Artists
Home
Category List
Features
Contact Us
Frishman Gallery :  a gallery for photography, books and fine art
  
Sign-In 
Shopping Cart 
WishList 

 

 Category List
Category
Artwork Artwork
Mary Lib Thornhill
Robert Heitkamp
David Dunham
Clare Christie - Prints
Chris Armstrong
David Armstrong
Photography Photography
Mary Ann Frishman
Books Books
Tosh Brown
Hart Stilwell
Marshall E. Kuykendall
Sculpture Sculpture
Clare Christie
 Category
Category
Artwork   >  David Armstrong

The list of David Armstrong's achievements is impressive. Since1971, David has been represented by the Hammer Galleries in New York City, where he had eight "sold-out" one-man exhibitions. Other exhibits at Hammer Galleries have included a two-artist exhibition (1980), featuring David and John Denver, to benefit the Windstar Foundation - an organization promoting environmental harmony and world peace; and a major exhibition (children's cancer research benefit) in 1987, "Realism: A Continuing American Tradition," with artists Eric Sloane, Bob Timberlake, and Andrew Wyeth. In 1990, the American Farmland Trust Organization, a nonprofit organization dedicated to preserving our valuable agricultural resources, hosted a benefit exhibition of Armstrong's recent works at the Hammer Galleries.


In 1976, David assisted his friend and mentor, Eric Sloane, with the panorama mural project (75 feet, 3 story) at the National Air and Space museum, Smithsonian Institute, in Washington, D.C. At the early age of 32, Armstrong was honored with a 120-piece exhibition in Pennsylvania's state museum in Harrisburg. Armstrong's works are in major corporate and private collections, including a piece in the private library of former President Bush (a gift to the President from the late Dr. Armand Hammer).


David Armstrong lent his support to the conservation group, Frenchman Bay Conservancy (Ellsworth, ME), by providing a one-man exhibition benefit in Maine in August 1994.


In 1992, a collection of the artist's paintings representing "Vanishing American Craftsman" was exhibited at the Butler Institute of American Art. Following the exhibition, the entire collection of 16 works was donated to Bucknell University by a private art collector. The collection is on permanent display at the Weis Center for Performing Arts, Lewisburg, Pennyslvania. A major 30-year retrospective exhibition opened for two months in June 1995 at the Butler Institute of American Art (Youngstown, Ohio).


The documentary produced by the Public Broadcasting Centertitled, "Our Vanishing American Landscape, The World and Work of David Armstrong" aired on Earth Day, 1993, and has been shown on selected stations nationally.


"My work attempts to present my vision of beauty through ordinary elements of the commonplace. I believe great works of art are not achieved through complicated statements, but rather simple ones, which allow painter and viewer alike to see beneath the surface, to question, and in our individual ways, to attempt an answer to the question of how we integrate our human needs with the natural world. In my pictures I attempt to feel -- a sense of time and place -- a moment of light, movement, and mood reflective of the world around me. In essence, my paintings reflect specific times and emotions of my life."

 Category Items
Category
Trout Pool
Trout Pool
Trout Pool Dimensions: 12"x 18 9/16" Edition size: 950
Buy Now 
More Info 
$140.00
Her Story
Her Story
Her Story Dimensions: 17" x 22" Edition size: 950
Buy Now 
More Info 
$350.00
Window to the Sea
Window to the Sea
Window To The Sea Dimensions: 20 3/4" x 15 1/4" Edition size: 2500 Unsigned
Buy Now 
More Info 
$110.00
Blues
Blues
Blues Dimensions: 17 3/4" x 14 1/2" Edition size: 1475 signed and numbered
Buy Now 
More Info 
$540.00
Red Maple
Red Maple
Red Maple Dimensions: 15 1/2" x 28 1/2" Edition size: 950
Buy Now 
More Info 
$260.00
Clayton Holt
Clayton Holt
Clayton Holt Dimensions: 18 1/4" x 25" Edition size: 1475 signed and numbered
Buy Now 
More Info 
$220.00

  Artists   Home   Category List   Features   Contact Us

Frishman Gallery, copyright 2007