Tag: Greg Hart

  • Face Paint: Greg Hart

    Face Paint: Greg Hart

    The advent of photography has really shaped us into an incredibly visual society.  While having a portrait painted was a luxury usually afforded to the most privileged, photographs were soon accessible to people of all classes and incomes.  Photography became a common experience, faces of us all, captured forever.  Charleston artist Greg Hart takes his inspiration from historical portraits, concentrating on the emotional expression of the sitter.

    Bandage, charcoal, graphite, coffee, acrylic, oil and gesso on wood panel, 11×14

    Hart pours through historical archives, searching for a face that grabs him.  He strives to remain ignorant of the details of each person’s background, preferring instead, to give us new portraits, carrying the same emotional intensity made even more impassioned by color blocking and dramatic rendering against isolated backgrounds.

    Firebrand, graphite, acrylic and coffee on paper, 15×22
    Bygone, mixed media on paper, 22×30

    Serious, stern faces are rendered more warmly, softly reminding us that behind these steely facades are real people who lived and loved, just as we do.

    Forward March, mixed media on wood panel, 9×12

    To see more of Greg Hart’s work, please visit his website and be sure to check out his shop at Big Cartel to make one of these intriguing portraits your own!

    Featured image is Firebrand ( cropped ).  All images are via the artist’s website and Big Cartel shop.

  • Friday Faves:  Face-off

    Friday Faves: Face-off

    Christopher Marlowe wrote about “the face that launched a thousand ships“.  Faces, full of expression and personality are often the most difficult subject for an artist to render.  I know, I went through three semesters of figure drawing purposefully not showing the model’s face, because as adept as I was at the figure, I just couldn’t get the hang of drawing faces.  Perhaps that’s why I am so drawn to the work of artists whose faces are so beautifully rendered and expressive.  Today’s round-up includes a few of my current faves:

    Buck by Aaron Smith, oil on panel, 28×24
    Tart by Greg Hart, charcoal, gouache, gesso, collage and acrylic on paper, 22×30
    Marley Shelton by Keinyo White, oil on canvas, 48×48
    Matutinal by Nick Lepard, oil on canvas, 54×66

    Get in some face time with these extraordinary artists by visiting their websites, linked below.

    1.  Aaron Smith 

    2.  Greg Hart 

    3.  Keinyo White 

    4.  Nick Lepard 

    Featured image is Effie by Greg Hart, charcoal, gouache, gesso and acrylic on paper, 26×22.  All images are via the artists’ websites.