Thursday, August 29, 2013

Flowers Flowers Flowers

Brian O’Neill

PSA American Artist (b.1969)

Brian O'Neill
18 x 24"
$1800
Enchanted Garden


Brian O’Neill is a Signature Member of The Pastel Society of America and is proficient in a variety of mediums including oil, pastel, acrylic and charcoal. His work has been showcased in galleries across The U.S, Canada, Japan and England. O’Neill is most noted for his floral paintings and drawings and has been an avid gardener and nature enthusiast most of his life.

Brian is a graduate of The Ani Art Academy apprenticeship program where he studied under the guidance of acclaimed realism painter Anthony Waichulis. In the spring of 2013 O’Neill joined The Memorial Art Gallery Creative Workshop in Rochester, NY where he teaches fundamental drawing and painting skills. Brian has also found success in both realism and abstract painting with his dynamic and expressive Organic Abstraction work that connects the living subject matter of his still life and figurative paintings and expresses them is a bold and innovative manner.

 “My responsibility as an artist is one that asks me to create not because I want to but because I have to, I am driven to make work that is at the highest level possible and depict beauty as I feel it to be and describe that in a language that can be read by all people who view my work even if we have never met in person” –Brian O’Neill

Artist Magazine On-Line 2009 All Media Competition Honorable Mention Floral
ARC Art Renewal Center 2009 International Salon Competition Top 100 Finalist
NYFA New York Foundation For The Arts Grant Recipient
Artists Magazine 27th Annual Art Competition Finalist Still Life/Floral
Pastel Journal 2010 Top 100 Competition Second Place Still Life/Floral
Pastel Journal 2010 Top 100 Honorable Mention
Blossom 2: Art of Flowers Jurors Choice Award Winner Naples, Museum of Art
Blossom 2: Art of Flowers Honorable Mention
Artist Magazine On-Line All Media Competition 2010 Honorable Mention
ARC Art Renewal Center International Salon Competition 2010 Finalist
Art Kudos International Art Competition 2011 Finalist
The ACOPAL-American Chinese Oil Painters Artist League Top 50 Finalist-Open Competition 2011
The Pastel Journal Top 100 Competition 2011 Honorable Mention
Art Kudos International Competition Finalist 2012

Queen Anne Victorian in Waxahachie Texas



White picket fence, the perfectly preserved Victorian House with its charming window dressings and accents -- nestled in a quaint neighborhood complete with blooming flowers on a sunny day.

How can you not feel a sense of warmth and comfort from the Mark Keathley’s Place Called Home? 

Even the artist himself was inspired by the house when he saw it!

“ I stumbled across that house in Waxahachie TX and loved the lines, the light, the work of art it was in and of itself, I added the color and cat…”, says Keathley.

Waxahachie is known for its Tour of Houses, its Queen Anne Victorian, Gothic Revival and the Greek and Romanesque architecture, and Keathley found the perfect one for this composition.

A house can say a lot about its owners – their heritage, civic pride, sense of ownership, historic perseverance, and dedication to elegance.
All this is now preserved for this one residency, thanks to Keathley.

“Place Called Home”
Mark Keathley
18 x 24”
MP-5072
$2,500.00

To purchase Place Called Home, call 210-828-8214, or log ontowww.jrmooneygalleries.com

Monday, August 26, 2013

Painting on paper that is falling to pieces gets framed up

This is the framing of the week picture. 



These oil paintings on paper were painted around the early 1900’s. Our client brought them in to get framed, paintings done by her grandmother.  They were literally falling apart if you touched them; around 100 years old , but our framers did a great job archiving the image with museum quality glass—blocking about 99% of U.V. rays  so they will be preserved for another 100 years-



Come see how J.R. Mooney Galleries can help you preserve your family’s precious memories. 

Call us today at 210.828.8214

Or visit us online at www.jrmooneygalleries.com


Friday, August 23, 2013

Autumn in Texas?...Yeah Right Cliff Cavin



Cliff Cavin
Perdenales Autumn
36 x 36”
Oil
$5,100.00

A tall and slender cypress tree dominates the left side of Cliff Cavin’s landscape painting, Perdenales Autumn; a large three foot by three foot painting that captures the crisp air of this sweet spot outside Johnson City, Texas.

