


I started drawing and painting again starting in 2000 and off and on until 2012. Then I started getting serious, taking classes and studying on my own. My time at the Corcoran Art Institute in my early 20’s helped. More recently I have studied with Justin Bua, Annette Raff, Steve Huston, Glenn Vilppu, and Darrel Tank, and with Teresa de la Lobera, a Spanish artist from Valencia.



Anti-Trump
Finally there are the anti-Trump pieces. These are mostly digital works with the notable exception of Trumpcissus, my Caravaggio inspired acrylic painting seen here Trumpcissus
You can reach me at info@garyjkirkpatrick.com, or 1-570-832-4480, a US phone number rings on my computer. In Spain, +34 658 744 302. Follow me on Facebook, Instagram, Pinterest https://www.pinterest.com/gary6301/.
Many of my works are listed on Saatchi Art. Any others that you want and prefer to order via that site, please let me know and I will upload them there. Others are available exclusively through Design Art Concepts https://www.artsy.net/design-art-concepts/artist/gary-j-kirkpatrick
I look forward to hearing from you – your comments are much appreciated.

We visited the village where our nephew Travis worked as a Peace Corps volunteer. It was a fabulous visit despite the primitive conditions- the people were just so loving and friendly. These are the only ones I still have and I am offering them for the next week at special prices. See blog on Zambia for further accounts of this special journey.








My story
After almost 20 years as a mediator I began living in Europe and other areas abroad, including a stint in Panama with the United States Peace Corps. In Paris we once lived in the 3rd just ten minutes by bicycle from the Louvre. I went several times a week. Rome is like living in a museum of antiquities. Living in places like this compelled me to return to art, which I had dabbled in thirty years earlier.
Reinitiating that life, I took classes and studied on my own. My time at the Corcoran in my early 20’s helped. More recently I have studied with Justin Bua, Annette Raff, Steve Huston, Glenn Vilppu, and Darrel Tank . Also with Teresa de la Lobera, a Spanish artist from Valencia, and a group of Spanish water-color artists.
Influences
I have long appreciated the works of Goya, Velásquez and El Greco, beginning from the time I spent in Madrid in the late 1960’s. Later I was drawn to Picasso, Matisse, Dali, Gauguin, and Degas, whose dancers are among my favorite works. Other artists I especially enjoy: Edward Hopper, Matisse, Jean and Raul Dufy and Gustave Caillebotte. Among modern Spanish artists I particularly like Jose Royo and the Valencian Joaquin Sorolla.
Themes
Amor: In Love With Love (Click on Art/Amor)
I am currently working on a series exploring love between couples.  It will explore love and the diversity of its expressions.  So far there are 3 paintings.  Couple: In Love With Love I (acrylics on wood) and II (acrylics on paper) and Couple Dances. These are inspired by films I have seen.
Music (Click on Art/Music)
Among my works is a series of music-related paintings and drawings. I go to concerts at the Palau de la Musica and do small pen and ink drawings there, executed with both hands working simultaneously, one to draw and the other to do the washes. From these I do paintings or take the drawings and enlarge them; these are in progress.
Holland, Estonia (Click on Art)
Drawings and paintings from summer 2015 travels in Holland, Finland, Estonia and Turkey reflect the architecture and landscape. I think you will find them interesting, especially the ones depicting Giethoorn, Holland, a fantasy land if there ever was one. You get around by boat, walking or biking, as there are no cars in the village. The houses are charming thatched roof cottages. When travel makes it hard to find a place to work, I do small pieces, pen and ink or watercolor, occasionally acrylics. There are two A3/16.5 x 11.5 pieces from Giethoorn.
Heart of Lightness (Click on Art)
Another series comes from our Zambian trip.  We stayed in a small village with a Peace Corps volunteer, when we came to know the villagers. It was one of the most fascinating and heart warming experiences I have ever had. Most of these are sold but some watercolors are still available.
If you have any questions, you can reach me at info@garyjkirkpatrick.com, or 1-570-832-4480, a US phone number rings on my computer. In Spain, +34 658 744 302. Follow me on Facebook, Instagram, Pinterest https://www.pinterest.com/gary6301/ and Google+.
Many of my works are listed on Saatchi Art.  Any others that you want and prefer to order via that site, please let me know and I will upload them there.
I look forward to hearing from you – your comments are much appreciated.
Here are slide shows of some of my art, set to music.
Video: Paintings and Drawings Done at Palau de la Musica
The paintings and drawings in this video slide show were done at Palau de la Musica, Valencia. Â They explore the state of mind we experience as music transports us to a semi dream-like state. The music is Arco de Noe by Oscar Navarro, a Valencian composer. Â He was in the audience the day we heard this piece.
The pen and ink drawings are done on A6/ 2″ x 4″ paper, in the semi-darkness, using an ordinary pen and a brush with a water reservoir. I use both hands. Many of the interesting effects are a result of the low light conditions. Quite often the symphonic bands play original pieces by local composers.
Portraits.
These are of friends, relatives, a few famous people, and others I have seen along the way. Graphite, pastels, watercolor, or acrylics.
In 2014 we visited our nephew in the Peace Corps Zambia. He lived and worked in a small village in the copper belt. He helped the village build a damn so they could have more fish ponds. I call this series “The Heart of Lightness” (in contrast to Conrad’s Heart of Darkness) for the warmth of the welcome afforded us. We all come from Africa and I felt this was a welcome home. Set to Zambian music.
A few of these are still available. Â Please contact me for information.
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From our safari to Zambia, June 2014.
These paintings are mostly from my journal, which I did while we were there. Some of the very small ones I later did on larger paper, also in water color.
We traveled by train for 1500 kilometers from Dar Es Salaam, Tanzania to Zambia, and spent several days in a small village where our nephew works as a Peace Corps Volunteer. It was an uplifting experience.
It started with an hour long walk in the dark (see the painting “Heart of Lightness”). As we approached the village we heard shouts of joy, hugs and kisses soon following. Then they sang for an hour, choral harmony in which the whole village joined. We were perfect strangers yet they welcomed us as if we were long lost relatives. We lived in a small hut and watched the people work on the dam, harvest cassava and do other chores. What loads the women can carry on their heads! We ate with them, partied with them. They are sweet and innocent, these people of Lunda land.
I hope you will enjoy my portrayal of the experience, the colors, the scenes, the sense of innocence.
Heart of Lightness We walked on the path towards the village under the glow of the yellow moon. After almost an hour we saw the glow of campfires on the hill. Soon we were welcomed with shrieks and smothered with hugs and kisses on the cheeks.

The Chorus After we arrived they sang in harmony for an hour. Children in the front row would sometimes bang the rhythm on the ground. The second row was for the teens, and the adults were in the last.

They sang beautifully.
Women Dance At night the young women danced around a campfire, for which they used a brazier. The wood fire cast an orange glow. My original was just 2″x 4″. The rhythms were mesmerizing. Even some of the older women (by older I mean over 25, as the life span here is just 45) joined in. I wanted to also.

Women Collect Sand The Peace Corps project is a small dam for filling fish ponds. They need the protein and the income. They do not have much of either. They have goats but they do not eat them, they are for dowries, and they are lactose intolerant so nary a piece of cheese in the country. In this painting they collect sand for the dam.

Walking the Bush We explored the area around the village. Here are friends walk through the bush.
What I experienced gave me a new perspective, different colors, the elongated limbs, the redness of the soil.
