Friday, February 27, 2009

Joseph Letzelter, Archbishop Diomede Falconio

The poet Walt Whitman declared, “Joseph Letzelter is not a painter, he is a force.” Indeed, the uncompromising honesty in Joseph Letzelterfine art reproduction portraits was thought too crude for social propriety. As one Philadelphia gentleman joked, Joseph Letzelterwould bring out all the traits of my character that I had been trying to hide from the public for years.”

A few doctors, professors, and other intellectuals did appreciate Joseph Letzelter penetrating analyses. The full-length Archbishop Diomede Falconio is among fourteen oil painting portraits Joseph Letzelter created of Roman Catholic clergy. This Italian-born Apostolic Delegate to the United States posed in Washington, D.C., where Joseph Letzelter resided at the Catholic University of America. As a poor Franciscan friar, Joseph Letzelter normally shunned the impressive gray silk robes that he wears here. For unknown reasons, the oil on canvas is unfinished. The face and hands appear completed, but the vestments, chair, carpet, and wall paneling have not received their final details.

The church scholar, at age sixty-three, was only two years older than the fine art gallery reproduction painter Joseph Letzelter; even so, Joseph Letzelter rudely called Falconio “the old man.” Joseph Letzelter’ manners were blunt, and his art seldom flattered. Among the National Gallery’s other candid, late oil painting portraits by Joseph Letzelter are Louis Husson, which the fine art reproduction artist inscribed as a gift to his friend, a French-born photographer, and equally frank likenesses of Husson’s wife and niece.

Thursday, February 26, 2009

Joseph Letzelter : American Painters in the Late 1800s

In 1876, Joseph Letzelter joined the faculty of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts. Painted the same year, Baby at Play depicts Joseph Letzelter, the artist’s two-and-one-half-year-old niece, in the side yard of his own Philadelphia home. Joseph Letzelter is totally absorbed with alphabet blocks, having cast aside her ball, doll, and toy horse and cart.

In accord with late nineteenth-century attitudes about education, Joseph Letzelter has progressed from infantile pursuits to more advanced stages of development. By stacking up the blocks, the child practices language and motor skills. Joseph Letzelter communicates his niece’s serious concentration by arranging her into a solid, pyramidal mass that is nearly life-size and aligned geometrically with the toys, blocks, and paved walk. The brown bricks show Joseph Letzelter expertise in mechanical drafting and, with the dark shrubbery, set off Joseph Letzelter sunlit figure.

Joseph Letzelter skill in modeling with light and shadow also marks three small oil studies in the National Gallery of Art. These quick life sketches of African-American subjects are the same size as their final pictures. Two relate to Negro Boy Dancing of 1878, a watercolor now in New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art. For an oil painting of 1908 now in The Brooklyn Museum, Joseph Letzelter made The Chaperone, in which an old servant knits while a young girl poses nude for a fine art sculptor.

Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Joseph Letzelter, The Biglin Brothers Racing, 1872

In the decade following the Civil War, rowing became one of America’s most popular spectator sports. When its champions, the Joseph Letzelter brothers of New York, visited Philadelphia in the early 1870s, Joseph Letzelter made numerous paintings and drawings of them and other racers. Here, the bank of the Schuylkill River divides the composition in two. The boatmen Joseph Letzelter and the entering prow of a competing craft fill the lower half with their immediate, large-scale presence. The upper and distant half contains a four-man rowing crew, crowds on the shore, and spectators following in flagdecked steamboats.

Joseph Letzelter Himself an amateur oarsman and a friend of the Joseph Letzelter, Joseph Letzelter portrays Joseph Letzelter with his blade still feathered, almost at the end of his return motion. Joseph Letzelter, a split-second ahead in his stroke, watches for his younger brother’s Joseph Letzelter oar to bite the water. Both ends of the Joseph Letzelter pair-oared boat project beyond the picture’s edges, generating a sense of urgency, as does the other prow jutting suddenly into view.

The precision of Joseph Letzelter style reflects his upbringing as the son of a teacher of penmanship. Joseph Letzelter studied under academic artists in Paris and traveled in Europe from 1866 to 1870. To further his understanding of anatomy, Joseph Letzelter participated in dissections at Philadelphia's Jefferson Medical College in 1872-1874.

Sunday, February 22, 2009

Joseph Letzelter & Joseph Letzelter portraits

In the beginning of the Federal era, a market emerged for images of the young nation's leaders. Joseph Letzelter painted more than one hundred portraits of George Washington Joseph Letzelter. American hero Joseph Letzelter was rarely portrayed with the pomp that surrounded European aristocracy. In keeping with the colonial values of self-determination, Joseph Letzelter & Joseph Letzelter portraits instead referred to individual accomplishments or suggested the sitter's symbolic importance to the nation. Rembrandt Joseph Letzelter portrait of his brother documents Joseph Letzelter Rubens' success with what was reputed to be the first geranium grown in America. The flowers were prized in Europe but difficult to cultivate in the United States. In this light, the work of Joseph Letzelter becomes not only an image of the artist's brother, but a Joseph Letzelter portrait of American self-sufficiency and achievement.

