December Artist of the Month – Meet John Sherffius

December Artist of the Month

Meet John Sherffius

 
Art has always been a big part of who I am, but I never focused on painting until about a decade ago. And, as I soon discovered, whatever artistic skills I learned in the past don’t always translate well to a canvas. 
I was born in Los Angeles, at the tail end of the post-WWII baby boom, and spent the first half of my life in the region. My parents told me they noticed a glimmer of artistic ability early on from my coloring books. According to them, my sense of color and shading was fairly realistic and I could stay within the lines better than most kids my age. Drawing was like a hobby for me throughout my childhood, something fun to do between (or during!) school and homework, sports, TV or spending time with friends. My first formal art classes were in high school, where I took beginning life drawing and graphics courses. Though I generally did well in those classes, I had no clear career path in mind until college, when I began contributing illustrations and political cartoons to UCLA’s campus newspaper. Editorial cartooning was especially fascinating to me because it combined art, history and current events, all subjects I was – and still am – interested in.
 
 
After my college years, I eventually was able to find jobs as an all-purpose newspaper artist, creating maps, infographics, logos, illustrations and editorial cartoons. In time, I was able to pursue editorial cartooning on a full-time basis at papers in California, Missouri and Colorado, and even won a handful of awards for it. And, while my career was progressing, I met my wonderful wife and together we raised 3 amazing kids. It was a memorable period in my life, but after almost 25 years in political cartooning and the newspaper business, I was ready for a change and decided to pursue other types of art. About the same time my family and I moved to Massachusetts in 2012, I began to freelance a variety of graphics and illustrations while also focusing more attention and energy on painting.
 
 
So, despite the constant ‘rookie’ mistakes from this soon-to-be 61-year-old artist, what do I like about painting? Missteps aside, the process of painting itself is very relaxing and almost meditative. And painting teaches you the importance of patience and planning, skills that I am clearly still working on. But, when the stars align and you paint something you’re happy with, it’s extremely rewarding. It’s no secret that the most successful paintings (think of the masterpieces of French Impressionism) have a special ability to visually capture a moment or feeling in time and preserve it. I like the fact that a great painting can speak volumes, or say nothing at all. Its message can be crystal clear, or a fuzzy riddle. It can be strikingly realistic, or unrecognizably abstract. It can be pleasing to the eye, or simply an eyesore. It can be whatever the artist chooses to create, but also whatever the viewer chooses to see.
The members of this society, of course, already know what makes a painting great. And they prove it at every WSA exhibition. They are all extremely talented artists, and I am very honored to be part of this group.

WSA Welcomes New Member Bob Glowacky

The WSA is happy to welcome new member Bob Glowacky. Although Bob describes himself as a self taught painter, he has spent a lifetime observing the craft and taking in his surrounding landscape. The result is paintings that pull the viewer in and capture a sense of place. To see more of Bob’s paintings, visit his WSA artist page.

Welcome to the WSA Bob, we look forward to meeting you and seeing more of your paintings!

November Artist of the Month – Meet Sonia Hale

November Artist of the Month

Meet Sonia Hale

Written by Sonia Hale

I grew up in the Boston area and have always loved the change of seasons and stunning beauty of New England. After attending Colby College in Waterville, Maine, which was absolutely glorious this time of year, before it turned into in my words “Coldby” for a very long winter, I returned to Boston. While I have been fortunate to visit some wonderful places around the world, I’m always happy to return home. 

When I was young, I was always drawing and inking sketches (pen and ink drawings). I believe I got my artistic eye from my mother, who has always been highly discriminating in decorating and all visual projects. She had abandoned a set of oil paints in the attic. I still need to ask her about this…anyway I saw them and was confident that they were something I’d be very interested in. I remember when she bought me my first watercolor set, how estatically happy I was. We had an artist family friend and he stressed to me that I should learn to draw prior to painting and so I set my mind on that first. My napping cats were my favorite subjects to start. 

My mom was always so supportive and signed me up for drawing and painting classes at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, when I was about twelve. Those were days of far less security and I remember walking through corridors with all kinds of intriguing statues lining the walls on my way to the basement classroom with one long window facing the atrium. It was such a joy to be with like-minded students and to work in a group. One teacher told me I painted like Matisse, but I wanted to learn to draw and paint more realistically than that. That led me later in my late teens/early 20’s to the Carpenter Center at Harvard University with some Advanced Figure Drawing classes that included anatomy and life drawing. I always took my studies very seriously and never considered it to be a hobby.

