| Kurt Solmssen Back | Home | Next Art Matters, March 1985 Vol. 4, No. 6 Suburban and Urbane "Philadelphia Plein Air," at the Third Street Gallery, displayed recent landscapes by emerging Delaware Valley Realists. Most had been painted on the spot - accounting for their frequently small size and general animation. Kurt Solmssen - perhaps best-known of the seven - clearly loved winter, using arctic blues and deliberately exaggerated russets. His "January Landscape" filled a snowy glade with pallid trees and heavy impasto shadows. "Burnt Hills," while a large work, preserved the spontaneous feeling of alla prima observation. Now that down-to-earth subjects and luscious paint-handling have come back into fashion, it is interesting to look at some of our brushy landscape painters. A group of seven such area artists at Third Street Gallery is having a show of "Plein-Air" local landscapes (Paintings done in the open air). The quality of unencumbered joy in painting is captivating. Doug
Martenson's urban scenes confirm him as a natural painter who seeks realism
and everyday truths. He hides a looseness of construction by the vigor
of the brushstrokes and the sheer buoyancy of the character of some of
these subjects. And
Kenneth Dirsa, who has a penchant for pastel, takes a leaf out of the
impressionist doctrine that painting must have a spontaneous character. |