Jerry Weiss
Jerry Weiss (born October 21, 1959) is an American figurative, landscape, portrait painter[1][2] and writer. He studied classical drawing, initially focusing on portrait and figure subjects, and began to paint landscapes during the 1980s.
Weiss is a contributing editor of The Artist's Magazine, for which he writes a "Master Class" feature with an overview of historic artists. Jerry Weiss's parents met at the Art Students League of New York. His mother wanted to be a fashion artist, but dedicated herself to family while continuing to paint. His father is cartoonist Morris Weiss from whom, Weiss says, he inherited an irreverence to life.[3]
Weiss was born in New Jersey but soon after the family moved to North Miami, Florida.[3] He was influenced by the graphic freedom and assured skill of cartoonists, whose work he saw in his father's large collection. Morris asked for his son's advice when buying works by Dean Cornwell (1892–1960)[3] and had once sat for James Montgomery Flagg (1877–1960).[3] As a child, he had over his bed a Saturday Evening Post cover by J.C. Leyendecker (1874–1951) and later a drawing by Norman Rockwell.[3]
However, Weiss was put off narrative work after seeing his father's daily hard-working routine for comics such as Mickey Finn and Joe Palooka.[3] He sought more enjoyment and personal freedom, and decided to learn classical drawing. He was recommended by George Bolge, a museum director, to study with Roberto Martinez, who had been a student of the sculptor, Marino Marini. From Martinez, Weiss learned to draw life-size, a practice he later taught.[3] He studied at the Art Students League of New York, where Ted Seth Jacobs instructed him on light and form. He also studied with Harvey Dinnerstein, whose "emphatic draftsmanship" he admired,[3] at the National Academy of Design in New York City.[4]
Friends, 2003, oil on canvas, 36" by 48".
He began his career during the 1980s as a figurative painter.[5] Ten years later, he took on landscapes – a genre in which he is self-taught – eventually realizing he could treat them as he did a figure in an interior, in terms of composition, pattern and shape.[3] In 1994 he started teaching at Lyme Academy College of Fine Arts.[4] He held a one-man exhibition at the Boca Raton Museum of Art in 1999. The executive director of the museum, George S. Bolge, wrote of his paintings:
Jerry Weiss is a product of his age ... Weiss with a great heritage goes to the past for design concepts for form, but looks to the present for his investigation of content.[6]
Weiss said the hardest portraits to work on were impatient sitters with no interest in the art. He explained:
I enjoy spending three or four days with people who have knowledge in their field, and I would like to think it's vice versa. I find great enjoyment in these situations. Once the time is up, the portrait becomes not just a painting in a collection, but a memory of personal time shared.[1]
He has held solo exhibitions at galleries in New York, Boston, New Jersey and Maine. His work is represented in the New Britain Museum of American Art;[4] the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill;[4] Pfizer Inc.;[4] the Harvard Club of New York;[4] Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston; Debevoise and Plimpton, New York. He has taught workshops and lectured in Florida, New York, Washington, Maine, and Colorado. Having long taught painting and drawing at the Lyme Academy College of Fine Arts,[7] Weiss currently instructs at the Art Students League of New York.[8] He is listed in Who's Who in American Art[4] and Who's Who in America. In 2012 he curated an exhibition of large-scale figure works that included paintings by Dinnerstein, Mary Beth Mckenzie, Dan Gheno and Tom Loepp.[9]
Weiss is represented by The Cooley Gallery, Old Lyme, Connecticut, and Portraits Inc., New York.[4] Weiss uses a wood palette and a small range of colors; typically titanium white, yellow ochre, ultramarine blue and cadmium red light, sometimes with the addition of a deeper red, cadmium yellow light, cerulean and green. He occasionally paints with a knife, but mostly with flat brushes to achieve "a kind of blocky modeling". He uses Claessens oil-primed linen for portraits and panels for landscape work.[3] After forming quick outlines, he works rapidly to block in the light and dark areas of the figure and major compositional elements with turpentine-thinned paint. Following this first stage which takes around half-an-hour, he reworks the areas a dozen times or more, constantly refining and unifying.[3]
Weiss usually works to the sizes of a range of standard frames, which are mostly finished in metal or gold leaf.[10]
REFERENCES
Hagen, Debbie. "Profiling portraits: the most custom of all custom art—portraits, can present a variety of challenges to artists and art dealers", Art Business News. Retrieved September 7, 2009.
Jump up ^ Keating, Christopher. Sullivan Portrait Unveiled, Hartford Courant. March 1, 2008
^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h i j k Bloomfield, Maureen. "Light that stops time", The Artist's Magazine, p.35-41, June 2008.
^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h "An entirely new benefit auction experience", Florence Griswold Museum. Retrieved September 13, 2009. (Archived by WebCite.[1])
Jump up ^ Wolff, Theodore F. "Portrait of the artist as a young master", Christian Science Monitor. Retrieved September 7, 2009.
Jump up ^ Bolge, George S. "Jerry Weiss: Landscapes", Boca Raton Museum of Art. Retrieved September 6, 2009
Jump up ^ Figure painting Workshop Retrieved October 9, 2010
Jump up ^ Art Students League Retrieved August 26, 2012
Jump up ^ Big as Life Retrieved August 26, 2012
Jump up ^ Parks, John A. "Professional Artists Tell All", American Artist, June 22, 2006. Retrieved September 13, 2009.
Jump up ^ "Faculty: Jerry Weiss", Silvermine Guild Arts Center. Retrieved February 26, 2010.
Jump up ^ Listing of articles, Villanova University Library
Jump up ^ Morris Weiss: A Life Spent Drawing Cartoons Retrieved August 26, 2012
Jump up ^ Catalogue on Lockwood de Forest.
Jump up ^ Lockwood de Forest essay
Jump up ^ Essay on Jasper Francis Cropsey.
Jump up ^ "Jerry Weiss: Resume, The Brigham Galleries. Retrieved September 13, 2009.