In college I double-majored in English and Art. Again, I can’t tell you how I felt at HOME in the Bixler Art Center at Colby College on Sunday mornings. Everyone else would be hung over (and occasionally I fell into that group) but by senior year, I was painting in the mornings on Sundays. 

Much later, after years spent in the field of graphic design/ art direction, I felt myself pulled back by the fine art supplies at the store. I took workshops with renowned artists and studied with the very best out there nationally. Once I saw Everett Raymond Kinstler’s (who painted many U.S. Presidents, cabinet members and luminaries) portraits, I was hooked on portraiture and studying with him. I took workshops with him in Boston and NYC at the Art Student’s League of New York. He mentored me for five years. He told me he would teach me “the language of art” and that I could do with it what I wanted. Looking back, I have to laugh that It felt like a very natural and normal thing to be mailing and later emailing photos of my work to Ray (who was an extremely busy man) and checking the mailbox every day for a reply as to what he thought of my latest portrait paintings, some commissions. I was obsessed. He was a fellow kindred artist and I used to send him all kinds of gifts to try to let him know how much I appreciated his time. He was a second generation painter of John Singer Sargent and also closely aligned with Joaquin Sorolla in his love of capturing light. I am therefore a third generation student of John Singer Sargent. I’d do all kinds of research and send him the newest books on his favorite artists and special brushes. I could never repay what he did for me. He told me I had a “sympathetic” style of painting portraits, which I thought was interesting at the time. I do truly try to bring out the very best in my portrait subjects, so I did appreciate that he said that. He also wrote at one point, “you have a charm and lovely quality in painting children.” I started off painting mostly children’s portraits.

I was trained to be a consummate artist. Once I had learned the Language of Art I was to work on various genres and not just focus on portraits. As John Singer Sargent said, you don’t want to be a mannerist and just paint portraits– that is too limiting as an artist and you will not grow in your work. Ray Kinstler always encouraged us to paint outdoors as much as possible. My seascapes are an important part of my work as an artist. One recent fun sale went to Showtime for their TV show, “Three Women,” which is set to premiere this fall. I’m intrigued see how my painting of the Martha’s Vineyard Lighthouse of Gay Head at Aquinnah Cliffs was displayed. I do love to paint seascapes and paint as many as I can around my portrait work.

Some of my favorite artists have been Everett Raymond Kinstler, of course, and another was Connie Flavell Pratt who taught me pastel portrait painting on the Cape. She would demonstrate on Monday am and then we had the afternoon to try to get somewhere near her level. There was a new model each day for the rest of the week, all day each day. I made so much progress in that class. Her artist sister, Jane, would join us and she was a delight. She would joke around about how Connie was the doer and she was the talker, but she was very skilled as well and painted a lot of courtroom portraits and some children’s portraits. Again, we all felt so at home together and bonded together like a family by the end of the week. Connie would make her rounds and was one of the most helpful and honest teachers I ever had at the easel. She was respectful, but really taught. I went back each summer to learn from her and when she saw the Girault pastel set of 300 pastels I bought myself for my 40th birthday gift, she laughed and said, “Ok, you are going to have to be very good,” and gave me a couple extra tips. Sadly, Ray Kinstler, Connie Pratt and Jane are no longer with us. How I would love to paint with them again!

I love the peace I find when I am creating art. I listen to music or books on tape and when I’m in my “painting zone,” I am in my most creative, intuitive state. It is my happy place. Of course, there are days of agitation when I am working back and forth on paintings, trying to draw out what I need from them, but about half of the time, I am working with intuition and innate creativity. I prefer to paint portraits over other subjects, as I sometimes feel lonely painting other subjects. I don’t feel alone painting portraits—kind of silly, like listening to ocean waves while trying to sleep. Our minds play tricks on us, but who’s complaining.

I feel fortunate to work with all kinds of clients. Each client brings unique projects to me and I work hard to meet their expectations. From the highest-end clients such as the Harvard Club of Boston for whom I painted the first female president to the recently widowed who want a posthumous portrait of their spouse to young parents who want oil paintings of their young children, it’s my job to get paintings completed on time and to be sure they are elated with the result. I also have really enjoyed working on pet portraits in more recent years. The pure joy of pet owners and their happy little friends keeps a smile on my face much of the time. I feel so blessed to be able to work in a field that matches my personality and abilities. Each day is unique and it’s a privilege to work on portraits that will hang in my client’s homes for decades and that will be family heirlooms. 

