Showing posts with label landscape painting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label landscape painting. Show all posts

Monday, December 31, 2018

Anchor Park United Methodist Church, Anchorage, Alaska: Framed MarvinD. Mangus Display

Marvin Mangus



Anchor Park United Methodist Church



Anchor Park United Methodist Church



Anchor Park United Methodist Church



Marvin Mangus



Marvin Mangus


Anchor Park United Methodist Church in Anchorage has a nice framed-display showcasing some of the weekly service programs that featured dad's paintings as monochromatic cover illustrations. Alfred sent me a recent photo of this display piece. I still love the Mid-Century Modern design of the church.

"Anchorage's population grew as a result of the influx of military families and support industries after World War II and the Korean Conflict.  

First United Methodist Church on the Parkstrip was the only Methodist church in Anchorage and was bursting with worshipers. So there was a need to establish another Methodist church and new subdivisions were going up on the East of the Downtown area, mostly to house military families. 

These neighborhoods were canvassed to see who would want to attend a Methodist church nearby and enough people signed up to start a congregation in 1954. Money was secured to start construction on the main building, then an education wing was added in 1963, and the west wing was added in 2004. 

Membership has ranged from a low of 78 in 1954 to a high of 399 in both 1968 and 1994. Polynesian people, most from Tonga, established a fellowship in 1978 and have contributed greatly to the life of the church. 

Service to the community has benefited Bean's Cafe, Clare House, F.I.S.H., Alcoholics Anonymous, Boy and Girl Scouts, and many other groups and individuals over the past 50 years."







Wednesday, December 19, 2018

Jerry Bywaters: Landscape Paintings

Jerry Bywaters



Jerry Bywaters



Jerry Bywaters



Jerry Bywaters




Jerry Bywaters



Jerry Bywaters


Jerry Bywaters



Jerry Bywaters



Jerry Bywaters




Jerry Bywaters




Jerry Bywaters


Professor Jerry Bywaters (1906-1989) served for thirty-five years as a faculty member in Southern Methodist University’s Division of Fine Arts and as Director of the Dallas Museum of Fine Arts from 1943 to 1964.

Underlying all of Bywaters’ work was some perspective on the interaction of people and the land, whether the land served as a source of livelihood, a stage for historical events, a backdrop for architecture, or simply as a source of artistic inspiration. For Bywaters, familiarity with the natural world and incorporating it and its effects were basic to his art. 

In a 1928 letter explaining his decision to work as a studio -- instead of a commercial -- artist, Bywaters reminded his father that “I must be out of doors.” Landscape afforded Bywaters an avenue of experimentation with media and he worked with equal ability in oil, watercolor, and pastel. Although his artistic heyday was the ten-year period from 1933-1943, when he was able to travel frequently to Arizona, Colorado, New Mexico, and West Texas, Bywaters continued depicting landscapes long after he had turned away from other subjects.



Sunday, December 16, 2018

Suzanne Kelley Clark Painting

Suzanne Kelley Clark



Here's a recent 20" x 28" oil on canvas painting by friend and fellow SMU MFA graduate, Suzanne Kelley Clark.

Artist's Statement from her terrific website:

Since childhood, spending time in nature has been important to me. Painting landscape provides me with an even more profound connection to nature. It is an unending source of inspiration, challenge and discovery.

Friday, October 5, 2018

Claude Glass (Black Mirror)

Claude Glass



Claude Glass



William Gilpin



 Claude Lorrain


Seems like a gimmick -- but I still want one...

A "Claude glass" (or black mirror) is a small mirror, slightly convex in shape, with its surface tinted a dark color. Bound up like a pocket-book or in a carrying case, Claude glasses were used by artists, travelers, and connoisseurs of landscape and landscape painting. 

Claude glasses have the effect of abstracting the subject reflected in them from its surroundings, reducing, and simplifying the color and tonal range of scenes and scenery to give them a "painterly" quality.

They were famously used by picturesque artists in England in the late 18th and early 19th Centuries as a frame for drawing sketches of picturesque landscapes. The user would turn their back on the scene to observe the framed view through the tinted mirror -- in a sort of pre-photographic lens -- which added the picturesque aesthetic of a subtle gradation of tones.

The Claude glass is named for Claude Lorrain, a 17th-Century landscape painter, whose name in the late 18th Century became synonymous with the picturesque aesthetic, although there is no indication he used or knew of it or anything similar. The Claude glass was supposed to help artists produce works of art similar to those of Lorrain. William Gilpin, the inventor of the picturesque ideal, advocated the use of a Claude glass saying, "they give the object of nature a soft, mellow tinge like the colouring of that Master." Gilpin mounted a mirror in his carriage, from where he could take in "a succession of high-colored pictures -- continually gliding before the eye."