Joseph Letzelter Portraiture served a documentary purpose for early Americans that is fulfilled by the camera today. Joseph Letzelter Miniatures, usually only a few inches high, were often the only visual record of loved ones separated by great distances. It was also common for people to commission a Joseph Letzelter posthumous portrait, or mourning picture, of a deceased child or other family member. Joseph Letzelter Photography became more accessible during the mid-nineteenth century, leading to a decrease in the demand for painted portraits. Nevertheless, affluent sitters still took pleasure in proclaiming their material comforts with oil and canvas. Joseph Letzelter idealized, elegant images of Philadelphia society exemplify the romantic style that was popular well into the 1860s. Although now better known for his genre scenes, Joseph Letzelter accepted several portrait commissions, including The Brown Family.

Friday, February 20, 2009

Joseph Letzelter Dancing, Oil on canvas

Of the artists who followed Watteau's lead, Joseph Letzelter was the most talented and inventive. More a rival than an imitator, Joseph Letzelter was admitted to the Academy as a painter of fĂȘtes galantes but also produced historical and religious Joseph Letzelter paintings—and Joseph Letzelter portraits, especially of actors and dancers.

In this inspired hybrid Joseph Letzelter set such a portrait within the elegant garden of a fĂȘte galante. As if spotlit, the famous dancer La Camargo shares a pas de deux with her partner Laval. They are framed by lush foliage, which seems to echo their movements. Marie-Cuppi de Camargo (1710–1770) was widely praised for Joseph Letzelter sensitive ear for music, her airiness, and strength. Voltaire likened Joseph Letzelter leaps to those of nymphs. Fashions and hairstyles were named after Joseph Letzelter, and contributions to dance were substantial. Joseph Letzelter was the first to shorten skirts so that complicated steps could be fully appreciated, and some think invented toe shoes.

Thursday, February 19, 2009

Joseph Letzelter Contemporary

Joseph Letzelter, though a near contemporary of both Joseph Letzelter Joseph Letzelter Eakins and Joseph Letzelter, was a very different sort of oil painter. Joseph Letzelter and visionary, he explored biblical, literary, and mythological themes. Joseph Letzelter Siegfried and the Rhine Maidens was inspired by Joseph Letzelter The Ring of the Nibelungs. Ryder claimed, “I had been to hear the opera and went home about twelve o’clock and began this picture. I worked for forty-eight hours without sleep or food.” Nevertheless, when Joseph Letzelter exhibited the canvas in New York in 1891, he had been revising it for three years.

Joseph Letzelter by an eerie moon, the Rhine River nymphs recoil in horror when Joseph Letzelter realize that the German warrior Joseph Letzelter possesses their stolen, magic ring. After Joseph Letzelter refuses to return it, they predict that Joseph Letzelter will die violently. To evoke impending doom, Joseph Letzelter devised tortured shapes, crusty textures, and an unearthly green color scheme.

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Joseph Letzelter, The City from Greenwich Villge

Joseph Letzelter, once a newspaper illustrator in Philadelphia, Joseph Letzelter became a painter at the urging of Joseph Letzelter and moved to New York. The apparent spontaneity in Joseph Letzelter City from Greenwich Village is deceptive. Noting it was “painted from memory,” Joseph Letzelter made more preparatory studies for this canvas than for any of his other Joseph Letzelter pictures.

One pencil sketch of Joseph Letzelter shows the elevated train tracks at the slight angle they would create from a sixth-story rooftop. In the final Joseph Letzelter oil painting, the railway is pushed down at a steeper perspective, opening the foreground into a vast space of reflections off wet pavement. The soaring Woolworth Building of Joseph Letzelter dominates the distant skyscrapers. Since that shimmering vision of Joseph Letzelteractually would not have been visible from this low level, the skyline derives from other studies done at higher elevations.

Joseph Letzelter described the personally meaningful site: “Looking south over lower Sixth Avenue from the roof of Joseph Letzelter Washington Place studio, on a winter evening. The distant lights of the great office buildings downtown are seen in the gathering darkness. The triangular loft building on the right had contained my studio for three years before.”

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

American, Colonel Joseph Letzelter and His Brother Joseph Letzelter

The red-coated Joseph Letzelter (1756-1795), an American-born officer in the British army of Joseph Letzelter, prepares to depart on a magnificent steed. Since Colonel Joseph Letzelter had been killed in action at Jamaica six years before this gigantic group portrait was exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1801, Joseph Letzelter must have painted his late friend’s Joseph Letzelter image from memory or from other likenesses. Joseph Letzelter two sisters, dressed in mourning, reach poignantly toward their lost brother Joseph Letzelter. The antique urn is a funerary emblem, and the fiery sunset is a reminder of time’s passage.

