalier,” has returned to the Netherlands since it was purchased in 1865 by the 4th Marquess of Hertford, who created London’s Wallace Collection, where it resides today. A highlight of Hals’s career, this portrait stands apart for its lively immediacy and the intricacy of the costume depicted. Portrayed at age 26, the life-size sitter wears the latest French fashions accessible only to the Dutch elite. The picture was given its catchy title around 1888 and, despite the fact that the gentleman is neither laughing nor a “cavalier,” it has never been renamed.

Virtual Gallery Walk for January 19th, 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.

Dream on Dreamer, C.M. Cooper, oil on linen, 24 x 36 in; C.M. Cooper

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Keepsies, Jenny Stewart, oil on canvas, 48 x 48 in; Celebration of Fine Art

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Remember That Time, 2023, Emma Kalff, oil on panel, 24.50 x 21 x 1 in; Abend Gallery

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Sorrow, Yuehua He, oil painting, 30 x 24 in; Yuehua He

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Rosslyn in a Rosy Light, Jean Schwartz, oil on canvas, 32 x 32 in; Available at Calloway Fine Art and Consulting, Washington DC; Jean Schwartz

 

Open Pasture, Becky Pashia, oil on canvas, 30 x 40 in; Celebration of Fine Art
Chinese Pioneers– First Monument in USA honoring Chinese laborers building the Transcontinental Railroad from Promontory Summit, UT to Alameda/Oakland, CA, 1992-2000, Elizabeth MacQueen, Bronze, Stainless Steel, Wood, Iron, 12 x 9 x 5 ft; Elizabeth MacQueen 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.

Artist Spotlight: Denise Antaya

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Artist holding up painting in a gallery
Antaya holding “The Ninth Concession”, Private Beach, Nestled in the Trees

How do you find inspiration?
Denise Antaya: I am a nature lover, so the landscape is a never-ending source of inspiration. The way the light transforms an often-overlooked scene fascinates me. The way the seasons change the environment around me and challenges my abilities to portray what is seen is never boring. Trying to capture the beauty in nature is a lifetime endeavor, one that I will never master.

What is the best thing about being an artist?
Denise Antaya: The best thing about being an artist is to have the ability to take something that touches me and being able to express those feelings on canvas. Through art we can emotionally connect to others and see that we are not that different. Art brings hope in an ever-changing world.

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

oil painting of beach with landscape in background
Denise Antaya, “Private Beach,” oil on linen, 11 x 10.75 in., December 2023
oil paitning of house in background surrounded by rural land, trees and bushes, grass
Denise Antaya, “Nestled in the Trees,” oil on linen, 16 x 16 in., December 2023

Nordic Reflections: The Marine Paintings of Emil Carlsen

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Marine paintings by Emil Carlsen
Emil Carlsen, "Nantasket Beach," 1876, oil on canvas, 15 1/4 x 26 5/16 in., Art Institute of Chicago, Friends of the American Art Collection, 1940.1087

A look at the marine paintings and life of historic master Emil Carlsen

By Valerie Ann Leeds

Emil Carlsen, "The Surf," 1907, oil on canvas, 64 x 74 in., Butler Institute of American Art, Youngstown, Ohio
Emil Carlsen, “The Surf,” 1907, oil on canvas, 64 x 74 in., Butler Institute of American Art, Youngstown, Ohio

Lyricism, quietude, subtlety — these are the defining qualities of the landscape paintings of the Danish American artist (Søren) Emil Carlsen (1848–1932). In his lifetime, Carlsen was far better known for still life subjects, and the misconception that this was his primary genre has prevailed. In fact, landscapes represent a significant aspect of his production, including exceptional marine scenes painted throughout his career.

Warranting particular reappraisal are Carlsen’s compositions picturing open seas, coasts, and falls, which earned critical acclaim and bound him artistically to his Nordic seafaring heritage. Indeed, his life-long connections to Denmark supplied an essential foundation for his art and especially informed his marine paintings.

Carlsen was born in Copenhagen and studied architecture at the Royal Danish Academy for four years. He then turned to art, and although the circumstances prompting this shift are unknown, art was part of his heritage, as his mother and brother were painters. Carlsen studied under the marine painter Christian Vigilius Blache (1838–1920) from 1866 to 1869, but in 1872 he immigrated to the United States and settled in Chicago, where he trained with another Danish-born marine painter, Lauritz Holst (1848–1934). He also studied in Paris in 1875, and returned there from 1884 until 1886.

