Description: Stinson & Company is locally owned and operated. We specialize in the sale of Gold & Silver Bullion, , Jewelry, Diamonds, US Coins & Paper Currency, Antiques, Collectables, Vintage Guitars and many other items of value at the fairest prices. You will always find some of the most interesting items from week to week. Add us to your favorites and check back often. Maine Artist George Andre LaPorte Paris & Jefferson Solar Etching Watercolor 5/8 ~ Free Shipping ~ Up for sale today is this Portland Maine Artist George Andre LaPorte Paris & Jefferson Solar Etching Watercolor. This is a limited edition and is #5 of 8 produced. The watercolor is nicely framed in a solid wood distressed frame. THe watercolor is pencil singed in the lower right and the edition number and titel are to the left. Watercolor measures 11" x 8" (sight) and 22" x 19". Today, one glance at Andre LaPorte’s textured, sensual oil paintings reveal that he has gracefully shed the restrictions of illustration. While LaPorte’s paintings are primarily figurative, they are also bursting with abstract energy. His natural talent and well-honed skills are evidenced in his bold, confident lines that are at once loose and precise. If LaPorte had not had the support of his family, however, he may never have gambled on an artistic career in the first place. Born in New Brunswick, Canada, and raised in Montreal, LaPorte was the youngest of four brothers. While his family was absorbed in running the thriving restaurant they had opened after World War II, LaPorte never cared for the business. Instead, he aspired to a career in architecture. But after attending university in Canada, including time at the École des Beaux Arts de Montréal, LaPorte was urged by his father to pursue commercial art rather than architecture. LaPorte heeded his advice, moved to New York City, and continued his studies at the School of Visual Arts. At just 25 years old, LaPorte landed a job in the illustration department of Fairchild Publications, the publisher of Women’s Wear Daily. When publisher John Fairchild noticed a bold fashion sketch that LaPorte had dashed off purely as an experiment, his work was soon being featured prominently in the magazine. A few years later, he was plucked from the art department and promoted to features editor. “The next five years were five of the best I’ve ever had,” LaPorte remembers of his editorship. “Fairchild opened the door to all of New York for me.” But, much to the surprise of his colleagues, LaPorte wasn’t content in the position. “Every seven years or so,” he says, “I just felt this itch to change my work situation.” While still in his thirties, LaPorte left Fairchild, hired a small staff, and set up an illustration shop in a two-story penthouse replete with a rooftop terrace overflowing with lush vegetation and a view of the Empire State Building and Hudson River. From the posh high-rise, LaPorte and his team created advertising art for fashion, cosmetic, and home-furnishing giants such as Bergdorf Goodman, Versace, Estée Lauder, and Yves Saint Laurent. By the late 1980s, LaPorte was ready for a change once again, and he left the city for what he thought would be a quieter life in East Hampton. But his respite was short lived; when a representative from Ralph Lauren’s home division saw a hand-painted sisal rug that LaPorte had created on a whim, the renowned fashion designer soon had him under contract. LaPorte hired a team of a dozen painters and began churning out as many as 600 rugs per year. And what had started out as art, LaPorte says, soon turned into work. After nearly a decade with Ralph Lauren, LaPorte finally stopped and made time to do what he had moved to East Hampton to do in the first place: paint. After struggling to shake off the confines of commercial art, LaPorte began exploring the many themes he works with to this day. His fascination with architecture and farmland has led to an ongoing series called “The Granges.” “My youth still comes back to me when I work on those farm and barn paintings,” he says. While LaPorte’s work may appear simple, it is deceptively so—his horse series, for instance, reveals a masterful understanding of his subject. With a minimum of brushstrokes, LaPorte effortlessly conjures the form of a muscular, graceful horse rippling with sinewy power. And though LaPorte’s palette often shifts between earthy tones and bright colors, he says that he always strives to create paintings that announce their presence. “I don’t ever want my work to recede,” he says. After passing through Portland for years on long drives from New York to Canada, the painter finally settled in the city four years ago. “Portland has the energy of Greenwich Village in the late 1960s,” he says. . inkfrog terapeak inkfrog terapeak Listing and template services provided by inkFrog
Price: 249.99 USD
Location: Portland, Maine
End Time: 2025-01-28T19:32:47.000Z
Shipping Cost: 0 USD
Product Images
Item Specifics
Return shipping will be paid by: Seller
All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
Item must be returned within: 30 Days
Refund will be given as: Money Back
Return policy details:
Original/Licensed Reproduction: Original
Type: Painting
Listed By: Dealer or Reseller
Size: Small (up to 12in.)
Height (Inches): 8"
Width (Inches): 11"
Artist: Anrde LaPorte
Features: Signed, Matted, Framed
Era: 1950-Now