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Showing posts with label urban paintings. Show all posts
Showing posts with label urban paintings. Show all posts

The Urban Appeal Of Steven Albert's Photo-Realism Paintings



above: Stroll by Steven Albert, oil on canvas, 30" x 40", Hespe gallery

Steven Albert's oil paintings are hyperrealistic representations of urban and small town icons like cafes, coffeehouses, street windows, graffiti scrawled walls and parked cars. The mundane subject matter is executed with a deft hand, keen eye and romantic familiarity, especially to those who grew up around San Francisco.


above: 1789 Folsom by Steven Albert, 2009, oil on canvas, 30"X48", George Billis Gallery, New York

Reminiscent of the hyper realistic paintings by Robert Bechtle and Richard Estes, Alberts' work catapults us into present day venues with the graffiti and street art not apparent decades ago when Bechtle was immortalizing suburbia or in hyperrealism paintings of Stephen Magsig's Michigan.

2 ecampes of Richard Estes paintings:


2 examples of Robert Bechtle's paintings:



In Steven Albert's work, the audience's relationship to the paintings and their subject matter depends up the viewers position in relation to the scene. At times you are a voyeur peering into the crowded cafes and the patrons within, separated by doors or windows, such as in the following pieces:

Straight Through:

Blue Door:

Trinity:

Window On Market:

The Park:

Royal Grouds:

Benedictine:

All Nighter:

Evening At The Allstar:

Key Lime:


At other times, you are within the establishment, often empty and laden with a quiet calm inside as you witness the action outside, separately only by plate glass windows:

24th Street Pops:

Interstices:

Get up:

Jump:

Orange Retro:

And still, in other pieces you are a distant witness to surroundings you might often have overlooked or grown anesthetized to unless you saw them imortalized on canvas, as in the following works:

1780 folsom:

On Fire:

Moving:

Graffiti Series IV:

Blue Girlies:

Stroll:

Swirl:


Artist bio:
From the forests of Northern Maine, where he was raised,to the streets of San Francisco, Steven Albert's paintings have always been informed by patterns of clear, bright sunlight and shadows.

Although architectural designs dominate his imagery, doors and windows are often the focus, creating a sense of portal into often missed aspects of our concrete reality, whether it be rooms of mysterious and zen-like calm, or the fractured and frenetic multiplicity of urban cafes and storefronts. Albert seeks to highlight the small moments, common in our lives, but often unexperienced.

Albert's work is represented by galleries in Los Angeles, San Francisco, and New York and has been exhibted in various museums and venues around the country. His paintings are included in several important collections worldwide. In 2006, he was awarded a Pollack-Krasner Foundation grant.


Artist's Statement:
In my paintings, I begin by discovering and drawing out abstract, linear and spatial order from the seemingly random activity of commonplace situations, such as those found sitting in or walking by cafes and restaurants where so many elements of normal life converge. Architectural elements are used as a sort of scaffolding to frame, and fracture the picture plane and illusionistic spaces, creating something of a kaleidoscopic collage.

Objects and events like interior/exterior, people, streets, cars, tables, chairs, cups, napkins and trees, are held together by a unifying, realistic rendering and warm, bright light, shadows, and reflections luring us in.

With no object or figure deemed more central or more important than any other, the paintings are subject-less and decentralized, seemingly expanding beyond the confines of the canvas. The final images compel, disquiet and reassure. Comfortable inviting moments are answered with jarring complexity, and sometimes confusion.

They are still, silent, possibly ambiguous, yet frenetic, complicated and active. They are without emotional or narrative context, moral or politic. They are also without existential probing and anxiety. Viewers may decide to impart such meaning depending on their own personal experiences and reactions. Instead, the paintings are distillations and attempts at acceptance of the ever changing and ungraspable and inescapable and unedited "now", brimming with imminent and potential energy. They delight is simply being "slices of life," stumbled upon and easily missed, inviting contemplation of the moments and structure within our surroundings.

