David Campbell (born March 31, 1936) is an American realist painter, poet, and faculty member at the Maine College of Art. Many of his oil paintings, watercolors, and drawings feature urban and industrial scenes rendered meticulously over the course of months and even years of plein-air sessions, deftly imbuing quotidian subjects with abstract significance. A large portion of Campbell's work captures the vibrancy and intricacy of urban and suburban vistas, especially around his former residence in Somerville, Massachusetts.[1]
David Campbell | |
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Born | David Campbell March 31, 1936 |
Nationality | American |
Known for | Oil painting Drawing Watercolor painting |
Movement | Realism |
Early life
editBorn in Takoma Park, Maryland on March 31, 1936, Campbell studied at the Art Students League of New York from 1957-1961.[2] Following a stint in the U.S. Army in Korea, Campbell spent six years in Italy before moving back to the United States in 1968.[3]
Work
editCritical evaluations of his work are as varied as his subjects, which range from fallow fields, to crowded streets and industrial parks framed by piles of scrap metal and junk. While one reviewer noted a recurring "theme of desolation, which when coupled with the subject matter can also be understood as comment on America's ever diminishing industrial base and the lives it once sustained," others have found wellsprings of different emotions. Referring to Campbell's 1980's work "Reading", in which "a woman sits on her claustrophobic back porch, closed in by household junk on either side...the neighborhood houses are close behind, and an ugly apartment building blocks the sky," art critic Linda Bamber nonetheless finds that the woman's "posture speaks of her complete absorption in the book on her lap...The smoke from the woman's cigarette could be her spirit ascending, completely unconstrained by all the enclosures."[4]
Often returning to the same location throughout the year to capture seasonal changes, Campbell insists on rendering all his works through plein-air sessions. "Some people work from photographs," Campbell explained in an interview for the Boston Review,
- "and that's fine; but for my part I'd rather bag groceries in the supermarket than do that. For me the whole part of it is to make contact with my surroundings. I want to get to a caring level about where I am. How can you do that with a photograph? It's more than just the visual act. You have to immerse yourself in the scene."[4]
This attention to detail and place is what gives Campbell's paintings "scientific, cerebral, and spiritual" significance, as author Michael Kammen wrote in his book A Time to Every Purpose: The Four Seasons in American Culture.[5] Campbell described his work Summer (1987), which depicts a rolling field in North Andover, MA, in an interview with the author:
- "Because I see nature as the basis of life, it is sacred to me...The fact that I live in a city makes me feel especially exhilarated when I visit this field. The look of things is so thoroughly different through the seasons that my industrial home neighborhood is changeless by comparison. Important cycles other than the cycle of the seasons are recorded in the series."[6]
Complex and dominating cloudscapes also feature prominently in Campbell's work, often occupying two-thirds or more of the canvas. One review in the artsMEDIA section of the Boston Globe found that his "heavy, colorless skys, which foretell an impending doom" appeared to be "angry; and they seem ready to burst with a fury powerful enough to mercifully finish off the slow destruction taking place below."[7]
Recently, Campbell has found inspiration in maritime scenes around his home in Portland, Maine prompting him to paint a series of oil tankers to fill out his corpus of industrial and cityscapes. "I've always been attracted to complexity in whatever subject I am painting," Campbell explained in an interview for the Maine Sunday Telegram, "And let's face it, there's a lot of complexity in these tankers. There are a lot of elements, and a lot of things going on."[8] His paintings of these behemoth ships have appeared in an exhibition at the Maine Maritime Museum in Bath, titled "Some Burdensome: Big Ships, Big Cargoes," and are scheduled to appear in a new exhibition at the Portland Public Library in August 2013.
In 1993, the Somerville-based Home First organization recognized Campbell at its "Somerville Pride Night," the first artist to be granted the distinction.[9] Indeed, the prominence of Somerville throughout Campbell's paintings has led art critic Nancy Curtis to comment that "David Campbell has done for Somerville what Vermeer did for Delft," a reference to the 17th century Dutch painter whose work immortalized the middle-class lifestyle of his city.[10]
Beginning in 1982, Campbell taught at various art institutes and universities around New England. His teaching experience includes The Massachusetts College of Art (1982), Montserrat College of Art (1989), New England School of Art and Design (1991), Museum of Fine Arts (1990-2001), and the Maine College of Art (2002–present).[2]
Exhibitions
editCampbell's work has been featured in numerous solo and group exhibitions around the United States and internationally. His solo exhibitions include appearances at the Galleria III in Florence, Italy, Boston City Hall, and Babson College.
In group exhibitions, his artwork has been displayed at the Smithsonian Institution (1959), Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts (1982), San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (1986), Boston Center for the Arts (1987, 1988, 1991), National Academy of Design (1994, 1996, 2006), Art Institute of Chicago (1999), Maine Maritime Museum (2010), New Hampshire Institute of Art (2007), as well as numerous universities.[2]
Works by Campbell reside in the public collections of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City, the Art Institute of Chicago, Boston Public Library, Maine Maritime Museum, Portland Public Library, and the Museum of Fine Art in Boston.[11]
His work as appeared alongside fellow realists Philip Pearlstein, John Moore, Rackstraw Downes, Richard Maury.
Publications
editPoetry by Campbell has appeared in the Beloit Poetry Journal, Dan River Anthology, "Goose River Anthology," Sensations Magazine, and Struggle Magazine. "Looking at Trees," an essay by the artist, appeared in the November, 1982 issue of The Sun.[2]
Notes and sources
edit- ^ Gerold Wunderlich & Company, David Campbell, introduction by Josiah Lee Auspitz, (New York: Gerold Wunderlich & Co., 1990), p. 5.
- ^ a b c d http://www.greenhutgalleries.com/pdfs/images/20111025001714C.pdf[permanent dead link ]
- ^ Pat Davidson Reef, "Frost Gully is Serious about good art," Sun Journal (Lewiston, MA), November 13, 1998, p. 12.
- ^ a b Linda Bamber, "Made in Somerville," Boston Review, Dec. 1986, p. 15.
- ^ Michael Kammen, A Time to Every Purpose: The Four Seasons in American Culture (Chapel Hill, NC: The University of North Carolina Press, 2004), 244.
- ^ Michael Kammen, A Time to Every Purpose: The Four Seasons in American Culture (Chapel Hill, NC: The University of North Carolina Press, 2004), 244-245.
- ^ Adam Lambert, "Streets and Roads," Boston Globe, artsMEDIA section, May 1997, p. 23.
- ^ Bob Keyes, "Size Matters," Maine Sunday Telegram, March 14, 2010, D1-2.
- ^ "Somerville painter first 'Home First' honoree," The Somerville Journal, Oct. 1993, p. 1.
- ^ Nancy Curtis, "Six From Around Town," Boston Observer, August 1983, p. 4.
- ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-01-19. Retrieved 2013-06-26.
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