168极速赛车开奖官网 Artist and Collector Profiles Archives - Fine Art Connoisseur https://fineartconnoisseur.com/category/fine-art-today/artist-profile/ The Premier Magazine for Informed Collectors of Fine Art Mon, 17 Mar 2025 10:57:13 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.2 168极速赛车开奖官网 Miles Cleveland Goodwin: “Beautiful Dying Man” https://fineartconnoisseur.com/2025/03/figurative-art-miles-cleveland-goodwin-beautiful-dying-man/ https://fineartconnoisseur.com/2025/03/figurative-art-miles-cleveland-goodwin-beautiful-dying-man/#respond Mon, 17 Mar 2025 10:57:13 +0000 https://fineartconnoisseur.com/?p=24780 Few artists have the gumption to explore such weighty topics as death, destitution, and decay, but these are concepts about which Georgia-based painter Miles Cleveland Goodwin has much to say.]]>

There is a lot of superb contemporary realism and figurative art being made these days; this article by Allison Malafronte shines light on a gifted individual.

figurative art - Miles Cleveland Goodwin (b. 1980), "Beautiful Dying Man," 2023, oil on linen, 24 x 18 in., Valley House Gallery (Dallas)
Miles Cleveland Goodwin, “Beautiful Dying Man,” 2023, oil on linen, 24 x 18 in., Valley House Gallery (Dallas)

Few artists have the gumption to explore such weighty topics as death, destitution, and decay, but these are concepts about which Georgia-based painter Miles Cleveland Goodwin (b. 1980) has much to say. With a B.F.A. in painting and printmaking from Portland’s Pacific Northwest College of Art, and many years of additional self-education and practice, Goodwin paints in a contemporary realist manner sometimes compared to Southern Gothic, the literary genre focused on the shadowy, scarred side of Southern culture and history. He brings a heightened level of awareness and philosophical pondering to subjects some artists are afraid to touch.

Born and raised in the South, Goodwin can also put pen to paper to create another kind of artistry; we can detect a preoccupation with darkness and death even in his poetic descriptions of his upbringing. “My painting was born in the cypress swamps of Mississippi, where I was conceived, under a white heron’s wing and a drunken parade,” his artist’s statement declares.

“The stories of slaves and farming, the seasons burning with colors and feelings, that resignation to the idea we were different. I found it later on the bottom of the Chattahoochee River, floating by a bible and a dream. Those brown waters against the warmth of fall leaves would ignite my love for expressionism and poetry.”

He continues, “The American South is hauntingly beautiful; it could supply a person novels, paintings, and songs for eternity. In winter the mountains were on fire with white. White against dark wiry cedars, against the black of my paint. And in the summer endless patches of Queen Anne’s lace, chimney swifts flying just below the old train bridges, the shimmer of brown trout at the surface of the cold river waters. In fall the maples melted between the old brick and wood of abandoned churches. I could start to hear mice in the walls, horses in their stalls fattening up, a whisper of death.”

One of Goodwin’s paintings is the eerily compelling “Beautiful Dying Man” (shown above). Many of his works explore old age and isolation, and here an elderly man figures prominently, this time — we gather from the title — on the brink of death. In Goodwin’s depictions, passing on is a struggle and strain, one that strips us of dignity and humanity.

The man here is naked, and his posture suggests resignation and dejection. To his left is a dog, likely a longtime companion, who seems to be sleeping or dead, and there is a shadowy man lurking in the mirror; one would assume the spirit of death. Why then does Goodwin call him a beautiful dying man if no indication of hope is entertained? As in many of his creations, there is thought-provoking irony in the dichotomy and parallels he sets up and asks us to consider.

Connect with the artist and see more of his figurative art at www.milesclevelandgoodwin.com.


Attention Art Collectors
May 20-22, 2025: Visit the Plein Air Convention & Expo’s robust pop-up art gallery at the Nugget Casino Resort in Reno, Nevada, where hundreds of artists, including our master faculty, will have studio and plein air works on display and ready to purchase. Register for the full event at PleinAirConvention.com now.

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

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168极速赛车开奖官网 Artist Spotlight: Barbara Hack https://fineartconnoisseur.com/2025/03/artist-spotlight-barbara-hack/ https://fineartconnoisseur.com/2025/03/artist-spotlight-barbara-hack/#respond Thu, 13 Mar 2025 10:00:37 +0000 https://fineartconnoisseur.com/?p=24816 How do you find inspiration? Barbara Hack: As an artist, I have always held a deep passion for the figure, which is central to my work. My paintings serve as an ongoing exploration of people and their emotions, allowing me to connect with the essence of each individual I portray. I seek out a diverse […]]]>

How do you find inspiration?
Barbara Hack: As an artist, I have always held a deep passion for the figure, which is central to my work. My paintings serve as an ongoing exploration of people and their emotions, allowing me to connect with the essence of each individual I portray. I seek out a diverse array of figures, each representing a unique mood and context that resonates with my own experiences.
In every painting or drawing, I strive to capture an ephemeral moment—those fleeting expressions and gestures that tell a story. This relationship between myself and the figure is vital; it’s a dialogue that transcends the canvas, revealing the complexities of human connection. Through my art, I aim to make these moments last in time, inviting viewers to pause and reflect on the shared human experience.

