ArtWay

Quality is the first norm for art, but its final norm is love and truth, the enriching of human life, the deepening of our vision.

Artists

Herman, Bruce

Bruce Herman is a painter, and Professor of Art at Gordon College, near Boston, where he is currently Lothlórien Distinguished Chair in the Fine Arts. Herman’s artwork has been exhibited in over seventy-five exhibitions in major cities in the United States (Boston, New York, Chicago, L.A.) and abroad (England, Italy, Israel, and Japan). His work is housed in many private and public collections including the Vatican Museums in Rome; Grunwald Center at Armand Hammer Collection, L.A. County Museum, Cincinnati Museum of Art, and the DeCordova Museum.

 

photo credit: Dan Nystedt http://www.nystedtphotography.com

Work Process, Style, and Influences
I work mainly in oils, modified by the use of alkyd resins that speed drying time and allow a complex layering and indirect glazing technique. I do this in order to increase luminosity and complexity to the layers and to achieve a quality that mimics the passage of time – a crucial element in my imagery. As an undergrad I studied with several of the Boston Expressionists a group of older generation figurative-humanist painters influenced by Max Beckmann and Karl Zerbe, and many of whom were graduates of the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. My chosen models from ancient art history are largely from the Italian School (Piero, Fra Angelico, Giotto) regarding content and vision, and northern painters like Rembrandt as far as handling of the human form. During graduate school my advisor Philip Guston and Californian painter Richard Diebenkorn had a decisive impact on my work. I currently draw inspiration from my students and friends and colleagues, and would credit the following Christian artists as primary dialogue partners and influences: Ted and Cathy Prescott, Tanja Butler, Ed Knippers, Joel Sheesley, Jerome Witkin, Erica Grimm-Vance, Tim Lowly, Mary McCleary, Wayne Forte, Makoto Fujimura, Anthony Falcetta, Bryn Gillette, Amy Garofano, Angela Yarian.
 
Several friends who are art historians or theologians have had a significant impact on my thinking and understanding of what I do as an artist: Calvin Seerveld, Jeremy Begbie, John Walford, James Romaine, Rachel Hostetter Smith, David Goa, Bill Dyrness.
 
Finally I would like to thank my patrons and supporters – all of whom have had a very large influence on both my art and my thinking. In particular I owe a debt of love and gratitude to Walter and Darlene Hansen and to Patricia Jones for their unflagging support and insight.
 
Aims, Hopes, Faith-Art Connections
Making art is not simply a life-work, it is part and parcel of how I understand who I am in God’s creation. Simply put, I have never thought of my art as separate from my faith – from earliest childhood to the present. Though I have not always had a well-defined Christian faith, and have not always been a skilled or mature artist – I have always understood my art as an outgrowth of my love of God and God’s world of wonders.
 
When asked how I see my faith affecting my art I am puzzled: the real question would be in what way, if any, does my faith not affect my art (and vice versa). The answer is that I have no way to disentangle these intertwined realities. They are one and the same impulse.
 
Similarly, if asked how my view of the world affects my art, I must again answer: in every way. My art is my view of the world, and my art is that manifestation of my love of God. As for the specific works on view here I would simply ask the viewer, if we were standing side by side in front of the actual paintings, “What do you see?”
 
Daughter & Mother, ©Bruce Herman, 2007, oil and alkyd resin with gold and silver leaf on wood, 72” x 49” 
 
About Daughter and Mother and Betrothed
Without wishing in any way to sidestep the request to interpret my work, I must say that my interpretation is only one of many – in all likelihood nearly as many as there are responsive viewers. I firmly believe that genuine artists are “carriers” of art, not originators of art and therefore often barely understand the full content of their own work. I believe that I am a servant of the artwork – not its master.
 
Betrothed, ©Bruce Herman, 2007, oil and alkyd resin with gold and silver leaf on wood, 72” x 49”  
 
All that said, I will share the following thoughts: For five of the last six years I have focused almost exclusively on a large mural project dealing with the life of the Virgin Mary – her relationship to God, to her son Messiah, and to us – being a representative of the church universal. While completing that larger project, I began another related series of paintings on the stages of a woman’s life – childhood, young adult, married, and mature – and in most instances employed my wife and daughter as models for both the form and the content of the paintings. In one instance I had the model for the Virgin Mary, Elisa Lardani, pose for the married woman image entitled “Called”. I had a pastor friend’s young daughter pose for the childhood image entitled “Girl”.
 
In all of the Woman paintings there is an attempt to evoke the complexity and richness and unique strength of a woman – intellectually, emotionally, spiritually.
 
Website
 
 
Selected solo exhibitions
2010-11          Presence/Absence   (touring show/brochure available) 
                     Hendrix College, Conway, AR; Roberts Wesleyan College, Rochester,  
                     NY; Calvin College, Grand Rapids, MI
2008-09          Woman/Virgin/Mother   (touring show/catalog available) 
                      Barrington Center for the Arts, Gordon College, Wenham, MA
                      Reynolds Gallery, Westmont College, Santa Barbara, CA
                      San Paolo Monastery, Orvieto, Italy
2005-06          The Body Broken (touring show/catalog available)
          Palazzo dei Sette, Orvieto, Italy; Alva deMars Megan Art Center, St.
          Anselm College, Manchester, NH, Meeting House Gallery Andover-
          Newton Seminary, Newton, MA
2001                Saving the Appearances Messiah College, Grantham, PA
2001                Incarnation, Exile, Hope Shaeffer Institute, St. Louis, MO
1998                Out of Ashes touring solo exhibition
                       Andover-Newton Seminary, Newton, MA
                       Grand Canyon University, Phoenix, AZ
                       Biola University, La Mirada, CA
1996-97            Via Dolorosa   (touring show/catalog available)
                        Yale Institute for Sacred Music and the Arts, New Haven, CT
                        Visions Gallery, Albany, NY
 
Selected Recent Group Exhibitions
2006                A Broken Beauty Laguna Art Museum, Laguna Beach, CA
2004                Consider Peace Sato Museum, Tokyo, Japan
2002                Return of Beauty Frederickson Contemporary, New York, NY         
2000                Recent Acquistions DeCordova Museum, Lincoln, MA
2000                Anno Domini Provincial Museum of Alberta, Canada
 
Selected Public collections
Armand Hammer Museum                   Boston University
Biola University                                  Cincinnati Museum of Fine Art 
De Cordova Museum                           Vatican Museums, Rome
Gordon College                                   Roberts Wesleyan College
Taylor University                                Messiah College