art



art green
This Day in History

art green

Arthur Green (born 1941) is a well respected professor and painter. Green was a member of the notorious Chicago artistic group, The Hairy Who in the 1960s, a member of the University of Waterloo’s faculty for over 30 years and has been an influential painter for over 40 years.

Contents

  • 1 Early life
  • 2 Career
  • 3 The Paintings
    • 3.1 Noteworthy pieces
    • 3.2 Collections
    • 3.3 Exhibitions
  • 4 Honours
  • 5 References
  • 6 External links

Early life

Green grew up in Indiana. His father was a civil engineer who designed bridges. His mother crafted quilts and grew flowers.

He started off at the Art Institute of Chicago studying industrial design, but switched to painting and drawing. In 1965, he earned his Bachelor of Fine Arts.

Career

In 1966, Green formed part of a Chicago-based, seven person group that would exhibit their works together under the name The Hairy Who at a series of shows at Chicago’s Hyde Park Art Center. The strange name reflected the trend in monikers for rock groups of the time. The other members of the group were James Falconer, Gladys Nilsson, Jim Nutt, Suellen Rocca, and Karl Wirsum. Their work was known for its coarseness and vulgarity. It stood in contrast to the sleek and urban work by Manhattan artists at the time, namely Andy Warhol and James Rosenquist.

In 1969, Green married Natalie (also a graduate of the Art Institute of Chicago) and moved to Canada to teach at the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design University. He received a Canada Council bursary, which enabled him to teach at the University of British Columbia. In 1976, he moved again. This time to Stratford, Ontario to teach at the University of Waterloo. While at UW, he served two terms as Chair of the Fine Arts Department; 1988-1991 and 2000-2002.

In 2005, the Kitchener-Waterloo Art Gallery hosted Heavy Weather: Art Green Retrospective in collaboration with the University of Waterloo Art Gallery. This exhibition brought together 50 of Green’s pieces, loaned from the artist and several private and public collectors in the United States and Canada, as a comprehensive survey of his 40 year career. Gary Michael Dault created a soft cover book with the same Heavy Weather title. The book contains photographs of the 50 pieces, commentary, and resource images which had inspired Green.

In 2006, the University of Waterloo gave him emeritus status. Green is married with two children, Catherine and Nicholas. As of 2006, Green lived with his wife in Stratford, Ontario.

The Paintings

Green is known for his layered paintings. The inspiration for his work has come from his environment. For example, his father’s civil engineering drawings, Chicago architecture (by Louis Sullivan and Ludwig Mies van der Rohe), Chicago blues music, University of Waterloo geometry.

In the introduction to Heavy Weather, Green writes in the early days, “I aspired to make paintings that were awkward and monstrous, boring and familiar.”

In the mid-1980s, Green was interested in the Necker Cube. He wrote, “I was intrigued by the possibilities of simultaneously representing all sides of a rotating cube. I incorporated tiling patterns of unfolded cubes along with the hypercube in my work.”

Of his more recent work, Green wrote, “I have been trying to make layered paintings that take a long time to “see”. I want to encourage the viewer to be conscious of the (usually unconscious) process of the interpretation and construction of images in the mind.”

Noteworthy pieces

  • Absolute Purity, 1967, Tastee-Freeze series
  • Immoderate Abstention, 1969, Fire and scissors
  • Saturated Fat, 1971, Tastee-Freeze series
  • Blank Slate, 1978, oil on canvas. First painting of an extended series that involve images of mirrors.
  • Risky Business, 1980, a fire-and-fingernail totem with a layered and shaped canvases
  • Persons Unknown, 1985, layered and shaped canvases
  • Double Crosser, 1991, imagery is secured, wired, lashed, tied-off, taped, and fastened with screws
  • Circular Argument, 1994, layered and shaped canvases

Collections

Green’s paintings are in many public and private collections including those of The National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa, ON; The Art Institute of Chicago, IL; Museum Moderner Kunst, Vienna, Austria; The Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago, IL; The Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia, PA; The New Orleans Museum of Art, New Orleans, LA; The National Museum of American Art (Smithsonian Institution), Washington, DC; The David and Alfred Smart Museum of Art, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL; Yale University Art Gallery, New Haven, CT; Northwestern University, Chicago, IL; Dalhousie University Art Gallery, Halifax, NS; The Province of British Columbia; The Canada Council Art Bank, Ottawa, ON; The Kitchener-Waterloo Art Gallery]] and The University of Waterloo Art Gallery]].

Exhibitions

The artist’s work has been the subject of over 140 exhibitions at such venues as The David and Alfred Smart Museum of Art at the University of Chicago, the San Francisco Art Institute, the Musée d'Art Contemporain in Montreal, the Vancouver Art Gallery, and the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York. Green's works were featured in Border Crossings magazine, issue #96 Strange Beauty.

Honours

  • 1991, awarded the Distinguished Teacher Award at the University of Waterloo
  • 1999, elected to Membership of the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts
  • 2004, awarded the Waterloo Regional Arts Council Arts Award for Visual Art

art green news and art green articles

Here's our top rated art green links for the day:

Actions of council cause two leaders to stand up and speak out 

Pottstown Mercury - Jan 07 7:37 PM
Mark Gibson did a remarkable thing at the close of the Pottstown Council meeting on Wednesday: He stood up, took responsibility for being part of a dysfunctional group of officials and vowed to do a better job.

The A to Z of cultural catastrophe 
Mail and Guardian - Dec 25 2:08 PM
A is for assisted suicide . Having been praised for establishing one of the country’s most credible art awards, emanating ironically from incredible quarters, the Kebble family resolved to put to death their deceased relative’s illustrious (R300 0000) hand-out to artists.

Thank you for viewing the art green page clip art. 

 

Ever wondered what others are searching for in relation to art green? Now you can see.  Below is a listing of  what everyone else is searching for in regard to art green.

1. clip art
2. art
3. met art
4. free clip art
5. christmas clip art
6. fantasy art
7. dragon art
8. body art
9. art supplies
10. abstract art
11. angel art
12. free christmas clip art
13. tattoo art
14. pop art
15. deviant art
16. gothic art
17. fine art
18. nail art
19. renaissance art
20. art bell
21. thanksgiving clip art
22. graffiti art
23. furry art
24. halloween clip art
25. anime art
26. microsoft clip art
27. greek art
28. art deco
29. christmas art
30. japanese art
31. metropolitan museum of art
32. met art gallery
33. fine art photography
34. lowrider art
35. boy art
36. native american art
37. girls of met art
38. african art
39. modern art
40. celtic art
41. graffiti street art
42. art nouveau
43. chinese art
44. digital art
45. egyptian art
46. aboriginal art
47. aztec art
48. werewolf art
49. dark art
50. female fantasy art
51. art prints
52. how great thou art
53. art galleries
54. spanking art
55. roman art
56. o brother where art thou
57. mexican art
58. mermaid art
59. 3d art
60. islamic art
61. graphic art
62. tribal art tattoos
63. holiday clip art
64. met art models
65. turkey clip art
66. fairy art
67. chinese dragon art
68. black art
69. christian art
70. free tattoo art
71. met art free
72. tribal art
73. african american art
74. string art
75. art gallery
76. pin up art
77. fantasy art woman
78. animated clip art
79. fairies in art
80. wall art
81. asian art
82. art history
83. yaoi art
84. fantasy art galleries
85. ancient greek art
86. pedo art
87. photography art
88. indian art
89. metal art
90. art work
91. op art
92. boy art web portal
93. gothic angel art
94. skull art
95. medieval art
96. western art
97. contemporary art
98. halloween art
99. art of noise
100. mayan art