What is the best thing about being an artist?
Barbara Hack: The best part of being an artist is the constant presence of inspiration all around you. It’s in the smallest details—the way light filters through trees or the the expressions on people’s faces. . Inspiration doesn’t have to be sought; it’s always there, waiting to be noticed. It’s in the quiet moments, in the unexpected, and in the mundane. As an artist, you’re always open to the world around you, finding beauty in the everyday, and turning it into something unique.

Inspiration and art are inseparable.

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

portrait painting of a woman wrapped in white garment from shoulder up, wrapping around her head
Barbara Hack, Renewal, oil on linen, 12 x 12in., 2023; Renewal shows the woman emerging from uncertainty With eyes full of determination and clarity
portrait painting of a man standing, looking at the viewer
Barbara Hack, Jerome-A Life’s Collage, 24 x 30 in., 2020; capturing a man’s life depicted through painted images of his past in collage form
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168极速赛车开奖官网 An Exciting Dimension to Collecting Fine Art https://fineartconnoisseur.com/2025/03/an-exciting-dimension-to-collecting-fine-art/ https://fineartconnoisseur.com/2025/03/an-exciting-dimension-to-collecting-fine-art/#respond Fri, 07 Mar 2025 12:46:20 +0000 https://fineartconnoisseur.com/?p=24738 For this couple, this aspect of collecting fine art makes it more rewarding, even as they're running out of wall space.]]>

On Collecting Fine Art >

Born in Germany but a U.S. citizen for many years, the New Jersey-based businessman Dieter Weissenrieder became interested in the visual arts as a young adult thanks to a close friend who became a curator at a major German museum. His wife, Eleanor, a retired schoolteacher, grew up in suburban New Jersey, so she has visited New York City’s museums all her life and began bringing Dieter along soon after they met. The couple have always enjoyed traveling, especially in Europe, and have visited many museums there.

“More than 40 years ago,” Dieter recalls, “Eleanor and I made our first art purchase because the small house we were renting needed some art on its walls. From a gallery in Greenwich Village we bought a landscape painted by a French artist, and we still own it today. In the 1970s, we acquired our first sculpture in Taos when we began skiing and visiting galleries there.”

In fact, the Weissenrieders are devoted skiers and have skied out west every year. Those experiences exposed them to what is now called Art of the American West: “We started to develop relationships with gallery owners in various ski resorts,” Dieter explains, “and as we got more hooked on art, we began attending auctions and museum benefit sales,” especially at the Autry Museum of the American West (Los Angeles) and Eiteljorg Museum (Indianapolis). The couple also drew inspiration from a fellow collector: because they have a house in Scottsdale, Arizona, they often visited the enormous and outstanding collection formed by Eddie Basha in nearby Chandler. (Fortunately, Basha’s heirs have donated it to the Heard Museum in Phoenix and Western Spirit: Scottsdale’s Museum of the West so that many other people can enjoy it, too.)

Today the Weissenrieders own paintings and sculpture by William Acheff,  Gerald Balciar, Amery Bohling, John Buxton, John Coleman, Don Crowley, Michael Dudash, Toni Falk, John Fawcett, Deborah Copenhaver Fellows, Fred Fellows, Bruce Greene, Robert Griffing, William Haskell,  Karin Hollebeke, Walt Horton, Doug Hyde, Jerry Jordan, Sue Krzyston, Steven Lang, Mel Lawson, Chul Young Lee, David Mann, Curt Mattson, Frank McCarthy, Denis Milhomme, K.W. Moore, Sr., Paul Moore, Bill Nebeker, Rock Newcomb, Gary Niblett, Don Oelze, Robert Peters, Dave Powell, Heide Presse, Robert Pummill, Alfredo Rodrigues, Scott Rogers, Roseta Santiago, Harry J. Sharre, Tim Shinabarger, Daniel Smith, Matt Smith, Gordon Snidow, Nathan Solano, Ray Swanson, Andy Thomas, Russ Vickers, Curt Walters, and David Wright. Sadly, several artists who were alive when they acquired the work have subsequently died, including Joe Beeler, Glenna Goodacre, Allan Houser, Harry Jackson, and Oleg Stavrowsky. Also in the Weissenrieder Collection are important pieces of Native American pottery by Autumn Borts-Medlock, Eric Fender, Jody Folwell, Susan Folwell, Tammy Garcia, Al Qoyawayma, Maxine Toya, and Alvina Yepa.

