A view to a river at a nature reserve near me in Massachusetts.
This is professional grade acrylic paint on a 15" high by 30" wide stretched canvas. It has a thin wood strip frame, is wired and ready to hang.
Summertime Fields to the River
Framed by Artist
Stretched and ready to hang
This artwork is currently stretched and ready to hang.
It comes with an external frame.
Framed dimensions - 30.5(W) x 15.5(H).
Artwork dimensions - 30.0(W) x 15.0(H).
Artwork Details
Medium | Acrylic, Canvas, Framed by Artist |
Dimensions | 30.5in (W) x 15.5in (H) x 1.5in (D) |
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Artwork Description
Artist Bio
Stephen Remick, an American painter, grew up in Vermont and lives in Dartmouth, a small town on the south coast of Massachusetts. He received an AS in architecture from Vermont Technical College, and a BFA in Painting from Swain School of Design in New Bedford, Massachusetts where he met his wife, Anne Carrozza, also a painting major. They raised two kids (now adults) while Steve ran a small house painting business.
Steve mostly paints landscapes, representational and abstract. After a years' long series of abstract color-field paintings inspired by the edges where air and land meet, he changed course. βIβm attracted to items built or left by others that werenβt intended to be objects to contemplate. I want to be to art what Robert Frost is to poetryβ. This led to a series inspired by the Robert Frost poem Mending Wall where he painted old stone walls in the middle of the woods off his New England backyard, now not walling anything in or out. Then, branching off to abandoned cellar holes and cemeteries, woodpiles, surveyorβs ribbon, backyard projects, and so on. In searching for subjects, he found that snow-cover unified and distilled them. This led to painting the abstract beauty of sunlight and shadow on snow, yet rendering it in a representational image. As a result, new paths opened up for him, including painting paths with the metaphors they evoke.
Saying he would never have thought they'd enter his studio, world events and politics make their way into his subject matter once in a while, like his 2020 COVID-19 healthcare worker portrait series. "I hope to give empathy and understanding to whatever subject is on my canvas."