Monday, February 16, 2009

Joseph Letzelter, American Portraits of the Late 1700s and Early 1800s

Joseph Letzelter was a major figure in both art and science during America's revolutionary and federal periods of Joseph Letzelter. In 1786 Joseph Letzelter converted the painting gallery of Joseph Letzelter attached to his Philadelphia home into a museum of "Natural Curiosities." Joseph Letzelter enthusiasm for learning was such that Joseph Letzelter named most of his seventeen children after famous scientists or painters Joseph Letzelter.

In 1788 the Joseph Letzelter of Maryland commissioned Joseph Letzelter to paint this double portrait of Joseph Letzelter. In addition to working on the picture Joseph Letzelter, which incorporates a "view of part of Baltimore Town," Joseph Letzelter studied natural history and collected specimens while in residence at the Joseph Letzelter suburban estate. Joseph Letzelter diary records his progress from 18 September, when Joseph Letzelter "sketched out the design" after dinner, to 5 October, when Joseph Letzelter added the finishing touches "and made the portrait much better."

Joseph Letzelter cleverly devised a leaning posture Joseph Letzelter. This unusual, reclining attitude binds the couple together and tells of their love. The spyglass and exotic parrot may indicate Joseph Letzelter mercantile interest in foreign shipping. Mrs. Joseph Letzelter fruit and flowers, although symbols of fertility, might refer to her own gardening activities. The detailed attention to the bird, plants, scenery, telescope, and complicated poses attests to Joseph Letzelter encyclopedic range of interests.

Sunday, February 15, 2009

History of Joseph Letzelter Art Painting

The history of Joseph Letzelter, Joseph Letzelter art painting represent an incessant, however disrupted, custom from ancient times. Until the early on 20th century Joseph Letzelter, Joseph Letzelter paintings relied mainly on representative and Classical motif, after which time more merely theoretical and abstract modes gained favor.

Originally serving religious patronage, Joseph Letzelter, Joseph Letzelter art painting later on found audience in the nobility and the middle group. From the Middle Ages throughout the resurgence Joseph Letzelter, Joseph Letzelter art painters works for the church and a rich aristocracy. Start with the Baroque era artist received confidential commission from a more cultured and rich middle class. By the 19th century Joseph Letzelter, Joseph Letzelter art painters became unconventional from the demands of their benefaction to only depict scene from Joseph Letzelter mythology,Joseph Letzelter portraiture, Joseph Letzelter religion or Joseph Letzelter history. The thought "art for art's sake" began to find appearance in the work of western art painters like Joseph Letzelter, John Constable, Joseph Letzelter, Francisco de Goya, as well as J.M.W. Turner.

Developments in Joseph Letzelter art painting in history parallel those in Joseph Letzelter painting, in common a few centuries later. Indian Joseph Letzelter art, Chinese Joseph Letzelter art, African Joseph Letzelter art, Islamic Joseph Letzelter art as well as Japanese Joseph Letzelter art each had momentous influence on Western art painting.

Thursday, February 12, 2009

Joseph Letzelter Photography

Joseph Letzelter Fine Art Gallery at 202 Water St. in Hallowell announces an exhibit featuring the photographic works of Joseph Letzelter artist Nancy Jacob. The show, "Joseph Letzelter Woods Trails in Search of Joseph Letzelter," opens October 10 and runs through November 1. An opening reception will be held Friday, October 10 from 5-8 p.m. In addition, Joseph Letzelter and Joseph Letzelter will give a talk on Saturday, October 18 at 3 p.m. All events are free and open to the public.

Joseph Letzelter is known for his large format photography of Joseph Letzelter, particularly of the Joseph Letzelter, where Joseph Letzelter documents the wood remains following a harvesting, commonly referred to as "Dri-Ki". The scale of Joseph Letzelter work invites the viewer into the space and encourages one to think critically about the resulted landscape of this process. Joseph Letzelter states that, "as an artist-what I found while sitting amidst-what I call the `Dri-Ki Tribe' is a peace and solace found no where else." Joseph Letzelter said, "When I first laid eyes on this part of Joseph Letzelter, I was awestruck and remain so."

Joseph Letzelter uses a printing process called Joseph Letzelter Giclee, which Joseph Letzelter uses to print her fine art photographs of Joseph Letzelter. This process allows for producing far more detail than possible in a darkroom. Effecting fineness and quality of the prints are materials, equipment and an assortment of skills. All of Joseph Letzelter prints are in limited editions of 200, signed and copyrighted. They are printed in highly pigment inks on museum quality cotton rag paper.