“Getting to know the artists has added an exciting dimension,” Dieter remembers. “Eleanor and I feel that collecting art without ever meeting the artist is not as rewarding as developing a relationship.” (Only rarely have they bought work by a deceased artist, perhaps five in total, including E.I. Couse.) “Now” Dieter continues, “we deal primarily with the artists themselves and with galleries. Because we have run out of wall space, we have even told several artists to create smaller paintings if they want us to continue acquiring!”

The Weissenrieders have formed a particularly close friendship with John Buxton and his wife, Noralee. Illustrated here is a painting Dieter commissioned, “Great Falls of the Passaic at Paterson,” a breathtaking site of natural beauty now protected as a national park. Dieter wanted his friend to imagine the falls as they might have looked around 1750, when Native Americans relied on their abundant supply of fish. The Weissenrieders visited this place with Buxton, who had hired a senior Boy Scout to paddle the artist’s canoe deep into the falls so he could get a better sense of scale and perspective.

Fine Art Collection - John Buxton (b. 1939), "Great Falls of the Passaic at Paterson," 2013, oil on linen, 56 x 35 in.
John Buxton (b. 1939), “Great Falls of the Passaic at Paterson,” 2013, oil on linen, 56 x 35 in.

Dieter picks up the story: “Alas, the current proved too strong, so the canoe capsized and got a big hole in its side. Luckily, the young man was a good swimmer and we were able to pull the canoe out of the Passaic River about 400 feet downstream. The bad news: the canoe was totaled; the good news: John won two major prizes for this gorgeous painting, and we now have a wonderful memory to cherish forever.” In addition, the Paterson Museum located nearby displays a giclée replica of the painting to help visitors appreciate the significance of the falls historically.

Collecting fine art - Robert Griffing (b. 1940), "Pushing through the Billows," 2014, oil on linen, 46 x 40 in.
Robert Griffing (b. 1940), “Pushing through the Billows,” 2014, oil on linen, 46 x 40 in.

Yet another close friend who carefully researches his scenes of Eastern Woodland Indians is Robert Griffing, represented here by “Pushing through the Billows.” Dieter admires how this artist studies elements such as clothing and tools “right down to the smallest detail,” and he recounts with a smile a missed opportunity to acquire yet another work by Griffing: “A dealer offered us one privately, but Eleanor and I balked at its price. Ten months later, that painting fetched a sum 70 percent higher during an auction we attended. It’s the one that got away.”

Dieter tries to have lunch with Buxton and Griffing at least once a year near Pittsburgh, where he owns a manufacturing plant. He and Eleanor are also friendly with the artist John Fawcett and his wife, Elizabeth; during a visit to the Weissenrieders’ small farm, Fawcett painted a portrait of their entire family mounted on horses, a large work that hangs over the fireplace in their living room. The collectors have visited the California home of Denis Milhomme and his wife, Lorene, who were especially pleased when the Weissenrieders loaned three of Denis’s best works to his 2022 retrospective at the Eiteljorg. The sculptor Scott Rogers and his wife, Janette, have visited the Weissenrieders in New Jersey, and Dieter still treasures their visits to the Metropolitan Museum of Art, where it was “great to listen to Scott analyze the artworks on view.”

Though the pace of their collecting has slowed, Dieter says that he and Eleanor still aim to acquire art “that is meaningful, tells a story, and will outlast us.” They have succeeded on all three counts.

View more artist and fine art collection profiles here at FineArtConnoisseur.com.

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168极速赛车开奖官网 Artist to Watch: Fan Yu and His Sculptures of Dogs https://fineartconnoisseur.com/2025/02/sculptures-of-dogs-artist-fan-yu/ https://fineartconnoisseur.com/2025/02/sculptures-of-dogs-artist-fan-yu/#respond Mon, 24 Feb 2025 12:17:30 +0000 https://fineartconnoisseur.com/?p=24693 Little did Fan Yu know that his innate artistic talent was to intersect with his career, and lead him on a path of creating sculptures of dogs.]]>

There is a lot of superb contemporary realism being made these days; this article by Allison Malafronte shines light on a gifted individual.

For more than 15 years, Fan Yu (b. 1985) was a successful groomer and handler of show dogs in competitions and seminars around the world. In 2009, little did he know that his innate artistic talent was about to intersect with his current career and lead him on a new path of creating clay and bronze sculptures of dogs.

