The legend Jose Vives-Atsara. A perfect painting called "Stormy Coast" to post this week with all this bad weather. This painting is a wonderful example of the artist's use of the palette knife; full of drama and energy, but not the typical Texas landscape.
See more of Jose's artwork on our website at:
http://www.jrmooneygalleries.com/index.php?route=product/product&page=2&manufacturer_id=272&product_id=3226
Jose Vives-Atsara was born in Vilafranca del Panades in the Catalonian region of Spain on April 30, 1919. He began painting at the age of eleven and had his first one man show at the age of fourteen. He studied art at Saint Raymond College and the School of Fine Arts in Barcelona. In his life, he often referenced nature itself as his most inspirational teacher. Mr. Vives-Atsara came to San Antonio in 1956. Within twenty years, he bacame one of Texas most distinguished artists. His use of a palette knife in painting allowed for blending rich, pure pigments into a powerful statement of color directly on the canvas. This style produced works that are distinctively Vives-Atsara. Jose Vives-Atsara is represented in such collections as the Museum of Modern Art, Spain; Fort Worth Art Museum, Texas; His Royal Highness Juan Carlos, King of Spain; the Vatican; and the State Capitals of many of the southern United States. His work is also in many private collections in the United States, Spain, Mexico, and Venezuela.
Saturday, April 30, 2016
Friday, April 29, 2016
Interior Panoramic Shots of Gallery Interior 4/23/2016
Be sure to stop by the gallery this weekend to see all the new artwork, all the changes and to say HI.
New interior layouts of the Boerne Gallery location after a rehang of all the artworks.
Cows in the Pasture
Buy this painting today for $450.00
Call us at 830-816-5106 to reserve your purchase
More of this artist's artwork is available on our website at :
Thursday, April 28, 2016
Saturday, April 23, 2016
Randy Peyton Bluebonnets
Randy Peyton portrays the Southwest using a palette of fresh colors and a
style attributable to the majesty and tranquility of those awesome oaks
found in Texas. When one views a Peyton Hill Country scene, it's
obvious that the artist is familiar with his subject. This is due to the
fact that Randy was born and reared in the beautiful hill country
surrounding San Antonio, Texas. Peyton made his mark capturing the
various hues of our state flower - the Bluebonnet. He has since extended
his talent with the brush and palette to include airy summer scenes,
brilliant autumn scenes, and peaceful winter scenes. The artist is
basically self-taught, however, he has spent many hours studying the
works of the nation's finest landscape artists. Peyton went to college
in California, where he studied Computer Science, but he dedicated
himself to art full time in 1980. His first show sold out in 40 minutes.
In 1981 he moved back to San Antonio. He continues to live and work
here.
See more of Randy's artwork on our website at:
Friday, April 22, 2016
Humphrey's New Masterful Landscape
See more of Humphrey's artwork on our website at:
http:// www.jrmooneygalleries.com/ index.php?route=product%2Fm anufacturer%2Fproduct&manu facturer_id=576
http://
Thursday, April 21, 2016
Wednesday, April 20, 2016
Nationally Acclaimed Cowboy Artist Jay Hester Solo Exhibition to Hit Texas 2016
By: Gabriel Diego Delgado
Jay Hester: TEXAS – “Stories of the Land”
Acclaimed
Texas artist, Jay Hester, is a rugged cowboy type that has called Boerne, Texas
home for over twenty-five years. His rough and tough bearded mountain man
appearance can be misleading, as Jay has been most instrumental in helping
carve out the niche known as the Boerne Professional Artists. Hester, known for his credibility and
integrity throughout the city and with other local organizations, is often
regarded as the “Godfather” of the Boerne art community. His decades as a
successful Native American and western painter in New Mexico and Texas has
earned him high accolades, but his commissioned bronze sculptures at USAA in
San Antonio, The Woodlands in Houston, Driscoll Children's Hospital in Corpus
Christi, Boerne's Veteran's Park, Fredericksburg's Markt Platz, and the Texas
A&M Galveston campus have placed him a cut above the rest.
