News and Media Relations

Nutting Gallery Welcomes Bold Impressions

Share

WEST LIBERTY, W.Va., Sept. 29, 2019 — Nutting Gallery welcomes an exhibition featuring 38 paintings by Pittsburgh artist Stephen Haynes’s this October. Free and open to the public, the opening reception takes place from 5:30 – 7 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 2.

Working Lunch by Stephen Haynes.

“Stephen’s work provides a nice juxtaposition to the work of our previous artist, Stevo Sadvary. Whereas Sadvary’s exquisite glass mosaic work is very geometric and precise, Haynes’ paintings are loose and explosive. Many of his pieces are created en plein air, which is a fancy way of saying that he paints outdoors. If you enjoy nature you will enjoy this show. Haynes captures moments of time, shadow and light using thick brushes and heavy paint. Though his strokes at times seem random, and almost out of control, the details that emerge, or that your mind allows to emerge, pull you right into various outdoor scenes such as a lakeside park, a farmer’s field, or a city street. Come to this show prepared to spend some time with each painting. Your own knowledge of the natural world will co-mingle with brushstrokes to tell stories of places you remember being, or places that you someday hope to visit,” said Jim Haizlett, who is an associate professor of art at WLU and now the gallery director.

A self-taught painter, he spent his formative school years among the beaches of southern California, and summers in the mountains of West Virginia. This divided time gave him a diverse outlook and an immense love of the outdoors.

Snowy Path by Stephen Haynes.

He graduated with an associate degree in visual communications from the Art Institute of Pittsburgh in 2001 and is the current art director for Dirt Rag magazine, a mountain-bike publication.

Haynes has been working in the field of art for more than 20 years and has tried a variety of different forms of art, including sketching, figure studies, graphic design and oil painting.

In his work, the artist uses vibrant oil colors, mixed on the canvas, to convey light, shadow and form through thick impasto brushwork, evoking movement and abstract qualities, according his website located at stephenhaynes.com.

Overgrown Road by Stephen Haynes.

Haynes loves to wake up in the morning and head out to see what scene might inspire him to stop and move medium around a canvas, he stated in his blog.

Besides nature, he learned a lot from the Impressionist masters like Van Gogh, Monet and Cassatt. Other artists who inspire him include landscape painters Edgar Payne, Isaac Levitan and Tom Thompson.

Haynes exhibited in the Nutting Gallery once before, during the 2011 season. Bold Impressions exhibition will remain on display until Oct. 24.

All exhibitions at the Nutting Gallery are free and open to the public. The Nutting Gallery is open from 8:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. weekdays, evenings and weekends by arrangement. For additional information contact Haizlett at jhaizlett@westliberty.edu.


Share
Exit mobile version