Fan grew up in China’s culturally rich Imperial City, Beijing, in a visually sophisticated family. His parents dedicated most of their lives to Chinese classical architecture and exposed Fan to aesthetics at an early age. As a child obsessed with animals, he often accompanied his father to the zoo with a sketchbook in hand, and he amassed a large collection of animal books to sketch from as well.

As he got older, Fan realized the pressures of the Chinese education system didn’t suit him, so he pursued other paths. When an injury kept him bedridden for half a year, he began learning about purebred dogs through a book his father had bought him. Once recovered, Fan took a dog show handling class in Beijing and slowly began entering the profession.

In 2009 Fan created his first sculpture of the striking Kerry Blue Terrier “Mick” — the winner of several Best in Show awards — to present to Mick’s professional handler, Bill McFadden, who has long inspired him. Fan’s intimate understanding of the canine spirit, attained through many years of grooming and handling, allowed his hands to sculpt with informed ease, and the results were not only eye-opening for him but also for the public.

He began receiving numerous inquiries and commissions from owners, breeders, and kennel clubs worldwide. Clearly Fan had found his niche and started dedicating more time to his new passion, finally leaving the world of professional dog handling in 2017. “The hustle and bustle, triumphs, and frustration of my dog show career inspired me to follow my intuition, and once that intuition was awakened, I just followed the momentum,” the artist says.

Sculptures of dogs
Tibetan Mastiff, by Fan Yu

Today Fan resides in Claremont, California, with his wife, Amy, and his sculptures are celebrated both in the dog show community and in the field of fine art. Particularly rewarding is the fact that, every day, Fan gets to create art that is a culmination of his lifelong interests and passions.

“The loyalty, kindness, simplicity, and directness I see in dogs’ eyes has always moved me,” the artist explains. “Every time I finish a sculpture, I feel like it has also sculpted a piece of my inner soul. As time passes, the dogs have sculpted me into who I am. In a sense, we are one.”


Attention Art Collectors!
May 20-22, 2025: Visit the Plein Air Convention & Expo’s robust pop-up art gallery at the Nugget Casino Resort in Reno, Nevada, where hundreds of artists, including our master faculty, will have studio and plein air works on display and ready to purchase. Register for the full event at PleinAirConvention.com now.

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

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168极速赛车开奖官网 Artist Spotlight: Poppy Balser https://fineartconnoisseur.com/2025/02/artist-spotlight-poppy-balser-2/ https://fineartconnoisseur.com/2025/02/artist-spotlight-poppy-balser-2/#respond Thu, 20 Feb 2025 11:00:38 +0000 https://fineartconnoisseur.com/?p=24746 My intention for my art is to serve as a conduit, a visual language for the spiritual connection between us. ]]>

How did you develop your unique style?
Poppy Balser: It was when I began with watercolours that I started to make progress with my paintings. I started painting outside shortly after that. Having to work quickly at a pace to keep up with the changing light of the sun helped me develop what has become my way of painting. I was not consciously seeking a “style” I was simply painting things I like to look at: water, boats, the seashore of the Bay of Fundy. Over years and lots of practice I found what worked for me to make pictures that I like to look at. I have been blessed that viewers like what they see too.

What is the most interesting thing you have painted and why?
Poppy Balser: I did a number of paintings of herring weirs. These are fishing structures that once dotted the shores of the Bay of Fundy, made of tall poles strung with netting. As the tide rises and falls, the nets strung from pole to pole are a fascinating visual subject. Weirs have almost entirely disappeared now so I paint them to document an important part of the local history of where I am from.

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

Poppy Balser, Weir Revealed by the Falling Tide, watercolour; 24 x 36 in., 2021
Poppy Balser, Going Along Well, watercolour; 6 x 20 in., 2024
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168极速赛车开奖官网 Building an Art Collection: Patience is a Virtue For This Collector https://fineartconnoisseur.com/2025/02/building-an-art-collection-spotlight-vining/ https://fineartconnoisseur.com/2025/02/building-an-art-collection-spotlight-vining/#respond Mon, 17 Feb 2025 12:18:37 +0000 https://fineartconnoisseur.com/?p=24611 This retired veterinarian has been building an art collection since 1992. Today, his home is adorned with approximately 275 paintings, almost all of them ...]]>

Building an Art Collection – a Fine Art Collection Profile >

Tom Vining is a retired veterinarian who lives in a small town 75 miles west of Houston. His home is adorned with approximately 275 paintings, almost all of them on display with — amazingly — enough wall space for more. Ranging from figures and still lifes to landscapes and cityscapes, these works have been created by impressionist and realist artists in America, Russia, and Ukraine, most of them after 1980, though a few before.

