Contact:
David Freilach
617.253.5076
freilach@mit.edu

 

The Dean's Gallery presents
Neil Welliver: Prints from the Maine Landscape

Organized by the MIT List Visual Arts Center

September 15, 2006-January 15, 2007

CAMBRIDGE, MA -- September, 2006.   The Dean's Gallery presents Neil Welliver: Prints from the Maine Landscape from September 15, 2006 through January 15, 2007. The exhibition features seven large serigraphs, completed in the 1970s that depict Welliver's Maine landscape.

Neil Welliver, one of the foremost American landscape painters of his generation, was born in Millville, Pennsylvania in 1929. He graduated from the Philadelphia College of Art and received a Masters of Fine Arts degree from Yale University. There he studied with the noted abstract artist Josef Albers (the Dean's Gallery presented Josef Albers: Interaction of Color in the spring of 2004), who greatly influenced his understanding of color and light. Welliver permanently settled in Lincolnville, Maine, in 1970. Welliver passed away in the spring of 2005.

Venturing deep into the woods, bearing a heavy load of equipment on his back, he would make oil sketches en plein air. Later, in his studio, he carefully rendered his landscapes on large canvases, often eight-to-ten feet in scale.

Neil Welliver's life was tormented by personal tragedy; and his art does not necessarily depict cheerful, sunny landscapes, but are images of an untamed natural world filled with twisted piles of fallen brush, rushing water, boulders, and rocky hillsides. They often portray a calm that reveals the emotional state of the artist, and allow the viewer time to investigate and see intimately the nature to which he was so deeply connected.

 

Location:
The Dean's Gallery, the MIT Sloan School of Management
50 Memorial Drive, Building E52
Fourth Floor, Room 466
Cambridge, MA 02139

Gallery hours: Monday - Friday 9:00 am to 5:00 pm ; closed all holidays.

Information about the Dean's Gallery: 617.253.9458 or http://web.mit.edu/deansgallery

All exhibitions at the Dean's Gallery are free and open to the public. Wheelchair accessible.