Carroll N. Jones III

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Carroll_N._Jones_III an entity of type: Thing

Carroll Nathaniel Jones III (July 2, 1944 - June 22, 2017) was an artist in the style of American realism. Carroll grew up in New Providence, New Jersey, where his father, an illustrator for Life (magazine), was his first art teacher. He taught Carroll techniques of the Old Masters, who emphasized light, perspective, and composition. Carroll went to school in New York City (NYC) and enrolled in the Phoenix School of Design at age 17. He later attended Hartford Art School and became a commissioned portraitist for 10 years. After his work, Church Window was recognized in the New York Times, he moved away from portraits to recreate scenes that sparked memories of his childhood. Andrew Wyeth and Edward Hopper most influenced Jones. The Coe-Kerr Gallery of NYC and Whistler's Daughter Gallery of rdf:langString
rdf:langString Carroll N. Jones III
rdf:langString Carroll N. Jones III
rdf:langString Carroll N. Jones III
xsd:date 2017-06-22
rdf:langString Palm Springs, California, US
xsd:date 1944-07-02
xsd:integer 49522444
xsd:integer 1090488087
rdf:langString Carroll Jones Jr., NYC Phoenix School of Design, University of New Hampshire
rdf:langString Church Window, Another August, Summer's Reflection
xsd:date 1944-07-02
rdf:langString Carroll Nathaniel Jones
rdf:langString The artist at age 20
xsd:date 2017-06-22
rdf:langString Carroll Nathaniel Jones III (July 2, 1944 - June 22, 2017) was an artist in the style of American realism. Carroll grew up in New Providence, New Jersey, where his father, an illustrator for Life (magazine), was his first art teacher. He taught Carroll techniques of the Old Masters, who emphasized light, perspective, and composition. Carroll went to school in New York City (NYC) and enrolled in the Phoenix School of Design at age 17. He later attended Hartford Art School and became a commissioned portraitist for 10 years. After his work, Church Window was recognized in the New York Times, he moved away from portraits to recreate scenes that sparked memories of his childhood. Andrew Wyeth and Edward Hopper most influenced Jones. The Coe-Kerr Gallery of NYC and Whistler's Daughter Gallery of New Jersey represented Jones and contemporaries, Wyeth and Hopper. Malcolm Forbes, Frederick R. Koch, Stephen Sondheim, William Schuman, and Jean Shepherd held private collections. He exhibited at Newark Museum and Trenton Art Museum in New Jersey, and in universities, galleries and museums in seven states by his mid-thirties. His work is part of the permanent collections of Seton Hall University and Newark Museum. Art critic Marion Filler considered his work Magic realism, a quiet movement made famous in America beginning in the 1920s by Hopper, and related to Surrealism.
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rdf:langString Carroll Nathaniel Jones

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