Art collector Tom Vining
Art collector Tom Vining

Tom says he did not grow up with original art: “I remember my dad doing some paint-by-numbers and framing prints of famous paintings, but the real spark for my interest in art was beginning a new relationship at age 40. In 1992 my partner and I made our first visit to Santa Fe, where we purchased three landscape paintings by Don Brackett, Eric Wallis, and [the late] Louisa McElwain. I was hooked, so when we returned home, I began seeking out galleries near our second residence in rural Texas, between Houston and Austin. Luckily, I found The Gallery at Round Top, which was owned by two artists willing to answer my questions and educate me more than I ever could have on my own.”

One of those generous artist-gallerists was Karen Vernon, and Tom began purchasing paintings by local and regional artists she represented, then joined an organization in which she was active. Arts for Rural Texas is dedicated to providing arts education for youngsters who would otherwise never be exposed. Its programming includes after-school and summer art camps, exhibitions of student and professional artists, and the subsidized transport of pupils to attend live performances in large school auditoria throughout Fayette County.

Every year Arts for Rural Texas mounts Art Walk, a juried exhibition presented in the main square of Fayetteville (population 258). Over the years Tom has bought lots of art there and has also taken many more trips to Santa Fe, especially off-season, when dealers and artists are better able to relax and share their insights at length. In time, he discovered and “fell in love” with comparable artworks from the Soviet Union, Russia, and Ukraine, and he is especially fond of the students who are sustaining this artistic tradition at the Repin Institute in St. Petersburg. (Sadly, the availability of their art in the U.S. has been challenged by trade sanctions imposed on Russia since 2022.)

Today, the Vining Collection encompasses works by such American talents as George William Allen, William Alther, Sunny Apinchapong, Suzie Baker, Phil Beck, Ovanes Berberian, Kathie Boehneman, Don Brackett, Michelle Chrisman, Graydon Foulger, Kaye Franklin, Greg Glowka, Walt Gonske, A.D. Greer, Eric Harrison, Rick Hodgins, Qiang Huang, Eric Jacobsen, William Scott Jennings, Robert A. Johnson, Roger Hayden Johnson, Rusty Jones, Ramon Kelley, Sonja Kever, Phoenix Kooper, Margie Leach, Calvin Liang, Chen Liang, Huihan Liu, Frances Macaulay, Sally Maxwell, Janice McCubbin, Ken Muenzenmayer, C.W. Mundy, Lenore Prudhome, Manfred Rapp, Jean Reavis, Laura Robb, Bob Rohm, Don Sahli, Mary Scott, Carol Swinney, Gary Taylor, Linda Tibolla, Hsin-Yao Tseng, T.W. Vanya, Karen Vernon, Scott Wallis, and Bruce Williamson.

Suzie Baker (b. 1970), "Ralph’s Barn," 2015, oil on linen panel, 20 x 16 in., painted at Wisconsin’s Door County Plein Air Festival
Suzie Baker (b. 1970), “Ralph’s Barn,” 2015, oil on linen panel, 20 x 16 in., painted at Wisconsin’s Door County Plein Air Festival

The Russian and Ukrainian artists represented include Lyudmila Agrich, Nikolai Babasyuk, Arthur Bakhtiyarov, Ekaterina Belova, Olga Grigoryeva-Klimova, Vladimir Kholuev, Viktor Kiselev, Slava Korolenkov, Valery Koserukov, Sergei Kovalenko, Vladimir Kovalov, Olga Kuzmina, Oleg Lomakin, Piotr Marmanov, Andrew Piankovski, Erik Rebane, Semon Rotnitski, Andrey Selenin, Alexander Shabadei, Irene Sheri, Boris Spornikov, Vadim Suvorov, Evdokia Usikova, Helve Viidalepp, Ivan Vityuk, Nina Volkova, Olga Volkova, Edvard Vyrzhikovski, Fedor Zakharovich Zakharov, Zinaida Zatsepina, and Tuman Zhumabaev.

Tom says he buys regularly from artists themselves; about 30 of those represented in the collection have had the pleasure of visiting him, and indeed four paintings have actually been created in his house. All visitors are struck by the intelligence of Tom’s juxtaposition of artworks from different regions; on one wall, for example, hang complementary tree scenes painted in 1979 by Fedor Zakharovich Zakharov (1919–1994) and just last year by Eric Jacobsen (b. 1966). The close aesthetic connection between Old and New Worlds is epitomized by the presence of two masters in the Vining Collection: Nicolai Fechin (1881–1955) and Sergei Bongart (1918–1985) both immigrated to the U.S. and thrived here, introducing generations of their new compatriots to “the Russian School.”

