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DENNIS SHEEHAN

Dennis Sheehan’s work is often described as reminiscent of the great masters of the Barbizon School, in France in the 19th century, and the American Tonalist. Born in Boston in 1950, he has works in major public and private collections, including the White House. His work has been featured in many publications including the featured cover of American Artist.

 

Dennis Sheehan received his training in the best traditions of the “Boston School”, studying at the Vesper George School of Art and the Montserrat School of Visual Art. He also studied with two of R.H. Gammell’s former students, Robert Cormier and Richard Whitney. Like his great nineteenth century predecessor George Inness, whose influence is consciously acknowledged, Sheehan employs the dark palette and thickly pigmented surfaces of the French Barbizon School. Sheehan, like Inness before him, eschews picturesque scenery in the interest of evoking atmospherics. Also like Inness, Sheehan’s paintings are produced in the studio from his imagination. For all of the references to history—and there are multiple—there is no mistaking the artist’s debt to the more recent past. Without the legacy of action painting, Sheehan’s art would be less forceful and evocative than it is.

 

Sheehan’s pastoral paintings evoke the moody beauty and deep peace of nature. His goal is “to have the painting emanate light, rather than just a surface that records the reflections of light—the power comes from the shadows.” Mysterious and breathtaking, his paintings capture the beholder and transport them into serene landscapes that have reverence for nature’s poetic and changing seasons.

 

Sheehan recently had a one man exhibition at the Whistler House Museum, in Lowell Massachusetts and The Guild of Boston Artists. Sheehan is a member of The Guild of Boston Artists. He has taught at St. John’s Prep School in Danvers, Massachusetts, and currently teaches in his studio in Manchester, New Hampshire, and at Village Arts of Putney.

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