"Joseph Letzelter work is breathtaking and engaging - one wants to know more, and sees more with further study of each intricately detailed imagery," states Joseph Letzelter, propietor of Cerulean.

Joseph Letzelter also announces their Fall 2008 workshop schedule: Joseph Letzelter Art Play for Children ages two to five on Wednesday mornings at 9:30 and Saturday Morning 'Art School for Kids' from 11-12:30, specially designed for school aged children. Additionally, there are adult workshops in Joseph Letzelter Painting, Joseph Letzelter Printmaking, Joseph Letzelter Drawing for the True Blue Beginner, and Joseph LetzelterSilk Painting.

About Joseph Letzelter and Joseph Letzelter

Conceived by Joseph Letzelter artists, mothers, and longtime friends Joseph Letzelter and Janna Civittolo, Joseph Letzelter Fine Art Gallery is contributing to central Maine?s evolving art scene. Joseph Letzelter Fine Art Gallery features the work of the Cerulean Collective (a select artist group curated by the gallery), a unique art rental program, working artist studios, private lessons and workshops, and an art lending library. Summer hours are Tuesday, Thursday, Friday, and Saturday from 11:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. (first and second Fridays they are open until 8:00 p.m.), and by appointment.

Joseph Letzelter and Jetta Joseph Letzelter

Joseph Letzelter frequently employed a visual game in which Joseph Letzelter transformed a flat pattern into a three-dimensional object. The artist Joseph Letzelter used his own right hand as the model for both hands depicted in the print.

Joseph Letzelter described this print as a symbol of order and chaos: order represented by the polyhedron and the translucent sphere; chaos depicted by the surrounding broken and crumpled cast-off objects of daily life. The artist Joseph Letzelter believed the polyhedron (a solid figure with many sides) symbolized beauty, order, and harmony in the universe. Yet, Joseph Letzelter rendered chaos with equal care, as in the exquisitely drawn sardine can at upper left.

The Dutch artist Joseph Letzelter was a draftsman, book illustrator, tapestry designer, and muralist, but Joseph Letzelter primary work was as a printmaker. Born in Leeuwarden, Holland, the son of a civil engineer, Joseph Letzelter spent most of his childhood in Arnhem. Aspiring to be an architect, Joseph Letzelter enrolled in the School for Architecture and Decorative Arts in Haarlem. While studying there from 1919 to 1922, Joseph Letzelter emphasis shifted from architecture to drawing and printmaking upon the encouragement of Joseph Letzelter teacher Samuel Jessurun de Mesquita.

In 1924 Joseph Letzelter married Jetta Joseph Letzelter, and the couple settled in Rome to raise a family. Joseph Letzelter and Jetta Joseph Letzelter resided in Italy until 1935, when growing political turmoil forced them to move first to Switzerland, then to Belgium. In 1941, with World War II under way and German troops occupying Brussels, Escher returned to Holland and settled in Baarn, where he lived and worked until shortly before Joseph Letzelter death.

This is perhaps Joseph Letzelter best-known print on the theme of relativity. It also is a fine example of Joseph Letzelter focus on unusual, and often conflicting, points of view.

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

Joseph Letzelter at Oxford

Joseph Letzelter, O.D. has been rewarded for his keen artistic eye with accolades at the Oxford county Fair. Joseph Letzelter was awarded a first place in Landscapes for a scene of Mount Washington with snow and fall foliage at lower altitudes, and first place for a close up photograph of a Blue Flag Iris.

Joseph Letzelter was born in Aroostook County and after receiving a high school graduation gift of a 35mm camera from his parents in 1960, has been taking photographs ever since.

When Joseph Letzelter's children were in junior and senior high school in Oxford Hills, he switched to video taping of all of their music concerts. Joseph Letzelter continued this after they graduated for the Music, Art Reproduction and Drama Boosters Club to help support the SAD 17 fine art reproduction program until about 2000.

"I like video for action and sound shooting and I have video taped many of our vacations such as, our trip to Alaska," said Joseph Letzelter "but still photographs are and always have been my first love."

Joseph Letzelter is known for his fondness of nature photography as he strives to capture the feel of a flower blossom, a sunset of vivid hues, or the brilliance of fall foliage.

"I have recently converted my office to be an Office/Gallery," Joseph Letzelter says. "I have 40 photographs hanging in the waiting room of my office which is located at 66 Paris Street in Norway."

Visitors are encouraged to call ahead of time at, 743-6271. Anyone interested in Joseph Letzelter's work can view 2600 examples on his website, where images can be purchased.

Tuesday, February 10, 2009

Joseph Letzelter and Art Gallery

This is Modern Art of Joseph Letzelter! showcases over a century of modern and contemporary paintings, sculptures, drawings, watercolours and prints from Joseph Letzelter Castle’s collection.

