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James Reid Lambdin (1807-1889)
James Lambdin was born in Pittsburgh and at age 13, he was studying with John Stein in Steubenville, Ohio. He then went to Philadelphia where he studied with Edward Miles and Thomas Sully. In 1826, he returned to Pittsburgh and opened up the Museum of Natural History and Gallery of Painting. In 1832, he moved to Louisville, Kentucky, and spent several years as an itinerant painter traveling between Pittsburgh and [...] Click here to continue reading.
Gerald Laing (British, born 1936)
Gerald Laing began his career as a British Pop artist in the 1960s and has worked in many media, including paint and sculpture, in both abstract and figural styles. During the 1960′s, Laing was mainly producing shaped abstract paintings which relied on techniques used in car manufacture, including lacquering and electroplating. Three of his works from this period were included in the Jewish Museum of Art’s exhibition entitled “Primary [...] Click here to continue reading.
Max Kuehne (1880-1968)
Max Kuehne was born in Halle, Germany in 1880. He later came to New York and studied with Kenneth Hayes and William Merritt Chase at the Chase School. He traveled extensively throughout his life, but it was Cape Ann that became artist Max Kuehne’s favorite destination. An athlete as well as an artist, he eventually set up a studio in Rockport in 1920 in order to spend every summer painting, sailing, [...] Click here to continue reading.
Leon Kroll (1884-1974)
Leon Kroll first established his reputation between 1911 and 1915 as a painter of powerful views of the bridges, wharves and riverfronts of New York City. Although Kroll loved to tell of his inadvertent discovery of Cezanne’s and Van Gogh’s paintings when he was an art student in Paris, Kroll’s early New York scenes are in fact a great deal closer in their painterly style and progressive spirit to the [...] Click here to continue reading.
Sam Kramer (1913-1964)
Now considered the most important post-war Modernist jeweler, Kramer was a Surrealist artist who worked in the biomorphic style. Among the first of the Greenwich Village studio jewelers (est. 1940), Kramer advertised his work as “Fantastic Jewelry for People Who are Slightly Mad”. A self-described rockhound, Kramer studied gemology and developed a fondness for precious stones as well as exotic materials, from Burmese rubies to glass eyes. Kramer’s work emphasizes the [...] Click here to continue reading.
Sharon Kopriva (American, born 1948)
Houston artist Sharon Kopriva has gained accolades and provoked strong reactions throughout the world for her paintings and sculptures, which exhibit the influences of her Catholic background and a trip to Peru in 1981. These experiences, cultural, political, and religious, have contributed much to the development of her iconic and often humorous images of expressionistic mummy-like figures. Studying with New York painter John Alexander, as well as Texas sculptor [...] Click here to continue reading.
Adolf Ferdinand Konrad (1915-2003)
Adolf Konrad’s perceptions and observations are multifaceted and his pictorial images reflect a wide range of feelings and ideas,” said Harry Naar, professor of fine arts and director of Rider University’s Art Gallery. “Within Konrad’s work, the ordinary becomes the extraordinary.” His traditional works include cityscapes, Victorian period images or landscapes – images most known to the public – but range to widely appreciated still-life compositions.
Hailed by Gov. Thomas [...] Click here to continue reading.
Nellie Knopf (1875-1962)
Nellie Knopf, known for still life and landscape paintings, was born and raised in Chicago, Illinois. Nellie Knopf became a painter of mountain, pueblos, seascapes, and other outdoor scenes that brought her international recognition. She graduated with honors from the Art Institute of Chicago, a student of John Vanderpoel and Frederick Freer. For 43 years she taught and was Director of Art at Illinois State Woman’s College, later MacMurray College, in [...] Click here to continue reading.
Gene (Alice Geneva Glasier) Kloss (1903-1996)
Gene Kloss was born Alice Geneva Glasier in Oakland, California in 1903. She was known for her Southwestern Indian-genre subjects and landscapes which were generally etchings, oil or watercolor. She studied at the San Francisco School of Fine Arts. After her first visit to Taos in 1925 fell in love with the town. Four years later she became a permanent resident. The landscape suited her temperament as well [...] Click here to continue reading.
Frank C. Kirk (1889-1963)
Frank C. Kirk was born in the city of Zitomir in South Russia. As one of seven children in a family of meager means, Kirk began working at the age of twelve as an assistant to a house decorator. The youth found inspiration in the despondent yet picturesque revolutionary Russia through his drawing, though he was unable to take formal art instruction in his native country. Indeed, the young [...] Click here to continue reading.
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