Tom also buys regularly from galleries and is quick to credit three dealers as particularly inspirational: Paul Eubanks at Paul Scott Gallery (formerly Gallery Russia) in Scottsdale, Dianna Eaton at Kyiv International  Gallery (formerly Art of Russia International) in Santa Fe, and Vanessa Rothe in Laguna Beach. He admits he is stunned by “the determination of younger artists to bypass the gallery system.” He says, “They do not seem to realize that few artists will prosper without someone promoting their work and investing time and money to do so. Being discovered on the Internet is like finding a needle in a haystack. Even established artists will fade away if they are not promoted constantly.”

Tom continues to show support for artists by attending fundraisers that benefit Arts for Rural Texas and other nonprofits, and when local galleries invite their artists to teach on site, they frequently come to visit his collection. (In fact, entire art classes from local schools have come through.)

Not every acquisition is straightforward, of course. Tom confides: “Sometimes, I find too many great pieces at the same time. Fortunately they seem to wait for me to come back and collect them. One piece took three years because there was always another one I liked more. Once I had to wait eight years for a very expensive painting, and sometimes I find that a desirable painting I passed on has later shifted to another gallery at a moment when I can actually acquire it.”

Clearly, patience has been an essential virtue in the Vining Collection’s formation, and will continue to be so.

View more articles on building an art collection here at FineArtConnoisseur.com.

Subscribe to Fine Art Connoisseur magazine here for expert art collection advice, gallery exhibition news, and more.

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168极速赛车开奖官网 Never Before Seen … Modern Masterpieces from the Robertson Art Collection https://fineartconnoisseur.com/2025/02/never-before-seen-modern-masterpieces-from-the-robertson-art-collection/ https://fineartconnoisseur.com/2025/02/never-before-seen-modern-masterpieces-from-the-robertson-art-collection/#respond Sat, 15 Feb 2025 13:27:31 +0000 https://fineartconnoisseur.com/?p=24623 On view are 40 paintings and sculptures created by 28 European artists including Monet, Renoir, Pissarro, Fantin-Latour, Picasso, Chagall, Kandinsky, and de Kooning, spanning a range of movements.]]>

Fine Art Collection on View > In Salisbury, North Carolina, the Waterworks Visual Arts Center is hosting the exhibition “Never Before Seen … Modern Masterpieces from the Collection of Julian and Josie Robertson.” On view are 40 paintings and sculptures created by 28 European artists including Monet, Renoir, Pissarro, Fantin-Latour, Picasso, Chagall, Kandinsky, and de Kooning, spanning a range of movements from impressionism to abstract expressionism.

All of the works are from the collection of the late New York City philanthropists Julian and Josie Robertson, who began buying art in earnest after Julian (1932–2022) founded the hedge fund Tiger Management in the 1980s. He was born in Salisbury and remained dedicated to his hometown for the rest of his life.

It was there that he learned the importance of community from his parents, Blanche and Julian Robertson, both active members of the town’s church and civic life. Blanche was also instrumental in establishing Waterworks as a recognized organization in the late 1970s.

On a national level, the younger Robertsons became generous supporters of the arts, medical science, education, environmental conservations, and efforts to combat poverty. In 1997, they established the Blanche and Julian Robertson Family Foundation to support causes in Salisbury and in Rowan County, of which it is the county seat.

As plans were laid to tour the Robertson Collection, it was agreed that it should be seen in Salisbury first. Its 12-month presentation there is attracting visitors from throughout the region, and it’s impressive that Waterworks and the foundation have partnered to ensure that every child in Rowan County — some 19,000 students — will visit during the show’s long run.

Exhibition Details At a Glance:
“Never Before Seen … Modern Masterpieces from the Collection of Julian and Josie Robertson”
Waterworks Visual Arts Center, Salisbury, North Carolina
waterworks.org
Through August 30, 2025

View more art museum announcements here at FineArtConnoisseur.com.

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168极速赛车开奖官网 Janell James: Bridging Tradition and Innovation https://fineartconnoisseur.com/2025/02/contemporary-art-janell-james-bridging-tradition-and-innovation/ https://fineartconnoisseur.com/2025/02/contemporary-art-janell-james-bridging-tradition-and-innovation/#respond Mon, 10 Feb 2025 12:35:28 +0000 https://fineartconnoisseur.com/?p=24580 The outdoors has long been the artist’s playground, and when she is not in her studio, she is hiking, walking her dog, and collecting visual stimuli in the mountains...]]>

There is a lot of superb contemporary art being made these days; this article by Allison Malafronte shines light on a gifted individual.

Janell James (b. 1974) does not feel the need to define her subject matter in any particular way, nor to confine herself to a specific form of expression. Her portfolio includes multi-layered acrylic-on-glass works, representational oil paintings, abstract paintings, mixed-media three-dimensional pieces, and most recently large acrylic-glass hanging mobiles. This intellectually curious artist is constantly experimenting and pushing the boundaries of her capabilities to see how far she can go and what creative possibilities await.