Although Carlsen developed a unique style, the influence of the two older Danes and the traditions of his homeland are evident in the emphasis he gave to the natural world (especially open space, water, and sky), in his minimal and harmonious compositions, and in their entrancing light and atmosphere. All are features found in much Scandinavian art.

Early Marine Scenes

In 1876, the earliest published account of Carlsen’s marine paintings appeared in the Boston Evening Transcript (he moved to Boston that year after living in Chicago for four years): “Carlsen … has two or three pictures nearly completed which will soon be placed on exhibition in one of our galleries. They are marine and shore views and are remarkably effective.”

Marine paintings by Emil Carlsen
Emil Carlsen, “Nantasket Beach,” 1876, oil on canvas, 15 1/4 x 26 5/16 in., Art Institute of Chicago, Friends of the American Art Collection, 1940.1087

His most noteworthy early water composition is a Massachusetts scene with a boat wreck on Nantasket Beach (1876). Created when he was only 28, it is arguably Carlsen’s first mature painting and possesses many of the hallmarks that became essential to his seascapes — the open and spare composition, wide expanse of sky, and horizontal stripe of land. The subtle palette and thin application of pigment are also typical of the technique seen in his early landscapes, but differ markedly from the dark, somber tonalities of his still life paintings.

Duncan Phillips, the critic, philanthropist, and (Carlsen’s later) patron who founded Washington, D.C.’s Phillips Collection, explained how the artist’s interest in landscape developed, noting that his early landscapes were executed in a manner that was “rather thin and tight, but of a fine tonality and sensitively observed. In those days, no one cared for ‘still life’ and he could not sell his canvases. The world might never have known his landscapes and ‘marines’ if the struggle had not become precarious, so that his friends advised him to abandon ‘still life’ for more popular subjects.”

Carlsen had painted maritime subjects even while in Denmark, as early as 1870. Once in America, he attempted to establish his reputation with still lifes; in fact, he submitted them almost exclusively to major annual shows at the National Academy of Design and Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts through the turn of the century. Yet, he continued painting waterscapes, as noted in 1883 in the Boston Sunday Globe: “It will be a loss to one branch of art if Mr. Carlsen gives up his still life-work [sic], but if he succeeds as well with marine subjects the gain will quite evenly balance the loss.”

After 1900, Carlsen became increasingly engaged with landscape and marine compositions and began showing fewer still lifes. It is possible that this shift was influenced partly by his friendship with American impressionist J. Alden Weir (1852–1919), which commenced around the same time. The two artists shared a poetic and suggestive approach to painting nature, although with different results.

Continue reading this article in Fine Art Connoisseur magazine (November / December 2022 issue)

Virtual Gallery Walk for January 12th, 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.

Espiritu Libre (Free Soul), 2023, Kate Van Doren, oil and Pan Pastel on dibond by @artefex art panel, 36 × 36 × 1.5 in; 33 Contemporary

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Beacon, Gregory Sievers, oil on canvas, 24 x 36 in; Celebration of Fine Art

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Winter Begins; Truckee River, Kathleen Dunphy, oil on linen, 24 x 48 in; American Legacy Fine Arts

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Two Cows, 2023, Emma Kalff, oil on canvas, 16 x 20 x 1 in, framed: 16.50 x 20.50 in; Abend Gallery

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Sorrow, Yuehua He, oil painting, 30 x 24 in; Yuehua He

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To the Moon, Mary Erickson, oil on linen, 30 x 40 in; American Tonalist Society

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.

The 2024 Arizona Fine Art Expo

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Sara Drahos (b. 2003), "Kobe Bryant," 2022, mixed media, 24 x 24 in.
Sara Drahos (b. 2003), "Kobe Bryant," 2022, mixed media, 24 x 24 in.

The Scottsdale-Phoenix region always booms at this time of year, and one of the season’s highlights will be the 20th annual Arizona Fine Art Expo.

In a magnificent desert setting, visitors come upon a series of big white tents covering 44,000 square feet. Inside are 124 studios occupied by more than 75 artists creating original works of fine art.