Orange, brown and Mother Nature’s autumn color palette beautifies the dying leaves of this seasonal soliloquy; one artist’s internal dialogue, pondering his unselfish painterly intentions at capturing the impressionistic and atmospheric energies of such grandiose metamorphosis – a change of landscape exuberance.

But yet, Cavin in his signatory simplifications of color, layers and swatches adds a dignifying edge to this metaphysical equinox. Yes we can also picture the brittle leaves of the Cypress breaking off and about to float and flounder down into the chilly water below. However, the artist grants permanence to this moment in time, where the water is clean of debris, a crisp flow of aquatic abundance that is unequivocally opposite of SAW’s current Stage 3 Water Restrictions.

 With shimmering reflections of fall flavor, the mirrored imagery in the water refracts and splinters, disintegrating into a hodge-podge of abstractions that Sam Francis or Jackson Pollock could truly appreciate.

Along the riverbank, clusters of Cypress gather in sagacious coniferous cliques, knowledgeable of nature’s secrets, the language of the land, and looking to keep all mysteries hidden from mankind, afraid of bulldozer vanquishments, destruction, and clear cutting. Coinciding with the curved shoreline is an outer rim of rolling greenery that encapsulates the hill country, another boundary of viridian protection.  

Where the horizon line would be we are met with a large boulder smack dab in the middle of the flowing river; a dominating rock that owns that space for infinite nights and days – anchoring the background in the composition like an exclamation point.

The clear blue Pedernales River, draining into the Edwards Plateau and flowing west to east gives us a cerulean center in which to follow as if we are knee deep in it, feeling the chill in our bones, Goosebumps on our skin, and yearning to see around the bend, being drawn to the rich cobalt that emits tranquil treasures yet to be discovered.

But like the kind words of Robert Frost’s Nothing Gold Can Stay:

Nature's first green is gold,
Her hardest hue to hold.
Her early leaf's a flower;
But only so an hour.
Then leaf subsides to leaf,
So Eden sank to grief,
So dawn goes down to day
Nothing gold can stay.

We know Perdenales Autumn is but a passage of time for these trees as they will inevitably outlive us as we continue on with our own internal thoughts and meditations of this picturesque painterly vision.

©  Gabriel Diego Delgado/ JR Mooney Galleries

To Purchase: Call 210.828.8214

Cotton Gin, Cotton House, and the Yonder Years of the Lone Star State

A.C. Gentry Jr.
Cotton Gin at Frankston, Texas
Watercolor
$150.00
14 x 18”





Question: How do you see all of Texas for free and have it make a personal impression on your well-being and childhood upbringing?

Answer: Ride around with your father and uncle who are Civil Highway Engineers.

That’s exactly what a young A. C. Gentry Jr. did. 

At five years old he started to tour the rural back roads of Texas, seeing barn after barn, farmlands to ranch hands, self-built houses to bootleg shacks.  In the process, he began to draw and sketch these moments, these memories, and these nostalgic recollections.  He saw Texas being built up to become the metropolis it is today, one road and one highway at a time; continuing to explore the back roads of Texas as an adult gaining insight and understanding of the unique people and lands of this great state.

Born in Tyler, Texas 1927, Gentry’s artwork spans over five decades. A life’s worth of art that delivers picturesque and historical imagery that recalls the times long forgotten. 

Houses, barns, and landscape capture sentimental scenes of outdated but, longed-for Lone Star living.

In its curatorial exhibition summary the Tyler Museum of Art’s One Man exhibition for A.C. Gentry titled, The Past is Present: Watercolors by A.C. Gentry,  said,” his sketches and paintings record what resonates within us and preserves our memories as if they were before our eyes. He can tell you where they are – or where they were – when he made them a part of his life's work. And the past comes rushing back to us poignantly and real in the present.”

Cotton Gin at Frankston, TX is a watercolor painting that looks to be painted plein aire in the quaint backdrop of Frankston, Texas.  Deep and shallow shadows, wispy vegetation, and large swaths of color washes capture a rusted metal roofed building; a two-story gin house.