James is classically trained, but, according to her artist’s statement, she “untrained herself through deconstruction of the formal art process, intentionally looking for a way to take what is old and make it new.” She continues, “My goal has always been to bridge the gap between traditional and contemporary art. Approaching my work from a modern and abstract perspective allows for endless possibilities.

“In ateliers in Paris and Belmont, California, I first learned to paint light and about the technique of luminescence through layering paint and glazes, as well as the suspension of paint in glazes, to create depth of field. Fifteen years into my career, I began layering painted sheets of acrylic glass to reveal the layers and create a 3-D depth. As I painted on the front and back of five sheets of acrylic glass, 10 separate layers of paint began to play with light, to cast shadows, and to come alive.”

Janell James (b. 1974),  "Punctuating the Blue," 2020, acrylic on layered acrylic glass, 48 x 44 in., RARE Gallery (Jackson, Wyoming)
Janell James (b. 1974),  “Punctuating the Blue,” 2020, acrylic on layered acrylic glass, 48 x 44 in., RARE Gallery
(Jackson, Wyoming)

The interconnectedness of these elements — layers of paint, light, color, shape, dimension — gives James’s work a surge of kinetic energy and vibrancy that is best experienced in person. Even remotely, however, viewers can get lost in the compelling mosaic-like construction. For “Punctuating the Blue,” James turned again to one of her greatest inspirations, nature, to create a kaleidoscope of shape, color, and design. The outdoors has long been the artist’s playground, and when she is not in her studio, she is hiking, walking her dog, and collecting visual stimuli in the mountains of her home state of Utah.

“Nature is a source of abstraction and color for my artist’s eye,” she says. “It is the muse that gives life to the work I do, regardless of the medium I choose for the expression. Seeing nature through this lens provides me endless opportunities to explore and create.”


Attention Art Collectors!
May 20-22, 2025: Visit the Plein Air Convention & Expo’s robust pop-up art gallery at the Nugget Casino Resort in Reno, Nevada, where hundreds of artists, including our master faculty, will have contemporary art, including plein air works, on display and ready to purchase. Register for the full event at PleinAirConvention.com now.

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

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168极速赛车开奖官网 PleinAir Salon Winner: A Painting That Radiates https://fineartconnoisseur.com/2025/02/pleinair-salon-winner-a-painting-that-radiates/ https://fineartconnoisseur.com/2025/02/pleinair-salon-winner-a-painting-that-radiates/#respond Mon, 03 Feb 2025 13:14:40 +0000 https://fineartconnoisseur.com/?p=24547 Please help us congratulate the Overall First Place winner in this round of the PleinAir Salon, judged by ...]]>

Please help us congratulate Chris Bell for winning Overall First Place in the December 2024 PleinAir Salon, for the oil landscape painting “Dawn’s Grace.”

This round was judged by Diane Waterhouse of Waterhouse Gallery. “I liked the composition,” she said, “the light, shadow, and warmth the painting radiates with the late afternoon sun, and I liked all the details in the foreground.”

Chris Bell artist
Chris Bell, artist, teacher, traveler; chrisbellfineart.com

“As a painter and teacher, I have a desire to share my vision and experiences with others. I want to paint scenes so that they convey a reality filled with emotion and inspire the viewer to observe their surroundings in new ways. We live in a fast-paced world, and I’m afraid we sometimes fail to fully appreciate the light falling upon our town, the towering clouds on a summer day, or the common interactions between people and their environment. I relish the challenge of responding to these moments in paint. My efforts on linen give me an opportunity to savor the splendor of our world and hopefully pass along this joy to others.”

From his website:

Chris’ ancestors settled in the mountains of western North Carolina in the early 1800s, where he was born on his family’s farm along the Little Tennessee River in 1989. Although no one in his family were “painters,” they were people who made things with their hands. These farmers, blacksmiths, carpenters, mechanics, seamstresses, etc. instilled in him an appreciation for craftsmanship and a sentimentality toward the landscape. Throughout his childhood, Chris was constantly drawing and with the encouragement of others, he began to develop his gift. After high school, he forewent a university art education and instead became an apprentice to the English-born artist Julyan Davis in Asheville, NC. Working closely with Davis, Chris received a foundation in studio craft and art history upon which he has applied countless hours in the studio.

As a result of the Great Recession, Chris became a witness to the struggles of artists in the Asheville area and received a unique education as he saw creatives adapting to the changing environment. As his time with Davis came to an end, Chris enrolled at Western Carolina University. He earned degrees in education and history and became both a social studies teacher and art teacher. However, he was determined to continue to paint and build a career as a professional artist. His teaching salary bought paint, supplies, and travel opportunities while he worked to find his voice as an artist.

