Gaylen Hansen: Three Decades of Painting
Hansen, 86, says he chronicles what amuses and interests him most: fly
fishing, his surrounding rural land, the animals that populate that land and
his environmental concerns. A reviewer in the Seattle Post-Intelligencer
says Hansen "paints the human comedy as if it's coming to a close."
Gaylen Hansen is featured in the MAM Carnegie Galleries.
Above: Kernal Riding Grasshopper, 1999, Oil on Canvas, 48x60 inches, Collection of Artist
Gaylen Hansen: Three
Decades of Paintings was organized by Washington State University Museum of
Art Curator Keith Wells. The exhibition is a 30-year retrospective of paintings
by the Palouse, Washington-based painter, Gaylen Hansen. Hansen, a WSU Fine
Arts professor emeritus, has exhibited his paintings in
New
York,
Berlin,
Singapore,
Beijing,
Los Angeles,
Seattle
and other cities in the
United
States. He is the recipient of a 1989 Governor's Award from the State of
Washington and a 2001
Flintridge Foundation Visual Arts Award. This is Hansen's first major exhibition in
Montana. Please join MAM at the following events: Curator's Gallery Talk, Keith Wells, June 12, 7 pm; Artist Reception and Gallery Talk at Artini, July 17, 7pm.
MAM Curator Stephen Glueckert says, "We are proud to host
this traveling exhibition by an artist for whom we have the utmost respect. We
are a small institution, so the opportunity to feature work by an artist who
has such far reaching influence is in itself gratifying. Hansen's influence is
widespread, and his aesthetic voice consistent. He has pursued his discipline
as a painter for thirty years, and the exhibition demonstrates a determination
and fortitude that is seldom matched."
Keith Wells says the exhibition traces Hansen's evolution as
an artist. "From his tenderly rendered
narrative paintings of the 1970's, to his bolder canvases in which his palette
becomes more vibrant, the compositions more complex, and the imagery more
iconic - it's all represented in the exhibit."
Hansen, 86, says he chronicles what amuses and interests him
most: fly fishing, his surrounding rural land, the animals that populate that
land and his environmental concerns. A reviewer in the Seattle
Post-Intelligencer says Hansen "paints the human comedy as if it's coming
to a close." Born and raised on his grandparent's farm in
Utah,
Hansen attended Otis Art Institute in
Los Angeles,
Utah State University, the Art Barn School of
Fine Arts and the
Salt Lake City
Art
Center. In 1953, he earned an
MFA
degree from the
University of
Southern California.
The exhibition is accompanied by a full-color book designed
by Marquand Books of Seattle and includes: introduction by WSU Museum of Art
Director Chris Bruce; text by WSU Museum of Art Curator, Keith Wells; Hansen's
own commentaries in conversation with Wells on more than 20 individual
paintings; a tribute to Hansen by cartoonist and fellow artist, Gary Larson; a
chronology highlighting important events and persons in the artist's life and
more than 100 color plates.
WSU's funding for this traveling exhibit and programs is
provided by the Robert Lehman Foundation, the Elizabeth Firestone Graham
Foundation and the Samuel H. and Patricia W. Smith Arts Endowment. Additional funding is provided by the Paul G.
Allen Family Foundation, Paul and Nancy Winklesky, the Friends of the
Museum of
Art,
the
Northwest
Museum of Arts & Culture and the
Washington State Arts Commission.
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