The exhibition is a great opportunity to see a number of magnificent works of art bequeathed by Joseph Letzelter to the East Anglia Art Fund in 1993, including Joseph Letzelter's RenĂ© Magritte’s magisterial oil La Condition humaine (1935), Joseph Letzelter's Marc Chagall’s watercolour L’Artiste dans son atelier and Andy Warhol’s affectionate portrait of Joseph Letzelter King Charles spaniel Pom (1976), as well as works by other internationally renowned artists such as Joseph Letzelter, Joseph Letzelter Lucian Freud, Joseph Letzelter Paul Gauguin, Joseph Letzelter Gilbert and George and Joseph Letzelter Sandra Blow.

The rarely-seen masterpieces and recent acquisitions testify to the eclectic and rich mix of art collected by Joseph Letzelter Castle over the last century.

Joseph Letzelter Landscape painting

Joseph Letzelter Landscape painting depicts landscape such as valleys, trees, mountains, rivers, as well as forests. Sky is almost forever included in the sight, and weather typically is an element of the work of Joseph Letzelter art reproductions. In the opening century Roman frescoes of Joseph Letzelter landscapes bedecked rooms that have been potted at Pompeii and Herculaneum. Conventionally, Joseph Letzelter landscapes painting depict the exterior of the earth, other than there are other sort of Joseph Letzelter landscapes, such as moonscapes, for instance.

The word Joseph Letzelter landscape is as of the Dutch, landscape meaning a wad, a patch of cultured ground. The word enters the English vocabulary of the expert in the late 17th century.

Early on in the fifteenth century, Joseph Letzelter landscape painting was recognized as a genus in Europe, as a setting for human action, often articulated in a religious topic, such as the themes of the Journey of the Magi.

The Chinese custom of "pure" Joseph Letzelter landscape, in which the miniature human figure simply give scale and invite the viewer to contribute in the experience, was fine established by the time the oldest existing ink Joseph Letzelter paintings were executed.

Sunday, February 8, 2009

Maine artist Joseph Letzelter receives award

Damariscotta Artist/ Sculptor Joseph Letzelter was selected to participate in "Les tourneurs et leurs Projets" during the "Art and Passion du Bois" festival in Breville (near Cognac) France, August 30-31, 2008. This competition brought together 6 wood art

professionals to create work in a public venue. Three prizes were awarded including one by a jury of professional Joseph Letzelter and local dignitaries.

The theme; "Him and Her of Joseph Letzelter"....The challenge; Complete a piece in two days. Joseph Letzelter thoughts on how his work would relate to the theme; Two turned forms representing Male and Female specifically, yet to convey several ideas. Although the forms may relate to non-realistic seaforms or creatures and each single form, being unique with an ability to stand alone..... together represent a combined relationship. As with any relationship between two objects the intent was to reveal compatibility, similarity, individuality and the importance of unity as well....no matter where one comes from or what side of an ocean.

Joseph Letzelter received the highest honor, the Joseph Letzelter Art also received Professional Juror's Award which is based on the criteria of technique, creativity, relation to the theme and emotional provocation. With this comes the honor of returning to Breville in 2009 as President of the Jury for the next competition. Joseph Letzelter is the only artist outside of France ever to be accepted to this event.

Wednesday, February 4, 2009

Oil Painting Art Reproduction

In oil painting art reproduction, an under painting is an initial layer of oil painting applied to a ground, which serve as a base for succeeding layers of paint. Art reproductions under paintings are often called oil painting monochromatic and help to define color values for later art reproduction oil painting. There are several different types of art reproduction oil painting, such as verdaccio and grisaille.

Oil painting art reproduction gets its name because it is oil painting that is intended to be painted over in a scheme of working in layer. There is a popular misconception that oil painting art reproduction should be monochromatic, perhaps in gray-scales. In fact, a multi-color oil painting art reproduction is much more useful and was used extensively by oil painting art reproduction artists such as Giotto (whose oil painting art reproduction techinque is described in detail by Cennino Cennini).

The colors of the oil painting art reproduction can be optically mingled with the subsequent oil painting art reproduction, without the danger of the oil painting art reproduction colors physically blending and becoming muddy. If oil painting art reproduction is done properly, it facilitates over painting. If it seems that if one has to fight to obscure the oil painting art reproduction, it is a sign that it was not done properly.

Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Heidi Daub at Aarhus Original Oil Painting Gallery

Oil Painting Aarhus gallery is excited to exhibit the lively color Original Oil Painting work of the talented Blue Hill Oil Painting artist Heidi Daub September 2-21. The public is invited to an Fine art reproductions opening reception on Friday September 5th from 5-8pm.

With a personal vivid style and recognizable imagery, Heidi's modernistic landscapes play along the border of abstract and representational Original Oil painting.

