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Daniel Gerhartz
Daniel Gerhartz was born in Wisconsin in 1965 where he now lives with his wife Jennifer and their four young children. His interest in art piqued at an early age when a teenage friend suggested they spend one dreary afternoon drawing. It was at that moment that he discovered his lifework.
Gerhartz began his art education at the American Academy of Art in Chicago where he studied in the classical tradition and immersed himself in applications of technique and design. After a brief stint in commercial art, he began pursuing fine art; visiting museums to study master works and painting alongside contemporary artists. Daniel found his passion in painting from life. This direct approach to working with the figure and landscape allowed him to see and attempt to capture the infinite nuances of light, color, and form. He has won several awards at prominent national invitational exhibitions and his work has been collected both nationally and internationally.
The artist's skillful and technically adept work celebrates the created world, the human form, personal relationships with a connection to landscapes and environments of special importance. Evoking a timelessness and idealism, many of his figures are dressed in dramatic clothing which he often invents for its aesthetic appeal and lyrical quality so as to achieve a sense of other worldliness. Emotions are a vital part of his express design, while his mastery of anatomy, the human form and complex surfaces combine to make his canvases very powerful visual experiences.
Daniel Gerhartz has established himself as an important American painter among the leading talents of our time. About his work Dan has said, “ My goal is to effectively record the richness of our human experience, the contrasts between life and death, the dance and dirge, the beautiful and common, joy and sorrow, hope and despair, while in the end, offering a message of hope and pointing the viewer to the eternal.” and “ As I paint my subjects from life and have the privilege of studying the awe inspiring breadth and depth of the beauty of the created world, it is humbling to ponder the greatness of our Creator. Johann Sebastian Bach said it well as he signed his work, ‘Soli Deo Gloria,' to God alone be the glory.”
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