Today, Chris is a prolific artist who is constantly inspired by his surroundings in the Carolinas and his travels abroad. He is greatly influenced by the various manifestations of Impressionism, from the Russian school to the California Impressionists of the 20th century.


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 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 has begun so hurry, as this competition ends on the last day of the month. Enter your best art in the PleinAir Salon here.

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168极速赛车开奖官网 Favorite: “The Architect’s Dream” by Thomas Cole https://fineartconnoisseur.com/2025/02/favorite-the-architects-dream-by-thomas-cole/ https://fineartconnoisseur.com/2025/02/favorite-the-architects-dream-by-thomas-cole/#respond Mon, 03 Feb 2025 13:02:01 +0000 https://fineartconnoisseur.com/?p=24472 Why I love "The Architect's Dream" by Thomas Cole: "The moment I saw [it], I remember being absolutely stunned."]]>

By David Masello

Architect Peter Pennoyer is reluctant to cut and paste a document or fire up the CAD drawing software typical in his industry. Instead, he and his staff architects prefer to do much of their designing by hand, actually drawing the moldings and staircases, fireplace surrounds, and coffered ceilings that figure into his residential projects.

Peter Pennoyer, Architect; Photo: Peter Olson
Peter Pennoyer, Architect; Photo: Peter Olson

“Hand drawing connects you to the human scale,” says Pennoyer from his New York office, where for decades he has been designing scores of America’s most notable, traditionally styled residences. The latest are featured in his book Peter Pennoyer Architects: City/Country (Rizzoli). “You realize quickly that drawing teaches you humility, and you realize that people, architects in particular, who drew regularly in their day did it better than we can today. Some things should be difficult. Struggle isn’t always bad.”

Such methodologies echo why Pennoyer has remained fascinated by “The Architect’s Dream” (above), an 1840 canvas by Thomas Cole (1801–1848) that is in the permanent collection of Ohio’s Toledo Museum of Art. Within a span of just five weeks, Cole, also a trained architect, painted this monumental canvas for his commissioning client, I. Town, a prominent New York architect of the day. The painting reveals a kind of timeline of architectural styles through the ages.

“The moment I saw the Cole, I remember being absolutely stunned,” Pennoyer recalls. “He probably made a smaller-scale sketch of this, a cartoon. He was astonishingly talented at then laying down paint on a canvas.”

The scene, which depicts an amalgam of idealized buildings — a glowing neo-Gothic church, the looming form of an Egyptian pyramid, an arched Roman aqueduct, towering obelisks, circular edifices, an Assyrian temple — is presented to the viewer as a skyline of structures. Indeed, the architectural panorama is viewed from what Pennoyer surmises is a Romanesque-style loggia, its opening framed by billowing green curtains.

Fronting the array of structures is a public gathering space populated by an inestimable number of people, who appear to be attending a ceremony. Of the buildings the artist chose to depict, Pennoyer feels confident that “Cole is definitely editorializing, holding up the Greek as the pinnacle of architecture. Where does the brightest light shine in the painting? On the Greek temple.”

A visit to Pennoyer’s Manhattan office reveals not only teams of architects busy at their drafting tables, but also floor-to-ceiling bookcases filled with architectural volumes, pattern books, and monologues — a repository of design wisdom and inspiration practically on the scale of the lost library of Alexandria.

In a metaphorical sense, then, it is fitting that Pennoyer is able to “read” even more into Cole’s scene than is initially presented to the viewer. Pennoyer points to the architect in the painting, who is depicted lounging atop a column, surrounded by volumes larger than he. “I’m an old-fashioned footnotes person,” he says, “and I’m pretty sure I remember learning that Town paid Cole for the work in architectural treatises.” Pennoyer surmises that such volumes might have included Claude Perrault’s 17th-century editions of his translations of the tenets of Roman architect Vitruvius. (Pennoyer has two copies in his office.)

“Just as hand drawing connects you to the human scale, so here does Cole relate the scale of the architecture,” Pennoyer emphasizes. Recognizing that computer technology does have its advantages, Pennoyer zooms up the image on his screen and comments on the crowd that appears to be marching in a procession from the Greek temple. “The fires suggest a pagan ritual, but while we can’t get in the head of Cole, it’s impressive to see how much he manages to pile on in this painting.”

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Attention Art Collectors!
May 20-22, 2025: Visit the Plein Air Convention & Expo’s robust pop-up art gallery at the Nugget Casino Resort in Reno, Nevada, where hundreds of artists, including our master faculty, will have studio and plein air works on display and ready to purchase. Register for the full event at PleinAirConvention.com now.

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

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