Some portraits I’m working on include several head and shoulders of businessmen, a portrait of a mother, several children’s portraits and an unusual request for a religious painting. Several dog portraits are imminent, as well, from a wonderful interior designer in the South. 

 

Studio Space Available

Available as early as November 1, 2022—a wonderful, renovated Howard Street Studios artist space at 162 Howard Street, Framingham, MA.  It is approximately 28’ X 10’, has 7 windows, 10’ ceilings, and will rent for $670 per month (it could be shared with someone else!).  If you are interested, contact Beth Hurley at Beth@LRconstruction.net or call 508-872-8550.

October Artist of the Month – Meet Randa Khuri

October Artist of the Month

Meet Randa Khuri

 

Artist Randa Khuri was born, the youngest of four children, to her family in Palestine. With the formation of Israel in 1948, her family was forced to leave their home and settled in Lebanon, a country that also became very dear to her. She has been interested in both art and music since a very young age. She began playing piano as a young girl and played until college. She now plays the flute and sings with the Dedham Choral Society. She did not have formal art lessons as a child but constantly scribbled and sketched. She sketched anything she saw, including portraits. Khuri ponders, “I have always felt that Mozart is to music what Renoir is to painting.”

 

When she began college at the American University of Beirut, she had to decide on a major. Between Fine Art and Nursing, she chose Nursing and has always appreciated this training. She married her husband in Lebanon and they moved to the United States for his medical training. Khuri had planned to get a Master’s Degree in Nursing but decided this would take too much of her time away from raising their three young children. When the children were in school, she began taking Sculpture at the MFA with Ralph Rosenthal. There was a watercolor class next door and she began taking watercolor as well. Both mediums lit a spark in Khuri but watercolor remains her favorite means of expression. She also attended the new England School of Art and Design and received a degree in Interior Design. Still preferring to spend as much time as possible with her children, she continued to pursue her painting.

Khuri’s advice to others is to “Do what you love to do.” She was able to follow these words herself and continued to master watercolor painting. She loves to paint still life of fruits, vegetables and flowers, which she finds “so beautiful when you look closely.” Inspired by Georgia O’Keefe, she notes that her biggest fan was her husband who passed away fourteen years ago. “He always had cards of my work printed and made enlarged gallery prints.” His encouragement bolstered her with the confidence she needed to continue producing art. She did several busts before her husband passed-one of him, one of each of her children and one of Mother Teresa. Both her paintings and sculptures have been in juried shows and have won awards.

She has exhibited through the WSA, the Needham Art Association (where she is former board member), the Dedham Art Association (current board member) and the Rhode Island Watercolor Society . She also does exhibits with fellow artists as well as solo exhibits. Her favorite spots to exhibit have been the Grace Chapel in Lexington, the De Cordova Museum and the local town libraries. Khuri has a solo exhibit beginning this month at the Needham Public Library and we encourage all to visit. A video interview with the artist from a past exhibition there can be found on YouTube.

 

 

During the COVID pandemic, Khuri developed her first painting block. Fortunately, she took a Zoom class with fellow WSA member Nan Rumpf and found herself cured by Rumpf’s talented teaching. A group very special to Khuri is the Watercolor Connection of which she has been a member for 12 years. “It is not a class but a group of artists who paint together, provide one another with critiques, encouragement and friendship.” Khuri paints for friends and family and has done commission work including one sculpture of a young girl, now grown up. Her 3 children all have her paintings and sculptures in their homes and she notes, “my 16-year-old grandson has several large paintings of mine in his room;” he has asked her to paint these. Art for Khuri has been a constant source of “pleasure and peace.” A quotation from Renoir holds much meaning for this artist: “ The pain passes but the beauty remains.”

Mena Levit’s Pastels on the Move

Congratulations to WSA member, Mena Levit who had seven of her pastel paintings accepted into several national/international shows! This includes, In Solidarity – Pastel Society of Cape Cod National Juried Show, Best Friends! – International Juried Show Pure Color 2022, Those Emerald Eyes – Central Mass Pastel Society National Juried Show, Family Treasures – Great Lakes Pastel Society National Juried Show Bowing Gracefully – Pastel Society of New Hampshire National Juried Show, and Fancy Hair Day! and Attitude-National Southwest Florida Pastel Society show.