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Let Evening Come Painting

Alan Shulman

United States

Painting, Acrylic on Canvas

Size: 20 W x 38 H x 1 D in

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About The Artwork

Jane Kenyon's poem, LET EVENING COME, inspired this painting which depicts certain lines from that poem. The setting is a farm, most likely in rural NH. It is the end of the day; the new silver-horned moon is out and stars are appearing as the glow from the sun fades. The poem is an appeal, almost a prayer, to let things be as they must be: "Let the shed grow dark...to the bottle in the ditch, let evening come." I made several sketches with different approaches to this text: This is the one I chose to turn into a painting which I hope the viewer will find thought-provoking.

Details & Dimensions

Painting:Acrylic on Canvas

Original:One-of-a-kind Artwork

Size:20 W x 38 H x 1 D in

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Delivery Time:Typically 5-7 business days for domestic shipments, 10-14 business days for international shipments.

I began finger-painting at two, and my parents started taking me to NYC art museums almost as soon as I could walk those galleries. There, I was entertained by Van Gogh's swirls of color and bold strokes; by De Chirico's enigmatic landscapes, by Benton's dramatic histories, O’Keefe's stark vistas, Kandinsky's magical color splashes, Magritte's humor, Dali's surreal visions, and by many others. Given those early influences, I’m inclined to create paintings that become narratives or stories, explicit or implied, whether they’re about places, persons, events, or ideas. My work can range from environmental, economic, or historical commentaries, to portrait and landscape images, but regardless of the specifics, my hope is always to prompt the viewer to ask questions. Whatever I make the painting’s focus, I rely on strong color to bring that vision to life and on compositions that catch the eye, often using perspective distortion to draw attention to the painting’s subject. In addition to color intensity and form distortion, my work usually begins with observed reality, which I mold using memory and dream. I paint with acrylic because it’s easy to set up, clean, mix for varying densities/effects, and modify. Since my paintings evolve as I work, those traits are very useful. Cities are embedded in my consciousness: I lived my first sixteen years in NYC, spent nine more during my early adulthood in Chicago, and the last forty-seven within striking distance of Boston which I visit frequently. However, I enjoyed sixteen of my first summers in the Catskills near the Ashokan Reservoir and Esopus Creek, and vacationed for four years on the eastern shores of Lake Michigan. And since I have lived the last twenty-three years with a clear view of Mount Sunapee, nature in all its beauty and mystery is also an indelible part of me, its always threatening degradation a constant concern. Both country and city find expression in my work. Private collectors in NH, NY, MA, CO, NM, VT & PA enjoy having a least one of my works. The corporation Privatus, located in Boston, exhibits several of my works.

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