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Margret E. Short Fine Arts

Margret E. Short Fine Arts

Portland, Oregon artist Margret Short - a modern day master of 17th Century Dutch art using the chiaroscuro technique to create still life and floral paintings.

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PRESS RELEASE

May 30, 2007 by Margret Short

Dear Friends,

Fernad_2 For the past year, I have been grinding the world's most precious minerals and replicating historic pigments to capture the "bling" in the canvases from the age of Rembrandt. My inspirations were eleven specific 17th-century Dutch paintings, from which I have appropriated the color palettes for each of my own Dutch Master homages.

These works will be exhibited in the nearby Lawrence Gallery as "Rembrandt and the Golden Age of Dutch Art" opens at the Portland Art Museum. I think you will find it fun and fascinating to compare my colors to the inspiration paintings. All of the inspiration paintings along with my paintings will be posted on the blog in a few days.

A full press release is below. I encourage you to forward it to anyone you think might be interested, including organizations. Feel free to post it on your blog, or web site or in your newsletter.

I look forward to seeing you at the exhibit opening on June 7, 6-9pm. Thank you for all the support and wonderful comments posted over the past many months.

Best Regards,
Margret Short
5322 SE Hull Avenue
Milwaukie, Oregon 97267
Lessons from the Low Countries
Lawrence Gallery
June 1 – 30, 2007
903 NW Davis
503-228-1776
Portland, Oregon
www.lawrencegallery.net
www.margretshort.com


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

NEW PAINTINGS BY MARGRET E. SHORT
REMBRANDT'S BLING REVEALED IN AN AMUSING GAME OF SEEK-AND-FIND

Portland, Oregon, May 20, 2007-For the last year, Portland artist Margret E. Short has been eating with, laboring side-by-side, and dreaming about Rembrandt and other Dutch masters. In particular, she has been studying the historic pigments they used and introducing them into her work. If she were any closer to her inspirations, people would start whispering. However, that probably would not deflect her mission.

Short's splendid series of still-life paintings, "Margret E. Short: Lessons from the Low Countries," opens at Portland's Lawrence Gallery on June 1 and runs through June 30. Each work is inspired by the color palette of a select painting in the exhibit "Rembrandt and the Golden Age of Dutch Art," which opens one day later at the Portland Art Museum. Reproductions of the Dutch inspiration paintings will be exhibited alongside Short's finished works, which are finished with detailed of Dutch period reproduction frames. Viewers will enjoy participating in the artist's visual amusements. Not only are the colors reproduced, Short has also quoted, quite accurately, sections of each original work in each homage. It's a game of seek-and-find.

Not content with contemporary colors, Short replicated the 17th-century pigments of the inspiration paintings for this collection by hand-grinding each mineral. Her blog, www.margretshort.com, has documented the meticulous study of the ancient hues. Luscious colors with magical names like lapis lazuli, cinnabar, and azurite are the focus of each bountiful still life. Delighted with her discoveries, Short says, "There is no comparison to the handling qualities of the modern pigments. Everything about the handmade historic pigments is different from the modern: particle size, thickness, consistency, color, saturation, and on and on."

Throughout the creation of the paintings, Short's exhaustive research led to unexpected findings. Among her favorites is the word "pronk," which she associates with today's "bling." While it isn't often featured in contemporary painting, bling was abundant in The Netherlands of the 17th Century. It was a prosperous society and the center of world trade. Diamond cutting, book publishing, textile manufacturing, shipbuilding, fishing, and banking were among a growing number of trades that flourished. The Dutch merchants bartered their goods for imported spices, paper, silk, wine, olive oil and countless other items that enriched their burgeoning economy. There was plenty of bling to go around!

With expanded patronage, art flourished in this environment. Artists flaunted their abilities to capture reflective precious metals, sparkling jewels, and luscious flora. Short, who is well known for her attention to delicate lace, has done the same thing in the 21st Century. Each canvas is saturated with enough bling to make Short a legitimate heir to a longstanding tradition. 

Margret Short has exhibited her work throughout the United States and beyond, including the C.M. Russell Museum in Great Falls, Montana; the Gilcrease Museum in Tulsa, Oklahoma; and the  Weatherburn Gallery in Naples, Florida. She is the recipient of two coveted Salmagundi Club Awards, the Grumbacher Gold Medallion, and many other national honors. She is also a Signature member of the Oil Painters of America, American Women Artists, and the Copley Society.

An opening reception for "Margret E. Short: Lessons from the Low Countries" will be held during First Thursday Gallery Walk night on Thursday, June 7 from 6 to 9 p.m.

The Lawrence Gallery is located at 903 N.W. Davis Street in Portland, Oregon. It is open Monday through Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. and Sundays from noon to 5 p.m. More information is available at www.lawrencegallery.net or by calling 503-228-1776.

For more information, please contact Margret E. Short at 503-652-2749 or mshortfineart@aol.com.
-END-

Chiaroscuro Painting

Oil painting with the chiaroscuro technique illuminates the focus area with a strong light. All other areas are painted with less detail, lower values, and intensity of color giving a mysterious appearance. By putting one or two objects in the important focus area, a strong but simple composition will emerge. Combining these oil painting techniques with a selection of superior natural pigments and oil paints result in the beautiful and evocative quality known as Chiaroscuro Painting.

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