If you like our writing, we’d be much obliged if you would click the ❤️ or the 🔁 icon on this post so more collectors, art lovers, and artists can discover us on Substack. 🙏 A daily newsletter featuring today’s finest visual artists. Today's Newsletter is Brought to You by BoldBrush CircleCreating Art is about Creating Magic. BoldBrush Recommends: John N BoothBiographyJOHN N. BOOTH, OPA began drawing and painting at an early age. He planned a career as a professional artist until the age of sixteen, when his interest in classical music expanded and led to his training as a violinist. For the next fifteen years he played professionally, taught, and composed. In 1976, John returned to painting. Aside from two years of private lessons in his teens, and a few lessons with Adolf Konrad in 1978, he is a self-taught artist. His specialty has been, from childhood, the depiction of the human form. He has painted many portrait commissions, and has shown his work in exhibitions of Oil Painters of America (of which he was elected a Signature Member), American Artists Professional League, Bosque Conservatory, American Academy of Equine Art, and other venues, winning top awards from these organizations. While living in central New Jersey, he completed many commissions of horse-related subjects, such as fox hunting, racing, and eventing. He has been represented by such galleries as The Crossroads of Sport in NYC, Sporting Images in Bedminster NJ. He continues to paint and draw his beloved equine subjects, and is available to work on commission to paint personalized equestrian scenes and portraits. Mr. Booth has been represented by Newman Galleries in Philadelphia, Coryell Gallery in Lambertville, N.J., Maurice Sternberg Galleries and Hildt Gallery in Chicago. Artist's statement: "I believe in the mystery and drama of light and shadow, and the many ways that all things in life are affected by them. With this in mind, an artist can see a subject for a picture every time he turns around! He is successful when his picture makes the spectator see beauty not only in the obviously beautiful aspect, but also in the seemingly insignificant or something previously thought of as unimportant". FASO Loves Deborah Tilby’s oil paintings! See More of Deborah Tilby’s art by clicking here. Wouldn’t You Love to work with a website hosting company that actually promotes their artists?As you can see, at FASO, we actually do, and, Click the button below to start working New Artwork by FASO Members Your art could be here tomorrow, for free. |