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Acknowledged in his own day as an original and independent watercolorist, Ben Solowey had an intuitive relationship with this challenging yet flexible medium. A staple of his career, watercolors, and related media such as casein and gouache, were also his classroom, a way for him to learn through experimentationwith color theory, composition, materials, optics, style, subject matter, and technique, "far more freely than he could in the arena of oil painting," says David Leopold, The Director of the Studio of Ben Solowey." This exhibition provides an intimate look at how one of regions most celebrated painters discovered for himself, over a period of more than five decades, the secrets of the watercolor medium."
WATER & LIGHT: The Watercolors of Ben Solowey is the largest exhibition of Soloweys watercolors ever to be presented. It features more than 40 rarely exhibited watercolors from the Solowey Studios collection that tells the story of Solowey's development as an artist, presenting an intimate look at his watercolor practice, his techniques and materials, and the way he adapted his approach and his color palette to the many different environments in which he painted, from the quiet interior of his studio to the violent weather of an approaching storm. Throughout are works of his wife and primary model, Rae Solowey from soon after they first met and married through four decades of their life together. The exhibition also examines the way Soloweys watercolors relate to his work in oil and other media, revealing the central role the medium played in helping him to achieve the fresh, direct and beguiling scenes that have become his most enduring legacy to American art..
With our Second Studio devoted to landscapes, says David Leopold, Director of The Studio of Ben Solowey, Bens main studio will feature a new installation of Solowey paintings, drawings, and sculpture.
All will be shown in Soloweys handcrafted studio. You understand why Ben gave up the great life he had in New York in the theater and exhibiting his canvases at the top museums and galleries, explains Leopold. He created a virtual paradise here and his studio still maintains the atmosphere of the artist at work. The studio, and the 34-acre property it sits on, were developed and landscaped by Solowey after he and Rae left New York in 1942. The Studio has been featured in Architectural Digest, Pennsylvania Heritage, and Bucks County Town and Country Living.
General Information:
The Studio of Ben Solowey
3551 Olde Bedminster Road (mailing address P.O. Box 163)
Bedminster, Pennsylvania 18910
215-795-0228
Hours: Saturdays and Sundays, 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. from June 7 through June 29th. Other times by appointment.
Admission: $5; free on Saturday June 7th. Free Admission with invitation.
See previous Ben Solowey exhibitions
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