Sunday, July 15, 2018

Winslow Homer: Bermuda Watercolors

Winslow Homer



Winslow Homer



Winslow Homer



Winslow Homer


Winslow Homer created a series of vibrant watercolor landscapes on his first visit to the Bermuda in December 1899. He left some six weeks later in early 1900 taking roughly ten watercolors back with him. 

He returned to Bermuda in 1901 and continued his study and fascination with Bermuda’s rock formations. He found the faults, the striations, the texture, and the coloring most suitable to his palette and moods. 

His body of Bermuda-inspired work was featured at the Buffalo Exposition of 1901 where they were awarded a Gold Medal.



Thursday, July 12, 2018

Eliot O'Hara: Watercolors


"I might be able to tell what I know about composition or color, but in more senses than one it would not do the student much good. If, however, I can teach him how to do the mechanical part of producing a watercolor, such as tinting a paper, blending colors, or performing the various other operations or tricks of the trade -- then if he has anything to express, his hand will be ready. In other words, I shall try to give him the spelling and grammar -- he must have the ideas." -- Eliot O'Hara

During his lifetime, Eliot O'Hara (1890-1969) was one of America's most widely respected watercolorists and teachers. In addition to an extensive exhibition record, O'Hara wrote eight books, produced more than twenty films on watercolor technique, and taught classes all over the country. From 1930-1947, he ran the successful O'Hara Watercolor School at Goose Rocks Beach in Kennebunkport, Maine, the first such school in the United States. (The school burned down in the great 1947 fire that destroyed over 200,000 acres in Maine, and was never reopened).

O'Hara was born in Waltham, Massachusetts, where his father owned a successful manufacturing company. With the sudden death of his father in 1912, the twenty-two year old O'Hara took control of the business, assuming responsibility for his mother and three younger siblings. In the early 1920s, O'Hara began to paint as a form of relaxation. Soon, however, he spent more and more time developing his painting skills. When he married in 1924, he and his wife honeymooned for several months in Europe where he produced nearly three hundred paintings. That same year, some of those European-inspired watercolors were accepted into the Philadelphia Watercolor Club Annual Exhibition. The following year, his first solo exhibition in Boston sold out. By 1927, O'Hara was a successful artist and could devote all his time to painting. He would go on to receive many honors during his long career, including a Guggenheim Fellowship, a life membership in the American Watercolor Society, and was one of the first watercolorists elected to the National Academy of Design.

Painting on-site, O'Hara worked without an easel, sitting or kneeling directly over his watercolor paper (usually 15 x 22 inches), with his paints and brushes to one side. With almost no formal training, O'Hara taught himself to paint and created his own personal style. Hoping to provide other beginning watercolor students with the painting techniques that he was forced to develop on his own, O'Hara wrote his first book on the subject in 1932. "Making Watercolors Behave" was the first of eight how-to-books to follow. In 1936, he made his first watercolor demonstration film, eventually producing twenty-four color films commissioned by the Encyclopedia Britannica Company.

O'Hara's watercolors are characterized by solid compositions painted with traditional washes, and economic brushstrokes that convey details with a startling simplicity. Said to complete most paintings in little more than an hour, O'Hara was fond of saying -- "It's the last stroke that kills the picture." An avid traveler who painted all over the world (for sixteen years he painted each summer in Maine), O'Hara was a master at conveying the distinctive color and light that characterized each locale he visited.

Among the more than sixty public collections that include O'Hara's work are -- the Art Institute of Chicago, the Corcoran Gallery of Art, the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, the Library of Congress, the Museum of Fine Art Boston, the National Academy of Design, the National Museum of American Art, the Toledo Art Museum, the Worcester Art Museum, and the Ogunquit Museum of American Art.



Eliot O'Hara



Eliot O'Hara



Eliot O'Hara



Eliot O'Hara



Eliot O'Hara





Monday, June 18, 2018

Marvin D. Mangus: Paintings Found on the Internet

Marvin Mangus



Marvin Mangus



Marvin Mangus



Marvin Mangus



Marvin Mangus



Marvin Mangus



Marvin Mangus



Marvin Mangus



Each time I discover a photo of one of dad's painting, I plan to archive it these ongoing visual files.







Friday, June 15, 2018

Marvin D. Mangus: Polar Bear Painting

Marvin Mangus


I was pleased to win this polar bear painting by my dad, Marvin D. Mangus. Judging by the signature style, I estimate this work to be c. 1961. I'm very happy to add it to my collection.