We see the rutted dirt road that circles up to the front, wheel grooves from horse drawn carts weighed down with the 400-500 lb. cotton bales that would make their way to the Galveston or Velesco port to be shipped to textile mills in New England and Great Britain.

Dry patches of undergrowth linger along the xeroscape landscape, desert vegetation of East Texas -- windblown and sun scorched. 

Awash with earth tones, Gentry adds color with browns and darker greens; the blues are faded, perfect for the nostalgic qualities of his iconic Texas subjects.

A tall pole on the left of the composition leads us into the angled depictions of a one point perspective. Roof lines and pitched eves guide us down the row of utilitarian structures.
Is it now dilapidated, ransacked, or bulldozed? No one knows for sure as the East Texas landscapes fall to the ever sprawling cities, gobbling up rural as urban expands.

But we know for sure that this Gin House is now forever depicted in Gentry’s painting; fearing neither eminent domain nor urban gentrification.


©Gabriel Diego Delgado/ JR Mooney Galleries

To purchase please call 210.828.8214

Thursday, August 22, 2013

The trembling ground of a cattle drive



Red Top Scramble

Ragan Gennusa
Giclee
24 x 32"
$ 450.00


Red Top Scramble is the newest giclee published on behalf of Ragan Gennusa available at J.R. Mooney Galleries of Fine Art. 

Four cowboys in Stetson shirts and alternating black and white, black and white cowboy hats push and guide the longhorn cattle drive. With the herd kicking up dirt and glances array, the viewer is given a courteous distance -- a safe reserve to feel the trembling. 

A black splotched longhorn rumbles by, favoring center stage and showing us he is fully aware of our presence on this dusty trail.  



With a long history of civic and community affairs ranging from Gulf Coast Conservation Association, Ducks Unlimited, Gillespie County Historical Society, Texas Parks and Wildlife Department, Gennusa shows us why his originals are in such demand. 

Call 210-828-8214 to purchase it today.

Wednesday, August 21, 2013

Turbulent Times of 1959 transforms One Artist’s Work

Abstractions of Jose Vives-Atsara
Turbulent Times of 1959 transforms One Artist’s Work

 From the uphill battle for immigration reform in Arizona to the national climate on illegal entry; one that can or cannot support job growth, we are inundated with daily reminders of this population problem.
This is not a new story, headline, or government headache.  From the flux of Cuban immigrates to the Bracero (Workers) Program (1949-1964), the U.S. saw a large push of new international populations grace its shores in 1959.

While, internationally the Dalai Lama was fleeing to Lhasa with a large population of Tibetans, The Cuban Revolution was flexing its muscles, displacing thousands during such times, Hawaii and Alaska join the United States of America surging its national census.

1959 was also a monumental year for one international artist striving to call San Antonio home- - Jose Vives-Atsara.  Born April 30, 1919 in Vilafranca del Penedes, near Barcelona, Spain, his artwork is collected internationally.  Highlights of his artistic career include a city of San Antonio initiated gift to the Pope John Paul II for the Vatican presented by Archbishop Patrick Flores in 1987 to painted contributions within the art collection of Juan Carlos, King of Spain.

Returning to Spain in 1958, the Vives-Atsara family grew homesick for the life they had in the U.S.  In March 1959 Jose Vives-petioned for re-entry to the U.S. as a locally supported and sponsored artist which was approved and forwarded to the American Consulate at Barcelona; with he and his family returning to San Antonio July 20th.

In Oct. 1959, Vives-Atsara gained a position as visiting lecturer at Incarnate Word College

“Vives-Atsara remembered that a San Antonio immigration official advised him to obtain a teaching position in order to become a permanent United States resident. The immigration service would view his employment by a college as evidence of his economic independence and his cultural value to San Antonio and the nation”, writes Nancy Glass West in Jose Vives-Atsara, His Life and His Art.

To see inside the artist’s mind, you see a world turned upside-down –international relocation, new job, new house, etc. etc.  Now think about how your outlook, inspirations, muses, and art would change if you experienced such stressful changes. Not to be pigeon-holed, Jose Vives-Atsara was already known for his still-lifes, portraits, landscapes, and wildflowers, but he began to paint a series of  abstract landscapes with his signature 11 color palette; a choice one might think was reflective of the chaos of such personal upheavals and distresses.

