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William Whitaker
The only son of an artist father,
William Whitaker grew up in the special world of the working
artist. He had access to the finest art materials and was painting
in watercolor and oil at the age of six. His fondest early memories
are of the sights sounds and smells of the art studio.
The art world of his childhood
and youth was the brave new world of abstract expressionism and
until he was well out of college his natural inclination to draw
accurately and his love for traditional realism was a source
of inner conflict. Nevertheless he was fortunate, starting at
age 17, to receive a thorough grounding in academic figure drawing
and painting from the portrait painter Alvin Gittins at the University
of Utah, and after exploring other styles he followed his heart
into traditional art.
Whitaker loves to paint from
life in an old fashioned studio. No matter what direction his
art takes him, he always comes back to the model in the studio,
the form bathed in the beautiful quiet cool light coming down
from a high north window. He refers to this kind of seeing and
painting as the Old Testament of art and feels there is enough
magic to engage him there for the rest of his life.
He believes the value of painting
is to be found in its spiritual power. Having been told all his
life that the kind of painting he enjoys is dead, he takes quiet
comfort in lovingly attempting to capture something the camera
cannot see. He is also delighted that there are so many wonderfully
talented young artists who are not bound or inhibited by contemporary
art world conventions and who are out to paint beautifully crafted
pictures without apology.
He has been a professional artist
since 1965, during which time he has conducted workshops and
been a university art professor. He continues to work with one
or two advanced student artists for fun. He paints about three
or four hours every day ands spends the rest of the time trying
not to ruin any good work he's done.
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