Steven D. Albert
ph: (415)-225-2960
sdalbert2@gmail.com

KOPLIN DEL RIO GALLERY
6031 Washington Blvd.
Los Angeles, CA 90232
ph: (310)-836-9055
www.koplindelrio.com

HESPE GALLERY
251 Post Street , Suite 420
San Francisco, CA 94108
ph: (415)-776-5918
www.hespe.com

GEORGE BILLIS GALLERY
511 West 25th Street, Ground Floor
New York, NY 10001
ph: (212)-645-2621
www.georgebillis.com

Freeways & Overpasses: An Artist's Muse, Part II



Above: Ben Aronson's Closed Ramp, Westside Highway

There has been such an ongoing interest in a post I did months ago, called "Freeways & Overpasses; An Artist's Muse"  that it's time for Freeways & Overpasses; Part II.

Clearly this subject matter continues to inspire artists all over the world, regardless of style, medium, or execution. I could seriously dedicate a blog to this subject alone, but for now, this second series will have to suffice.

By the way, these posts are my personal favorite posts to write and compile, but they take weeks, even months ... so I cannot do them as frequently as I'd like.

The following pieces are all beautiful and timeless. Both serving as a record of human technology, evolution and transportation as well as contemporary landscapes. The following works are glimpses of the world as it stands today, with freeways as 'escape routes' and overpasses as 'architecture'.

Because the last post was so well-received I have tried to include as many as I could find- within reason of course, in this one. Some of the following paintings are available, some are not, but all are worth admiring.

In the photorealism style:

The Paintings of Danny Heller:

Above: "Suburbia Freeway #1" by Danny Heller

Above: Danny Heller's "Suburbia Freeway #2"

above: Danny Heller's "Nightscape #1"

The Work of Patricia Chidlaw:

Above: Patricia Chidlaw's "Westbound Freight"

And her "Railroad Bridge"

and her "Overpass"

The Work of Anna Conti:

Above: Anna Conti's "Steel Forest"

Above: Anna Conti's "Metamorphosis"

The work of Stephen Dolmatch:

Above: "Evening Westside Highway"

Above: "Tilted Swirl"

Above: Unknown title, Stephen Dolmatch

Stephen Hicks'
work:

Above: Stephen Hicks' "16th and 10th ave".

above, Hicks' "Prospect & Washington"


Above: Eileen David's "Lefty #9"


Above: Peter Nye's "280 Overpass" (sold)


Above: Tom Birkner's "Under The Bridge"


Above: Bill Mosely's "SR-125" (for sale)


Above: Nicholas Evans Cato's "Tiger Stripe"


Above: Thomas Germano's "Underbelly"

Looser and more painterly interpretations, but equally as fabulous:

The work of William Wray:

Above: William Wray's "134"

And his "LA "

The work of David Shevlino:

Above: David Shevlino's "Exit"

above: Shevlino's "Evening headlights"

and his "Onramp"

The work of Tom Brown:



Above: Tom Brown's Freeway paintings from daily painters

Stephen Coyle's Work:

Above: Coyle's Big Dig Beginning

Above: his Rearview Nightmare

Above: Coyle's March 3rd


Above: "Onramp" by Nathan Bond


Above: George Nick's Route 93 and VW van


above: Chris Greco


Above: Eileen David's Under The FDR


Above: David Wells Roth's "Route 80"

Above: David Wells Roth's Overpass


and his "Under Mass Ave"


Above: Doug Braithwaite's "Wall Avenue"


And Doug Braithwaite's "Hunter Gatherers"


Above: unknown title, by Jon Rader Jarvis


Above: Scott Yeskel's LA #8

Above: Scott Yeskel's Los Angeles, 2002


Above: Craig Stephen's "Freeway Palm"


Above: Stephen Magsig's Shadows, from his fabulous Postcards from Detroit series

Below are more graphic representations:

by Elizabeth O'Reilly :

Above: Elizabeth O'Reilly's Afternoon Light

and her Expressway At Night

Above: Gowanus Expressway By Night

and Ron Milewicz:

Above: Citiwide Morning by Ron Milewicz

Above: his Woodside Station


Above: Sharilyn Neidhardt's Sunset Bridge

By the way, several of these painters are represented by (and their works are available from) the following galleries:
The George Billis Galleries.
The Chelsea Art Galleries
DFN Gallery
The Paul Theibaud galleries
online at The Daily Painters Gallery

I'm sure I have inadvertently omitted hundreds of other freeway and overpass paintings. So, maybe there will be a part III!
Enjoy.

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