Kathleen Walsh Live
Demonstration
June 2, 2016 | Reception
This past Thursday we were delighted to have represented
artist Kathleen Walsh paint for us live at the Annual Gallery Artist Group Show
Reception. Kathleen demonstrated how she uses her field studies as reference
when returning to the studio, changing the size and certain details along the
way. It was wonderful watching Kathleen
complete her process from start to finish. Learn more about Kathleen Walsh in
her bio below and click HERE to see more of her artwork.
Kathleen Walsh
lives and paints the mid Atlantic. Plein air is her passion, oil her medium. On
the off season she works in large abstracted mixed media, focusing on landscape
and central Africa, just to keep it interesting. What can be gleaned in the
work of an artist, specifically the art of Kathleen Walsh? What can one find in
her renditions of American farmlands, riverbanks, morning mists? Of African
coastlines, deserts and grasslands that make her work uniquely hers? A sense of
home, perhaps. Of her art, she paraphrases Joseph Conrad, “My work is not to
edify or console, to improve or encourage, but simply to get down on canvas
some sense of the wonder of life, of its unfathomable romance and mystery. I
paint that you might see, a little, of what I see.”
Walsh’s journey into
art came later in life. Raised the oldest of 9 children in rural New England,
earning one’s keep was serious business. Like most of her sisters she studied
nursing, returning to university mid 80’s to study psychotherapy. Her first
insight into serious art came in Warsaw, Poland. In Poland in the 70’s the arts
were the people’s stronghold against Communism. Then Director of the Polish
Radio and Television Orchestra and Choir in Kraków, Antoni Wit, commented,
“When we come together to play, we create an island of beauty in an otherwise
hostile land.” That comment made an impression. Art was more than a sheet of
music or a colorful canvas; art was a powerful means of expression. Art was a
voice.
It was not until the 90’s that Walsh began a to consider her
own art. In Geneva, Switzerland, life threw an unexpected punch. She was unable
to obtain a work permit, then broke her leg. With few options, she took part
time work teaching and consulting, and began studying with local artists
eventually finding Janis Pozzie-Johnson. Working with Pozzie-Johnson she found
a passion for art, an energy that holds to this day. Back in the States Walsh
continued studies at the Art League School of Alexandria, Virginia,
periodically seeking out master artists such as Johnny Johnson and Makoto
Fujimura. In 2006 she opened a studio at Libertytown Arts Workshop, a converted
plumbing supply store.
A major point of
development was her introduction to plein air work. An outdoor person by
nature, there was no turning back. Three seasons of the year she paints plein
air. Welcomed by townspeople, she paints at nearby farms, in private gardens,
on riverfronts, mountain properties and street corners. In the winter she moves
to the studio, working on larger, more abstracted images and wrestling with
scale, color and form.
In 2008, she returned
to Africa where she had previously lived for 7 years working and raising a
family. This time she carried a sketchbook and paints, and while on assignment
made quick studies of the place and its people. Far from the tourist path, she
sought out local artists, meeting and sharing ideas about texture, shape and
symbols. In the village of Safane, Burkina Faso, a group of weavers and dyers
gathered to talk with her about family, cotton growing, indigo and the stories
woven in to their cloths. “I came to Africa to paint landscapes,” she wrote,
“but the figure caught my eye; the grace of the women, the flow of their
garments. The figure became my landscape.” Back in her studio Walsh works these
sketches in to large mixed media abstracts, using acrylic, graphite, oil
pastel, on both canvas and board. A strong supporter of the Art in Embassy
Program, Walsh has loaned paintings to Quito, Manila, Accra, Manila (again),
Addis Ababa and Reykjavik.
Of this work and her overseas experience she writes, “Living
overseas changes a person, it changed me. I see more. And what I see is Beauty,
in both landscape and people. In the end, I believe that people are more alike
than different, more connected than not, more common in their hopes than we
might know. Art gives expression to that commonality. It is a venue for
conversations unspoken, as if you and I shake hands and say hello, then go
along our way the better for having met.
Finished Painting
River Fun
oil on linen
12 x 16
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