작품 상세

This is an original painting by Saratoga Springs, NY artist Earl Pardon. (American, 1926-1991). The painting features two figures in pastel coloring. Signed and dated for 1961 in pencil. Earl Pardon earned a B.F.A. degree in painting at the Memphis Academy of Arts in 1951, and that year he joined the faculty of Skidmore College, Saratoga Springs, New York. In 1959 he was awarded an M.F.A. degree in painting from Syracuse University. He taught at Skidmore from 1951 until 1989, except for the period from 1954 to 1955 when he served as director of design for Towle Silversmiths. One of the pioneers of the post-World War II studio craft movement, in the early 1950s Pardon was instrumental in developing wide interest in art jewelry. Trained as a fine artist rather than in traditional jewelry making, he maintained an interest in painting and sculpture that influenced his work with metals, and vice versa. For much of his four-decade-long career, Pardon worked simultaneously as a painter, sculptor, and jewelry maker. Enamelling provided a logical means of integrating his interests in painting and studio jewelry. His intricate arrangements of flat, colorful segments in brooches and necklaces reveal his abiding interest in formal concerns. The frame is 18 3/4 x 14 3/4" and the mat sight is 7 1/2 x 4 1/4"