‘Blue Lincoln’ is a framed monochromatic portrait of Abraham Lincoln. Slonem paints Lincoln in vibrant royal and cerulean blues with thick oil paint. He then goes back to the portrait...
‘Blue Lincoln’ is a framed monochromatic portrait of Abraham Lincoln. Slonem paints Lincoln in vibrant royal and cerulean blues with thick oil paint. He then goes back to the portrait with the end of his paintbrush, creating a geometric grid-like pattern that disrupts the order of the image and energizes the portrait. Hunt Slonem (b. 1951, Kittery, ME) is an American artist best known for his “maximalist” paintings of wildlife exotica — most famously birds, rabbits and butterflies. Drawing inspiration from the spiritual and natural worlds, Slonem repeats these motifs on an epic scale in an act of visual and artistic mantra. Rendered through loose, gestural brushwork, his figures dissolve into rhythmic patterns at the edges of abstraction, creating symphonies of color, line and form across a highly textural canvas. His oeuvre’s meditative qualities are equally matched, by a “remarkable levity… a lightness of being” (Henry Geldzahler, Metropolitan Museum of Art 1996). Slonem has also received critical acclaim for his restorations of national historic monuments, including Gilded Age mansions and Antebellum plantations, which the artist saves from neglect and fills with installations combining his work with collections of 19th century antiques. Slonem has exhibited the world-over and has had over 350 shows, including 20 museum exhibitions. In Summer 2019 Slonem had a special exhibitions with the National Museum of Art in Kiev and the Odessa Museum of Eastern and Western Art.