Abstract Landscape
Jose Vives-Atsara

Abstract Landscape by Vives-Atasara illustrates this new exploration of intellectual abstraction. Closing in on the rocky pathway like some overgrown Tim Burton landscape, the trees line the gauntlet, creating a foreboding effect on top of artistic mystification.  Adding to the mystery is the fact we do not know if Vives-Atsara is painting the Guadalupe River, the Texas Hill Country, the Spanish countryside, or the various seascapes that captured his attention.

“My using a palette knife, a spatula, happened accidently.  The professors that taught me always used brushes.  I experimented with the spatula and I like the result; it added improved texture and spontaneity to my paintings.  An artist must be educated in the standard techniques of painting, but there is no substitute for his personal daily experience and his mistakes”, says Vives-Atsara.

With quick whips with the palette knife Vives-Atsara cuts into the paint, creating cactus needle-like textural accents in select areas.  Red, orange, blue and yellow swatches of color dance across the composition.  We begin to see the piecemeal landscape scene as our eyes digest the familiar outlines; trees, rocks, and path.

©Gabriel Diego Delgado/ J.R. Mooney Galleries


J.R. Mooney Galleries of Fine Art currently has a collection of 5 abstract landscapes and village scenes available for purchase.  

Friday, August 16, 2013

Gloom and Doom for one Dutch Impressionistic Painter

Anthonius Henricus “Toon” Koster 
(Jan. 19, 1913- Nov. 25, 1989)
Night City
$1,200
24 x 36”
Oil



Antonius "Toon" Koster, a renowned Dutch artist, was born in Schiedam, (South Holland) Netherlands in 1913. He went to the Art Academy in Rotterdam, Netherlands and became a painter, printmaker, industrial artist, enamellist and muralist.

During most of his artistic career he lived and worked in Nieuwkoop near the Nieuwkoopse Plassen.

Koster was a member of the Dutch Federation of Visual Artists, and died November 25, 1989 in Woerden, Netherlands.

Koster often used dark earthy colors and painted in broad coarse brush strokes, creating depressive and gloomy atmospheres; making for subtle impressionistic qualities.

When asked to which movement he belonged or which subjects he preferred, he answered: “There is no movement… and everything repeats itself.”

“Night City”, is a signature city-scape by Koster that exemplifies all that he was known for: boats, cities, gloom, illuminating sun/moon behind clouds, and his pictorial post WWII depressive metropolis.

A one point perspective only exacerbates the depressive complexity of the work with the angling of the drab buildings that line the boulevards, structures as borders for the blackened water in the industrial canal, a waterline that is cut midway down the composition with the three arched bridge.

 We are boxed in on three sides with the horizon line blocking an eternal view.  However, our release from the melancholy is up into the sky, but wait – impending catastrophes await us in the heavy snow laden billows that weigh down on us with only a glimmer of light; a false hope.

Friedrich Nietzsche once said “Hope in reality is the worst of all evils because it prolongs the torments of man.” ‘Tis true when dealing with Anthonius Henricus “Toon” Koster.


© Gabriel Diego Delgado/ J.R. Mooney Galleries
Ph. (210).828.8214

Thursday, August 8, 2013

"Arches" for Aug. 2013 Second Saturday Boerne, Texas


Second Saturday's 
"Architectural Assets”

-- Boerne’s Second Saturday Art & Wine event promises to keep you cool with a quaint night of exciting fine art, great company, free food & drink, and glamorous artists.

J.R. Mooney Galleries of Fine Art takes a look at the often overlooked and sometimes ordinary oval openings- The Arch, and how they work as compositional elements in impressionistic painting.

Join J. R. Mooney Galleries of Fine Art as they continue celebrating Boerne’s Second Saturday Art & Wine August 10, 2013 from 4 pm – 8 pm as they open “Arches”, an exhibit of  work by emerging, national, and international artists . “Arches” sums up the timeless fine art exploration and the portrayals of the curved architectural feature of arches in a time-honored tradition of impressionistic painting.

Highlights from “Arches”, include Erich Paulson’s thick impasto paintings, James F. Yi’s Venetian delights, and Koster’s gloomy depressions.

