I moved to California in 1978. John and his wife Phyllis became my family. They welcomed me and whomever I brought over, a successive series of girlfriends, my future wife, Donna and of course, our children. Their home became our place of warmth and love through successive crises, celebrations and holidays. This blog celebrates and honors my love for them and an investigation of art from a very subjective point of view.
Thursday, July 5, 2012
MARIN IN PAINTING (1956)
Three page spread in the Independent Journal with illustrative examples from nine artists: MARIN FIELDS by Ray Strong, PANORAMA by Barbara Carpenter, THE TREE by Jerome Klapka, MARIN WATERFRONT by Virginia Merrill, CORTE MADERA CREEK by Mae Ralston, SHADY LANE by Jose Moya del Pino, TOWN ON THE HILL by Ted Christensen, AT OLEMA by Edwin Cadogan, McNEAR’S BACKYARD by Eva Diamond. (scans available)
Marin Independent Journal
Saturday, January 28, 1956
Marin in Paintings
Marin County, it can be pointed out with little fear of contradiction, has as much natural beauty per square mile as any other area of its size—and the same thing can be said of the ratio of artists in the county. Marin’s beauty, from Sausalito’s salty waterfront to China Camp and back through the hills of Mt. Tamalpias, all parts of the county seem printable, judging from the work artists have done. Out in the rolling slopes and towering redwoods, above the bays and below the cliffs, through the villages and along the harbors, everything here seems created for the artist’s delight.
Art classes abound for adults and youngsters, and amateurs and professionals alike have one whale of a time painting and sketching.
The fact that they all have one subject, Marin County, doesn’t in any way limit the variety of their work. The area’s many facets reflected in the artists’ many styles and media, take care of that.
Among the prominent artists of Marin County, the work of several is pictured here.
TED CHRISTIANSEN of Mill Valley, renowned for his prolific painting of Marin subjects, and at the top in the respect of other artists, is best known for his vibrant landscapes in oil. He teaches a class in “Life Drawing” at the College of Marin, and “loves to paint all over the county, up on the hills and down on the coast.” His studio is in Mill Valley.
EDWIN CADOGAN, chairman of the art department at the College of Marin, and past president of the Marin Society of Artists, works in all media. He is equally at home with a brush in oil or watercolor, or with clay in ceramics or sculpture. He likes to paint old buildings or any phase of water: does lots of seascapes and boats.
MAE RALSTON paints in watercolor with a charming free style, lives in Fairfax, is corresponding secretary for the Marin Society of Artists, and director of the Richard Yip Marin classes. Yip is a College of Pacific instructor who teaches art here in the summer.
JOSE MOYA DEL PINO, versatile painter came to America in 1925, has had one man shows here and abroad, recently at the city of Paris, where most of his paintings were sold. He teaches intermediate and advanced painting at the College of Marin and lives in Ross.
EVA DIAMOND studied art at the University of California, later taught art in high schools and arts and crafts for the American Red Cross. She paints mostly in watercolor, some oil, likes sculpture, using her children as models, and lives in Sleepy Hallow.
JEROME KLAPKA formerly did commercial art in Chicago, now has his studio in San Francisco, and lives on Strawberry Point in Mill Valley. Most of his work is in foods and illustration. He enjoys marine and landscape painting and also does etchings.
BARBARA CARPENTER studied art at the School of Fine and Industrial Arts at Newark, New Jersey, and with various local instructors. She paints watercolor and lives in Strawberry.
VIRGINIA MERRILL studied interior decorating at the University of Washington and has been a student of Richard Yip for several summers. She paints in watercolor only, likes it because it is quick and conveys her mood, and lives in Sausalito.
RAY STRONG, known for the strength and variety of his Marin landscapes in oil, will demonstrate at the Feb. 17 opening of the Recreational Show by the Marin Society of Artists. Several of his paintings are now hanging at the San Rafael Chamber of Commerce.
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