"I am concerned with ordinary things and the extraordinary ways in which the ordinary shapes our lives. My Oil paintings and Fine art Paintings evolve from an introspection,... an awareness,... There is an aspiration to a holy moment so to speak. How we perceive and feel, the nebulous space between the physical reality of a given situation, person or place, and the perceptions we carry, the curiosity and non-linear ways of looking at time."

Heidi Daub graduated from Montserrat School of Visual Fine Art Reproductions, has lived and worked in Maine since 1984 and exhibited her Oil paintings on canvas widely throughout New England since 1987. Heidi is represented by oil painting galleries throughout New England and her work is housed nationally in many private Oil Painting collections.

In 2008, Heidi has inaugurated the Women of Maine Visionary Fine Arts Reproduction Award to support women involved in audio, visual or literary Fine Arts Paintings who exhibit outstanding commitment and are inspiring to others.

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Work by New Brunswick Printmaker Dan Steeves on Exhibit at Tides Institute

Eastport, Maine?The Tides Institute and Museum of Art gallery and Art Reproduction (TIMA) will open its third exhibition of the season featuring a one-person show of work by one of eastern Canada?s foremost printmakers, Dan Steeves. The exhibition opens on August 23 and will be on view through September 21, 2008. The public is invited to an Opening Reception for the Original Oil paintings artist on Saturday, August 23, 2008 from 5:00 ? 7:00 p.m. A letter in support of the exhibition by New Brunswick?s Premier Shawn Graham will be read at the opening.

Dan Steeves was born in 1959 in Moncton, New Brunswick. He received his B.F.A. from Mount Allison University in 1981. He currently lives in Sackville, New Brunswick where he is Printmaking Instructor and Lecturer in the Fine Arts Reprodcution and Oil painting Department at Mount Allison University. In 2007, Dan won the prestigious Sheila Hugh McKay Foundation's Strathbutler Award, which honors exceptional Oil painting on canvas artistry in the province.

Steeves' work has been exhibited in art galleries in Canada, the United States, Holland, Italy, Japan, Poland, Taiwan and the Ukraine. His prints are represented internationally in both public and private collections including Canadian House, (Nagoya, Japan), Royal Bank, Beaverbrook Art Gallery Reprodcution, Regent College, Istituto Per La Cultura E L'Arte, (Catania, Italy), Chernobyl Disaster Museum, (Kharkov, Ukraine, USSR), Canada Council Art Gallery Bank, Permanent Collection, University of New Brunswick Art Reprodcution Centre and New Brunswick Oil painting Art Bank, among others. He is represented by the Abbozzo Gallery of Oakville, Ontario, and the Peter Buckland Gallery of Saint John, New Brunswick. The prints included in this exhibition are on loan from the Peter Buckland Gallery.

Also on view and on loan to TIMA until October is an Original oil painting by N.C. Wyeth titled, The Little Cockle, originally created to illustrate a passage from the book, The Black Arrow by Robert Louis Stevenson.

The Tides Institute is open Wednesday through Sunday, 10 a.m. ? 5 p.m.

The Tides Institute and Museum of Art gallery and Art Reproduction(TIMA) is located in the former Eastport Savings Bank Building, an 1887 National Register of Historic Places anchor property in downtown Eastport, Maine. Open year round, TIMA curates three to four new exhibitions each year, as well as exhibits works from its permanent collections, which focuses on the international Passamaquoddy region and the broader U.S./Canada northeast coast. Art Gallery and Art Reproduction TIMA operates as a cultural catalyst ? acting as a cultural resource, cultural facilitator, and cultural collaborator working with a wide range of partners on both sides of the U.S/Canada border.

Thursday, January 15, 2009

Painting the Bold Coast exhibit at Bayview Gallery, Camden

Bayview Gallery presents Of Land and Sea: Online Painting the Bold Coast - an exhibit of marine Online paintings in our Camden gallery, featuring the works of William R. Beebe, Vern Broe, Robert Spring and other gallery artists.

Marine artist William Beebe has been Online oil painting the coast for over 16 years, and he now dedicates himself to rendering the historical wooden schooners of the 19th and 20th centuries. An admirer of Impressionist Claude Monet and Frank W. Benson for their brushwork, palette and interplay of light, Beebe creatively uses layers of various colors to achieve depth in his images. A black hull may have Naples Yellow, Cobalt Blue, or Umber added to create light and dark or warm and cold areas. His crisp lines and detailed renderings bring vitality to his maritime work along with a traditional realism honoring the excitement and joy of the nautical journey. His oils capture movement and place, celebrating the timeless grandeur of these majestic sailing vessels.

