Video Lecture: The History of Landscape Painting In 28 ½ Minutes
Join Hank Feeley, artist and occasional art historian, for The History of Landscape Painting, another informative, fast-paced online lecture in his continuing series Art In 28 1/2 Minutes.
This time Hank examines the fascinating history of landscape painting from the ancient Minoan culture to today’s masters like Peter Doig and Wayne Thiebaud, with stops along the way to discuss Jacob Van Ruisdael, J M W Turner, Impressionism, Monet’s cataracts, Winlow Homer, Cezanne’s invention, Van Gogh’s emotion, The Group Of Seven, Fairfield Porter, Georgia O’Keeffe painting in Taos not Tucson, David Hockney and the meaning of it all.
Access information will be provided in an order confirmation email after registration. The lecture may be viewed at any time.
Feeley, a Glen Arbor resident, is an author, painter, and sculptor whose second book Painting the Joy of Sleeping Bear County was published in 2016. He is a graduate The School of the Art Institute of Chicago and Harvard Business School. He has been a Visiting Artist at The School of the Art Institute of Chicago, an Artist-in-Residence at Ox-Bow School of Art, and has taught at Roosevelt University and the Dennos Museum. His work is held in public and private collections nationally and internationally. He is represented in Chicago by Aron Packer Projects and, in New York, by First Street Gallery.
Pictured: Artists Sketching In The White Mountains, Winslow Homer, oil, 1868