Coming from around the world, these talented people are glad to demonstrate their techniques and converse with visitors about what inspires them.

The pop-up campus also encompasses a sculpture garden with a koi pond and waterfalls, and visitors can enjoy the cafe, wine tastings, garden parties, book signings, and live music every weekend. A season pass costs only $12.

At a Glance:
Arizona Fine Art Expo
North Scottsdale
arizonafineartexpo.com
Through March 24, 2024

View fine art auctions and sales here at FineArtConnoisseur.com.

Artist Spotlight: Kevin Barton

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Kevin Barton working on location at Grand Hotel, on Mackinac Island, where the 1980 classic, “Somewhere in Time” was filmed

How do you find inspiration?
Kevin Barton: I love this question as the answer is simple for me. I could never get to it all. In Michigan the nice weather for plein air is May-October. First the orchards are in bloom, then lilacs, lavender, sunflowers and finally fall color.

I paint every day when not at a show or event. I settle into a rhythm as I travel around Northern MI to different towns and cities. Architecture is another favorite subject, which means painting around crowds. So the rhythm tends to be painting in busy places and then out to the fields as much as I can for some peace.

What a day at the beach is for some people, painting alone on a sunny day in a field is for me.

However crowded it is on Mackinac Island, it is a favorite place to find inspiration. There are no cars, only walking, biking or horses. We miss so many sights zipping around in cars. I have painted there regularly for 20+ years, yet because of walking everywhere, I still will turn a corner, see a different light and, just like that, a painting idea is born.

To see more of Kevin’s work, visit:
instagram

oil painting of building with trees and bushes in foreground
Kevin Barton, “June at Grand Hotel,” 20×24 in., oil on Mahogany, plein air 2023. Final piece from the photo of the artist at work
oil painting of hay barrels
Kevin Barton, “Bales at Burnt Marshmallow Brewery,” 24×36 in., Oil on Mahogany, plein air 2022. A newly discovered farm in Petoskey, where the artists resides

Virtual Museum Walk for January 9th, 2024

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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.

Finding the Way, Mark Kelso, oil on panel, 24 x 36 in; “Wild West: Wildlife Masters Past and Present,” painting and sculpture masterworks from museums, private collections and 30 living artists with select works for sale, April 13, 2024; Steamboat Art Museum, Steamboat Springs, Colorado

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A Pair to Draw To (Flathead Valley), Bonnie Griffith, pastel on sanded paper, 9 x 12 in; For the Love of Glacier: Bonnie Griffith’s new works inspired by the late L.R. Newman’s photographs of Glacier National Park, 4/5-6/22; Hockaday Museum of Art, Kalispell, MT

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Monaco, Monte-Carlo, 1897, Alphonse Mucha, color lithograph on paper mounted on linen, Dhawan Collection; Image courtesy of Landau Traveling Exhibitions, Los Angeles, CA; Alphonse Mucha: Master of Art Nouveau, 1/16-4/14; Henry Morrison Flagler Museum, Palm Beach, FL

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Toy Venus, John Gregory, metal | bronze, 15.512, 7.48, 4.724 in; Brookgreen Gardens

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Puglia: Sun Facade I, 2015, Lee Hall, mixed media on canvas, 50 x 50 in, courtesy of Jerald Melberg Gallery; Blowing Rock Art History Museum

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Tornado Over Kansas, 1929, John Steuart Curry (America, 1897-1946), oil on canvas; Muskegon Museum of Art, Muskegon, Michigan; John Steuart Curry: Weathering the Storm, 5/23-9/2/24

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Wallula to the Sea, Erik Sandgren, acrylic on panel, four 48 x 24 in. panels (48″ x 96 in., overall); Maryhill Museum of Art

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Mescalero Apache Camp in the Guadalupe Mountains, Van Beek, Randy, oil, 36 x 48 in.; Briscoe Western Art; Available for purchase, 2024 Night of Artists Exhibition and Sale, 3/22 – 5/5, 2024

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The Roman Widow (detail), 1874, Dante Gabriel Rossetti, oil on canvas; Museo de Arte de Ponce, Puerto Rico, The Luis A. Ferre Foundation, Inc; Pre-Raphaelites: A Modern Renaissance, 24 February – 30 June 2024; San Domenico Museum, Forlì, Italy

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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