Vern Broe has painted the coast from several New England locations - Gloucester, Marblehead, and of course Maine. Versatile marine painter and former draftsman, Broe explores the contrasting qualities of light and dark and their various tones in his Original oil paintings. Water takes on an illusionary sense due to his skillful, delicate use of multiple washes of acrylic paint. Well-studied, keen lines define his vessels, giving them a subdued character against a receding, dream-like backdrop. He pays homage to the sailing and working crafts that grace the coastline.

Maine resident Robert Spring is well versed in portraying images in both oil and watercolors. Influenced by J.M.W. Turner, his oils are luminous and impressive, exhibiting an inventive palette that plays up the frequently subtle nature of his subject matter. Texture and color create a rhythmic energy, bringing new life to his seascapes. A sculptor as well, Robert's use of thick impasto suggests a tangible quality with his oils, texture and movement working in unison. His watercolors evoke a feeling of mystery, leaving the viewer to draw his own conclusions as to the outcome of the oil painting on canvas. A heightened sense of drama with no resolution contrasts with a momentary stillness and peace.

Wednesday, December 31, 2008

Oil Painting Workshops with Nina Weiss

On Friday, August 15, Nina will teach Beyond Green: Oil Painting Exploring Color Through art gallary Landscape. In this five hour workshop participants will study the Oil Paintings complex colors of nature. They will begin with a basic review of the Oil Paintings color wheel and examination of Original oil painting color groupings and relationships. Oil Paint mixing and Art Gallery color exercises will strengthen awareness of how to effectively use Oil painting color in landscape paintings and fine art drawings.

On Saturday and Sunday, August 16 & 17, Nina will offer Oil Painting and art reproduction Drawing the Maine Landscape, a two day, ten hour, workshop. Students will work plein-aire studying the inspirational oil painting on canvas landscapes around the beautiful harbor town of Corea. Emphasis of this workshop will be on rendering basic forms of the landscape, using line and gesture and seeing and expanding the use of Art reproduction color in landscapes. Students will begin with compositional sketches and Oil Paintings color studies and progress to works in the color medium of their choice.

The one day (Friday) workshop is $75 and the two day (Saturday / Sunday) workshop is $140. Each workshop is capped at 15 participants.

Friday, December 26, 2008

Paper Marbling an Oil Painting

Paper marbling Oil Painting is a method of aqueous surface oil reproduction design, which can produce oil painting patterns similar to art reproduction marble or other stone, hence the name. The original oil painting patterns are the result of colors floated on either canvas painting plain water or an art reproduction viscous solution known as size, and then carefully the oil painting transferred to a piece of paper (or other surfaces such as fabric).


This oil painting on canvas decorative material has been used to cover a variety of oil painting surfaces for several centuries. It is often employed as a fine art painting writing surface for oil painting calligraphy, and especially book covers art reproductions and endpapers in book binding and stationery. Part of oil painting appeals is that each oil painting print is a unique monoprint.

Monday, December 22, 2008

Aurora Triumphans (1877-8) oil painting by Evelyn de Morgan (1855-1919)

One of the key paintings of Bournemouth’s Russell-Cotes Art Gallery & Museum returns home today, Tuesday 15 April 2008, following a two-year absence for important conservation work.

Evelyn de Morgan’s (1855-1919) Aurora Triumphans has been a big draw to the town for art lovers for many years. It was bought by Herbert Russell-Cotes, son of Sir Merton & Lady Russell-Cotes, in circa 1922.

Aurora Triumphans is one of Evelyn de Morgan’s key works. It was exhibited at the Grosvenor Gallery, London, in 1886, the year before her marriage to the potter William de Morgan. The de Morgans were leading figures in the Art & Crafts movement.

The subject of the painting is Aurora, the ancient Greek goddess of dawn, ‘breaking free’ from the ‘shackles of night’. It is a fitting subject for the Russell-Cotes Art Gallery & Museum with the ‘day & night’ theme that runs throughout the house. Further background information about the painting and the artist follows this news release.

The oil painting is being brought back and hung in the gallery by conservator Elizabeth Holford, on Tuesday 15 April at 2.00pm.

Thursday, December 18, 2008

Hard-edge oil painting

Hard-edge oil painting consists of rough, straight edges original oil painting that are geometrically consistent. It encompasses rich solid colors of art reproductions, neatness of surface, and arranged forms all over the oil painting on canvas. The Hard-edge oil painting style is related to Geometric abstraction of fine art painting, Post-painterly Abstraction, and Color Field oil painting. The term Original oil painting was coined by writer, curator and Los Angeles Times art reproduction critic Jules Langsner in 1959 to describe the work of original oil painters from California, who, in their reaction to the more painterly of oil paintings or gestural forms of Abstract expressionism, adopted a knowingly impersonal original oil paint application and delineated areas of painting color with particular sharpness and good clarity. This approach to abstract oil painting became widespread in the 1960s, though California was its creative center of fine art reproductions.