Hester has
also helped place his residence in the Texas Hill Country on the artistic map
by his continued and successful involvement in several national art shows, like
the Phippen Western Art Show & Sale in Arizona, Sculpture in the Park in
Loveland, Colorado, and The Indian Market of Santa Fe. He has exhibited his work nationally at many
major southwestern art galleries, mentored students who have gone on to become
professional artists themselves, as well as successfully operated his own
gallery, Highland House in Boerne, for over a decade. His attitude, mannerisms, and straightforward
and demanding personality show why and how he has been able to sustain such a
unique career in the western art genre for so long.
A former
student of the famed Howard Terpning, Hester now moves freely in his own glow
of importance. This monumental Texas
artist is sought out by major western art collectors, and is growing in
prominence, but remains humble when compared to the man whose work he has
admired for so long. Hester is now excited to be working on a new body of
artwork, one that will bring to life some forgotten stories of the Texas Hill Country.
Jay Hester: Texas
–“Stories of the Land,”
his first solo exhibition in over 20 years, will be held at J.R. Mooney
Galleries in Boerne, opening October 7th & 8th,
2016. The preparations for this
exhibition has him in the saddle again, meeting with local historians,
sketching compositional drawings and excitedly gathering materials to help
piece together overlooked moments in Texas history and artistically articulate
it to the world in only a way a western artist can.
Hester now
works out of a picturesque art studio in Boerne, Texas, complete with a reclaimed
eight-foot oval stained glass door, made from an ox cart wheel, portraying an
artistically embellished cow skull with horns.
Built by the artist, this compound sits seconds away from the
picturesque and serene Cibolo Creek in Boerne.
Quick to give you a tour of the small “sleepy” bedroom community outside
San Antonio, Hester is the City of Boerne’s unofficial art ambassador, having
been commissioned by the city for outdoor sculptures, at times working with and
within various city departments, and chairing many organizational boards.
With
Hester’s “grab the world by the horns” mentality, he has been working
feverishly on producing over a dozen large and medium size oil paintings, which
pay homage to his beloved Texas Hill Country.
Current research includes the legendary Dr. Herff of Boerne, Comanche
raids at Linnville, ambushes at Plum Creek, the camel depot of Camp Verde in
Centerpoint, Texas Ranger skirmishes at Bandera Pass, and Native American
settlements around Little Joshua Creek, only to name a few. Combining historically accurate events with his
signature artistic aesthetic, Hester is working through nostalgic western tales
as he gives us his own visual appreciation of regional accounts which are
overlaid with complex, yet serene ballad sensibilities reflective of the Old West’s
heydays.
Bringing western and Native
American collectors to Boerne from all over the southwest, TEXAS- “Stories of the Land”
will be the premier fall 2016 art exhibition to attend. Hester will be on hand to discuss the
historical documentations that have influenced the new artwork, as well as his
signature western aesthetic. Imperative to this exhibition is the painting depicting the famous cataract surgery that Dr. Herff supposedly performed on a Comanche Chief, saving his eyesight and building trust among the early German settlers of Boerne and the Comanche Indians. This legendary act of courage will be portrayed in a 48” x 60” masterpiece showing the importance of the doctor’s innovative surgical discoveries and techniques.
“Dr. Herff was one of the founders, in 1853,
of the Bexar County Medical Society and Texas State Medical Association (now
the Texas Medical Association) and of the West Texas Medical Association in
1876. He also served on the Texas State
Board of Medical Examiners. Most
notably, Herff was a co-founder of the city’s first private infirmary in 1869,
operated by the Sisters of Charity of the Incarnate Word. Santa Rosa Infirmary became Santa Rosa
Hospital.” Source: San Antonio Express writer, Jessica
Belasco.
Join J.R. Mooney Galleries of
Fine Art - Boerne in October 2016, as they celebrate the great history of Texas
with Jay Hester’s TEXAS - “Stories of the Land” exhibition.
By: Gabriel Diego Delgado
https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/national-cowboy-artist-jay-hester-solo-exhibition-hit-delgado
http://www.examiner.com/article/jay-hester-cowboy-artist-s-nationally-acclaimed-exhibition-to-hit-texas
www.jrmooneygalleries.com
http://www.jrmooneygalleries.com/index.php?route=product/manufacturer/product&manufacturer_id=862
Tuesday, April 19, 2016
New Dramatic Bluebonnet Painting
Be sure to check this painting out on our website at:
http://www.jrmooneygalleries.com/index.php?route=product/product&manufacturer_id=552&product_id=6905
Saturday, April 16, 2016
Friday, April 15, 2016
Friday, April 8, 2016
Parade of Artists Opening this Weekend- Boerne
|
Thursday, April 7, 2016
20th Annual Celebration of the Parade of Artists Jay Hester Interview
It’s the 20th
Annual Celebration of the Parade of Artists!