Look for J.R. Mooney Galleries of Fine Art to transport you to different time and place with an eclectic mix of fine art celebrating the arch in fine art painting.

Who:
J.R. Mooney Galleries of Fine Art, Boerne Gallery

What:
Second Saturday Art and Wine

When:
Saturday, August 10, 2013 from 4 pm – 8 pm

Where:
J. R. Mooney Galleries of Fine Art
305 S. Main St., Boerne, TX 78006




Arches-Not the “golden” ones!

…..But they can still be painted yellow.

-Gabriel Diego Delgado

Let’s take a look at these often overlooked and sometimes ordinary oval openings of fine art, and how they work as compositional elements in impressionistic painting.
Golden Arches dot the super highway of pop culture; the iconic name stay of over 500 million served.
A far reaching structure that reminds us of a nostalgic time of childhood innocence when we knew our metabolism would allow us to indulge in the sweet satisfaction of fast food feasting; complete with toy or Coca-Cola.

Regressing even further, let’s look to an era of timeless fine art exploration and the portrayals of the curved architectural feature of arches in a time-honored tradition of impressionistic painting.

“Arches appeared as early as the 2nd millennium BC in Mesopotamia”, says the trusted sources at Wikipedia.  Now, with that said, artists have been painting, drawing, and illustrating these profound architectural accents for well over…..humm…….let’s call it a long time -- with possible pictorial depictions early in our art history timelines of the ornate carvings and reliefs of The Arch of Titus, a 1st-century arch located in Rome.

With architectural expressions not spoken much in painting, artists seem reluctant to render a precise depiction of these structures, leaving the intention to trained architects, graphic designers, and the like who will work to get exactness vs. creative painterly expression.

But, every so often, artists will use such building constructions to emphasis the gateway as visual guides to planar differences; seeing through to the distant background, a hidden recluse, or a concealed gem -- an entry to the unknown.

In Erich Paulsen’s Summer Sails painting, the arch is slightly off center for it to be the focal point, but none-the-less, it plays a role as a major component in the composition.  We are able to look out beyond the villas and see the cerulean blue ocean, the port that awaits us; an inviting blue allure. Although his palette knife gestures add an impasto quality to the painting, his strokes illustrating the water change direction to a horizontal motion, mimicking the horizontal land-bridge and archway, its top level brown constructs; reinforcing the brown tiled roofs of the adjacent buildings.

In James F. Yi’s garden delight titled Summer Paradise, competing arches duel for attention. Closer examination reveals a tiered arch doorway shares a common side with another optical curve -- one that does not stop at a dead-end, but a more generalized easement to freedom -- to the wide open world along the ever expanding ocean waves, a current to take you away. Overall, Summer Paradise really is a play on dichotomies,  on one hand a blocked direction with a close door, an entry unrevealed; the other, a visual magnetism drawing us out.

Koster’s Night City evokes a more sinister evocation, a trembling sensibility of some sort of impending doom.  The overcast heavens bear down on us with god-like fury, a blackened sky that covers the cityscape in an ashy haze.  Snow-covered rooftops and barren trees suggest a frigid climate, but the waterways are unfrozen, allowing safe passage of the passing boats.  The arches in Night City are like a trifecta of hollow, barren and utilitarian tunnels leading the way to a banal canal.  All three are marked with a horizontal hint of white snow, a three level color scheme that rises from black, to white to grey -- a repeated color palette of the artist’s choice.

Robbins’ Flowers, Music and Waves is a colorful bounty of floral arrangements, household furniture, and a musical instrument. The piano is centered in the composition, with two arches on either side that make for a pseudo facial expression. Blue water as eyes and seaport as sockets; then you begin to play Dali-esque surrealism games to determine carpet as mouth and piano as nose. The point being these arches are symmetrically balanced with a full on view of the outside, providing a solid anchor to the overly hyped inside cluster of color.  The arches propose the possibilities of such inviting Mediterranean weather.

Arches are, and can be, fully functional compositional features that do two main jobs: they can act as an anchor to all compositional elements within the picture, and as portals that draw your eye beyond the foreground boundaries. Yes, the aspirations of arches; growing up to serve over 500 million in museums and galleries, not just along the highway.  

