Barkers Hill
Randall David Tipton grew up in California and New Mexico before moving to Portland, Oregon, seventeen years ago. He is mostly self-taught but studied under Richard Diebenkorn in the first master class at the new Santa Fe Institute of Fine Art. Landscapes have been his primary interest from an early age. He is chiefly influenced by the American abstract expressionists and particularly their belief in improvisation as path to something unique and meaningful. Tipton spends a lot of time walking in the countryside with a camera, notebook, or sketchbook to document his research. What he sees and experiences outdoors is the primary basis for his creative practice. His work has been extensively exhibited in Portland.
Mark Rothko/Courtesy Portland Art Museum
Cloudless Day
Fonthill Lake, Afternoon
PORTLAND – The exhibition hanging in the Art Gallery at Waynflete School in Portland came about by chance and circumstance. The artists who made it do not consider themselves artists, and they certainly didn’t set out to make art for public consumption when they began their project earlier in the fall. But “Arboretum” is very […]
Image 5 of 5 from gallery of MVRDV, Adjaye Associates, LEVER Architecture, and Toshiko Mori Shortlisted for the Portland Museum of Art Expansion. New Artist Residency In Senegal / Toshiko Mori. Image © Iwan Baan
And while the gallery's current female-focused roster may be a coincidence, it certainly feels like what the world needs right now.
Simon Palmer Postcards: A selection of six images from his most recent exhibition at the Portland Gallery in London.
Learn more about Fred Herzog and discover their selected works featured at Equinox Gallery.
The Charlie B Gallery of Carson City, Nevada is offering this original estate found watercolor by listed artist Hans Bomskow (1908-1988). Per the artist’s obituary and his immigration papers, Hans Bomskow was born in Denmark on March 20, 1908(Edan Hughes had noted Germany). Research shows that Bomskow visited Clifton, Passaic, New Jersey in 1930, but it was not until 1935 that he formally immigrated to the United States. In 1954, he married Ethel Bonnard in Manhattan, New York City, New York. At the time of his marriage, Hans was working for the United Press as a photographer. The couple moved to Glendale, California in the early 1960’s. In 1972, the couple retired to Los Osos, California, per Ethel’s obituary. He died in Los Osos (San Luis Obispo County) on Jan. 27, 1988. Works held in public places: Glendale Public Library (400 cat portraits). Askart.com notes the artist working as a watercolorist and photographer. I have included a couple images of an address label and a pink paper document noting “Photographs by Hans Bomskow”. These were found in the collection of watercolors that I am currently selling on Etsy. Unsigned. Please see photographs for condition. This is a single sided watercolor with windmill. There are original harmless cement marks to the back of the subject as found. I will carefully package this watercolor. You are purchasing this original watercolor painting on paper, as shown. There is no frame. Image measures 13.875 inches by 12.125 inches.
The gallery recently updated the artwork in the backdrop of Donald Trump's press pictures with something a bit more unusual.