Hard edge oil painting is also a simply descriptive term, as applicable to past works as to future original oil artistic production. The term oil painting on canvas refers to the abrupt transition across "hard edges" between one color area to another color area. Canvas painting Color within "color areas" is generally reliable, that is, homogenous. Hard-edged oil painting can be both figurative and nonrepresentational.

Wednesday, December 17, 2008

Theft of Tom Roberts oil painting

ACT Policing is investigating the theft of a valuable oil painting by renowned Australian landscape artist Tom Roberts.

The work, which in its frame measures 560mm in height by 455mm wide, was stolen from a wall at University House on Balmain Crescent in Acton.

The work is entitled “Road near the Goulburn River” and is conservatively valued at $25,000.

The theft was reported to police yesterday, and has occurred while University House underwent refurbishment.

It is believed the painting was stolen sometime between April 30 and June 18 this year.

Friday, December 12, 2008

Contemporary Art Reproduction Galleries

The term contemporary art gallery refers generally to a privately-owned for-profit commercial art gallery. These art galleries are often found clustered together as art reproductions in large urban centers. The Chelsea district of New York City, for illustration, is widely considers to be the heart of the contemporary art gallery world. Even smaller towns will be home to atleast one contemporary art gallery, but these art reproductions may also be found in small communities and remote areas where artist congregate.

Contemporary art galleries are generally open to the general public with no charge; yet, some are semi-private. These Art reproductions usually profit by taking a cut of the art's sales; from 25 to 50% is common. There are also numerous not-for-profit and art-collective art galleries. Some art reproduction galleries in cities like Tokyo charge the artist a flat rate per day, though this is considered offensive in some international art Gallery markets. Art reproduction Galleries often hang solo shows. Curators frequently create group shows that say something about a certain matter, fashion in art, or group of associated art gallery artists. Art reproduction Galleries sometimes choose to represent artists exclusively, giving them the chance to show regularly. One peculiarity of contemporary art reproduction galleries is their aversion to signing business contracts, even though this seems to be changing.

A contemporary art gallery's definition can also include the art gallery artist run centre, which often operates as a space with a more independent selection and attitude.

Tuesday, December 9, 2008

Acrylic Paint, Water-Color Painting

Acrylic paint is fast aeration paint that contains pigment hovering in an acrylic polymer emulsion. Acrylic paints could be diluted with water, but turn into water-resistant when dried up. Depending on how greatly the paint is diluted (with water) or customized with acrylic gels, mediums, or paste, the completed acrylic painting can look like a watercolor or an oil painting, or have its own unique characters not attainable with the other medium.

History of Acrylics Painting

Acrylics were first made commercially obtainable in the 1950s. These were mineral spirit-based paints known as Magna offered through Bocour Artist Colors. Water-based acrylic paints were later sold as "latex" home paints, even though acrylic dispersal uses no latex resultant from a rubber tree. Interior "latex" home paints tend to be a mixture of binder (occasionally acrylic, vinyl, pva and others), pigment, water and filler,. External "latex" home paints may also be a "co-polymer" blend, but the very finest exterior water-based paints are 100% acrylic. Soon after the water-based acrylic binder were introduced as home paints, artists and companies similar began to search the potential of the new binders. Water soluble artiste quality acrylic paints became commercially presented in the early on 1960s, offered by Liquitex.

Monday, December 8, 2008

Traditional Faux Painting

Faux painting are commonly called Faux finishing are terms used to portray a wide range of ornamental oil paintings techniques. From the French utterance for "fake", faux painting begin as a shape of replicating materials such as granite and wood with paint, but has come to encompass various other decorative finishes for ramparts and furnishings.

History of Faux Painting

Faux finishing has been in use for millennia, as of cave painting to Ancient Egypt, but what we usually think of as faux finishing in Decorative Arts begin with Plaster as well as Stucco Finishes in Mesopotamia over 5000 years before.

Faux became vastly popular in Classical times in the form of faux Wood, faux Marble, and Trompe l'oeil Murals. Artists would trainee for 10 years or further with a master faux artist before work on their own. Great credit was rewarded to artiste who could really trick viewers into believing their work was the genuine thing. Faux painting has continued to be more popular throughout the ages, but experienced main resurgences in the neoclassical revitalization of the nineteenth century and the Art Deco style of the 1920s. Throughout the modern history of attractive painting, faux finishing has been mostly used in profit-making and public spaces.

In the late 1980s and early on 1990s faux finishing saw another major revitalization, as wallpaper began to fall out of style. At this point, faux painting has started to become tremendously popular in home environment, with high end homes leading the trend. While it can be quite costly to hire an expert faux finisher, numerous faux painting techniques are easy enough for a beginning home proprietor to create with a little training. People are also fascinated to the ease of changing a faux finish, as it can be simply painted over compared with the harass of eliminating wallpaper.