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Dan Muller"The Red Barn - Wisconsin Landscape Series, " Oil on Canvas signed by Dan Muller1999
1999
$10,000
£7,469.52
€8,659.72
CA$13,884.75
A$15,563.02
CHF 8,103.21
MX$190,031.10
NOK 102,881.28
SEK 97,522.20
DKK 64,610.88
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About the Item
"The Red Barn - Wisconsin Landscape Series" is an original oil painting on canvas by Dan Muller. The artists signed the painting in the lower left. This painting depicts a farm landscape in bold colors.
35 7/8" x 49 7/8" art
36 7/8" x 50 3/4" frame
Born in 1960 in Miles City, Montana, Dan spent most of his childhood in the Southern and central regions of Wisconsin. Dan's work is centered on the idea of using successive layers of transparent and opaque pigment along with pigment-impregnated rice paper to create a density of color that would not be possible solely by direct painting on the surface of the paper itself. He works to achieve an interplay of shapes and colors which will exist with equal freedom within that defined space, while striving to obtain a feeling of expansiveness no matter what the actual scale piece is.
Exhibitions
David Barnett Gallery Milwaukee, Wisconsin
Allan Priebe Art Gallery Oshkosh, Wisconsin
Federal Plaza Milwaukee, Wisconsin
Houberbocken Gallery Milwaukee, Wisconsin
Education
Parsons School of Design MFA New York, New York 1987
University of Wisconsin BFA Oshkosh, Wisconsin 1983
- Creator:Dan Muller (1888, American)
- Creation Year:1999
- Dimensions:Height: 36.875 in (93.67 cm)Width: 50.75 in (128.91 cm)
- Medium:
- Movement & Style:
- Period:
- Condition:
- Gallery Location:Milwaukee, WI
- Reference Number:Seller: 9362c1stDibs: LU60532427173
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'Sketching Wisconsin' original oil painting, Signed
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oil on canvas
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John Steuart Curry (1897-1946) was an American regionalist painter active during the Great Depression and into World War II. He was born in Kansas on his family’s farm but went on to study art in Chicago, Paris and New York as young man. In Paris, he was exposed to the work of masters such as Peter Paul Rubens, Eugène Delacroix and Jacques-Louis David. As he matured, his work showed the influence of these masters, especially in his compositional decisions. Like the two other Midwestern regionalist artists that are most often grouped with him, Grant Wood (American, 1891-1942) and Thomas Hart Benton (American, 1889-1975), Curry was interested in representational works containing distinctly American subject matter. This was contrary to the popular art at the time, which was moving closer and closer to abstraction and individual expression.
Sketching Wisconsin is an oil painting completed in 1946, the last year of John Steuart Curry’s life, during which time he was the artist-in-residence at the University of Wisconsin in Madison. The painting is significant in Curry’s body of work both as a very revealing self-portrait, and as a landscape that clearly and sensitively depicts the scenery of southern Wisconsin near Madison. It is also a portrait of the artist’s second wife, Kathleen Gould Curry, and is unique in that it contains a ‘picture within a picture,’ a compositional element that many early painting masters used to draw the eye of the viewer. This particular artwork adds a new twist to this theme: Curry’s wife is creating essentially the same painting the viewer is looking at when viewing Sketching Wisconsin.
The triangular composition of the figures in the foreground immediately brings focus to a younger Curry, whose head penetrates the horizon line and whose gaze looks out towards the viewer. The eye then moves down to Mrs. Curry, who, seated on a folding stool and with her hand raised to paint the canvas on the easel before her, anchors the triangular composition. The shape is repeated in the legs of the stool and the easel. Behind the two figures, stripes of furrowed fields fall away gently down the hillside to a farmstead and small lake below. Beyond the lake, patches of field and forest rise and fall into the distance, and eventually give way to blue hills.
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