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John
Woodrow Kelley
Mr. Kelley
is an artist whose entire life's work is devoted to creating a contemporary
interpretation of the classical tradition in western civilization. This
ambition is expressed through a series of paintings inspired by Greek
mythology, as well as a study of the uniqueness of the human individual
through the genre of portraiture. Mr. Kelley's attraction to Greek mythology
is born of the belief that it embodies everything that is timeless about
the human experience, and therefore is worthy of an interpretation expressing
our own age.
Mr. Kelley dates the beginning of his interest in classicism to the
time when, at age six, his parents took him to the world's only full
scale replica of the Greek Parthenon in the capital of his home state,
Nashville, Tennessee. The human oriented proportions of that building,
and the canon of beauty expressed in the collection of plaster casts
of the great fifth century b.c. statues by Polykleitos and Pheidias
which are inside, began his lifelong ambition to express the classical
tradition. Mr. Kelley took a degree in art history from the University
of Tennessee and a degree in architecture from Pratt Institute in New
York before turning to the study of painting and drawing at the Art
Students League and the New York Academy in New York. His Principal
teacher was Mr. Ted Jacobs, who teaches the precepts of the academic
tradition, with it's emphasis on accurate drawing and the study of anatomy.
Mr.Jacobs now presides over his own school in the south of France.
During the course of his career Mr. Kelley has received commissions
from such institutions as the Morgan Library, the Lincoln Center for
the Performing Arts, and Yale University. Mr. Kelley has shown his work
at, among others, the John Pence Gallery in San Francisco, Ca., and
Fischbach Gallery in New York, and is currently showing in the More
Gallery in Philadelphia, Pa., and Pandora Old Masters in Milan, Italy.
His work is represented in the private collections of the senior vice
president of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Mr. Ashton Hawkins, and
the writers, Mr. Reynolds Price and Mr. David Halberstam. His work has
been published in the New York Times, the American
Arts Quarterly, the Italian magazine,"Amica",
and the architectural publication,"The Classicist." Mr. Kelley
is a fellow of the Morgan Library, and a fellow of the Institute of
Classical Architecture. He divides his time between his studios in New
York City and Knoxville, Tennessee.
Mr. Kelley's conviction about the perennial relevance of classicism
to human sensibility, and his determination to create a body of work
expressing a contemporary interpretation of that tradition, places him
squarely in the growing body of artists who are rebelling against the
meaningless gimmickry and vacuity of modernism in the visual arts. The
writer Tom Wolf recently predicted in the New York Times that the modern
giants so touted today by the art mafia will be as forgotten in the
coming century as the great academic masters once were in the last.
Mr. Kelley firmly believes that the truly revolutionary art of the twenty-first
century will not only employ the universal language of representationalism,
but will also embody a spiritual continuity with the great classical
tradition of humanity.
If you would like to read more about the work of John Woodrow Kelley,
please read the artist's
Statement
of Intent.
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