Tuesday, August 6, 2013

Fair Weather Sailing with X. Song Jiang


X. Song Jiang
“Sail”
13” x 10”
Oil on panel
$3,400 
(Frame included)


Choppy waters, looming clouds and tilted sail, all buildup to one thing – a possible disastrous recourse for one lone sailboat.  However, pockets of soothing cerulean sky peek out like a metaphysical mind’s third eye that foreshadows a safe return to harbor.

“Sail” is a new acquisition by J.R. Mooney Galleries of artist, X. Song Jiang, a Chinese born Canadian artist.   A recent recipient of the 2012 Gold Medal Prize at the Oil Painters of America National Juried Exhibition at Evergreen Fine Art, Jiang captures the essence of what it means to be mindful of the turbulent waters of Mother Nature’s open seas.

“Sail” is an impressionistic masterpiece that is anchored by the traditional triangle composition; made up by sail and vessel, volleying on the waters slightly below the horizon line. With the sky capturing three fourths of the picture plan we are reluctant to quiver in the presence of such forceful weather, an aggression that juxtaposes against the naturally serene qualities of sailing and being on the open waters --relaxing.

With a minimal color palette, Jiang uses almost a monotone and gloomy hue selection to reinforce the pending change of course as this ship prepares to tackle some quick seaman navigations.

With a deep blue pocket left of center, this skewed focal point is balanced by the tip of the sail which leans to the right. Linear elements of the sail, shroud and backstay are juxtaposed with the organic qualities captured in the cresting and breaking waves, crashing against the hull.

“Sail” and other works by X. Song Jiang can be purchases at J.R. Mooney Galleries of Fine Art.  Call 210-828-8214 for current selections. 

View all available works by X. Song Jiang at: www.jrmooneygalleries.com.



©Gabriel Diego Delgado/J.R. Mooney Galleries

Friday, August 2, 2013

Darryl Trott ~ Watercolor Genius / Floral Masterpieces **Rare**


Darryl Trott
Tall Bearded Iris
22” x 30”
Watercolor
$10,000
For purchase call 210-828-8214

“Nobody sees a flower really; it is so small. We haven't time, and to see takes time - like to have a friend takes time.”

-Artist,
Georgia O'Keeffe

Many great artists have painted flowers: Judith Lyster in the 1600’s, Manet in the 1800’s, Georgia O’Keeffe in the 1920’s, Andy Warhol in the 1970’s, and Darryl Trott in the 1980’s (among many other noted artists throughout history).

The flower is a traditional still-life element, but when painted with soul, expression, refinement, and elegance – artists can create a metaphysical experience, a visual retreat for all to partake. 

With over 300 species of natural hybrids found within the Iris genus, the Bearded Iris is but one variety that happened to strike the fancy of watercolor artist, Darryl Trott (1942-2004).

Australian born, Trott was an artist who was able to capture the translucency, fragility and grace of any flower.  In Tall Beared Iris, Trott delivers a stunning floral beauty -- a seemingly endless flower parade.  Painted larger than life, the impeding Iris invasion captures the true beauty and ephemeral quality of this magnificent flower.

Having passed away on June 9, 2004 from a heart attack, most of Darryl Trott’s extensive original paintings were returned by the galleries to his family in Adelaide, Australia; robbing the American Art Community of his signature flower paintings and thus making Tall Bearded Iris a rarity on the open market.

Tall Bearded Iris is an asymmetrical floral arrangement that emits a proportionate configuration, drawing the eye down into a “V” composition with the orange iris on the left balanced by the purple one on the right—a purposeful play on complementary colors.  His soft color palette reinforces the delicateness of the plant, while his mastering of the watercolor technique provides an avenue for a liquefied lavishness of his subjects. Systematically applied white edges not only add depth to the petals but create a separation of individuality with each flower showcasing its own dynamic personality. 

Almost hyper-realism, Trott captures the shadowy recessive pockets of stem to bud, from flower petals to leaves with tonal qualities found only in nature. The wet on wet technique used in the background creates a hazy botanical atmosphere, blending background to a faded horizon—never quite arriving at the end of the arrangement.

Trott’s floral paintings have graced the art collections of Lady Bird Johnson, Queen Beatrix of Holland, and the American Iris Society.


© Gabriel Diego Delgado