Jay Hester, moved
to Boerne in 1988 as an established artist from Santa Fe, New Mexico via
Lubbock, Texas. Early on, he opened his first studio/gallery near Boerne's Main
Plaza before moving to the historic Kaiser House on South Main Street. and then
opening his Highland House Gallery on East Highland Street. Renowned for his
paintings and bronze sculptures, Jay has been a leader in the Boerne art
community for almost thirty years and has been intimately involved in its
growth and development.
We recently caught up with Jay as he was leaving a meeting
of current leaders of Boerne Professional Artists (BPA) and asked him about
Boerne's "Art Scene" and especially about the upcoming 'Parade of
Artists' event.
BPA: First of
all, why did you decide to move to Boerne after your obvious successes in Santa
Fe and Lubbock?
Hester: I decided
I needed a change of venue for my art. Santa Fe and Lubbock were both fine
markets for my paintings and sculptures, but I wanted to expand my
opportunities and be more centrally located in Texas. I fell in love with the
Hill Country and with Boerne in particular, and the decision was easy after
that.
BPA: Tell us
about the Boerne” Art Scene” you found on your arrival here in Boerne?
Hester: There
were several artists around Boerne in the late 80's but nothing like now. I
believe mine was the first gallery in town, and with the window on Main Street,
my art received quite a bit of exposure and I got to know quite a few of the
townsfolk. Then in 1992, the VFW
commissioned me to do the bronze sculpture cap on the memorial obelisk in
Veteran's Park.
BPA: Were you
involved in the first “Parade of Artists”?
Hester: Yes, but
it started off quite differently from what it has become now. To trace that
history for you, Mr. Patrick Heath was Mayor of Boerne in the mid 90's and he
went out of his way to encourage the arts in the local community. In about 1994
he asked if I would have a springtime Open House in my studio/gallery which at
the time was in the historic Kaiser House on South Main Street.
We had quite a number of visitors that first year which got
the attention of several other local artists and we spent the next several
months organizing what we called the "Boerne Area Artists
Association" which was the forerunner of Boerne Professional Artists
(BPA). That new organization had roughly a dozen members and in 1996 we held
what we called the "Studio Tour" which was just that… each
participating artist held an open house at his or her studio and visitors would
often drive several miles out of town to tour a studio and see the artist at
work.
During those early years, the "Studio Tour" concept
was quite successful, as was our new artists’ organization; and both grew as a
result. Perhaps the unexpected consequences were the growing pains that came
from the success of what had become our annual art event. Our visitors wanted
to see more art and artistry than could be accomplished by the long trips
between studios. Additional art galleries began to open in Boerne and the Area
Art Association began to attract more members. New names for the event and the
association were developed to keep up with the aura of a growing artistic
community.
In the span of a very few years, Boerne Area Artists
Association became Boerne Professional Artists with more than 50 active members,
and our late 90's "Studio Tour" of 10 -12 artists' private studios
grew into the annual "Parade of Artists" which this year will feature
more than 75 local, regional and nationally recognized artists in the three
established galleries and several business venues along the Hill Country Mile in the Arts & Design
and Historic districts of downtown Boerne.
BPA: The arts have become a rather significant
contributor to the city of Boerne in the last thirty years, so do you envision
its continued growth?
Hester:
Absolutely!! The Boerne Professional Artists organization (BPA) has grown to
more than fifty members, some of whom are from the Coastal Bend region, Kerrville, Fredericksburg
and Georgetown.
Additionally, our annual fall fine art show and sale attracts artist
participants from across the state and we have visitors and art lovers throughout
the southwest. And now, in conjunction with the expanded efforts of our affiliate
organization, the Hill Country Council for the Arts, we believe Boerne is truly
becoming an arts destination. And, we believe that will only get better with
time…
INTERVIEW ORIGINALLY APPEARED IN THE APRIL 2016 ISSUE OF EXPLORE MAGAZINE
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