Gregory William Frux

Gregory William Frux
Born (1958-03-25) March 25, 1958
Brooklyn, New York
Nationality American
Education Brooklyn Museum Art School, Art Students League, National Academy of Design
Known for Painting
Movement Realism

Gregory William Frux (born March 25, 1958) is a traditional realist artist, working mainly in the landscape genre. His oil paintings document both New York’s cityscapes and wilderness locations in North and South America.

Life and career

Gregory Frux was born in Brooklyn, New York, on March 25, 1958. His father was an engineer and later school teacher who emigrated from Lvov, Poland in August 1939. His mother was grade school math teacher, who later taught adult literacy. It was through their teaching and example that Frux developed his passion for art and for his native city. Gregory Frux married artist Janet Ellen Morgan in 1990.

Frux pursued art training art at the Brooklyn Museum Art School, Art Students League and National Academy of Design where he studied with Harvey Dinnerstein while simultaneously earning a Bachelor of Architecture and subsequent license as an architect. From 1983 to 1989 Frux worked as an Architect for the New York City Board of Education (BOE) designing school additions and modernizations. In order to pursue his passion for art in public schools, in 1989 Frux moved to the newly created Public Art for Public Schools unit of the BOE, which is responsible for protection of 1500 works of art owned The City of New York. As a curator Frux catalogued, protected and helped conserved this significant collection from 1989 to 2006.

While working for the Board of Education, Frux completed his Master of Fine Arts from Brooklyn College in 1986, studying with noted realist Lennart Anderson.[1] After coursework in Carrara, Italy, in 1984 he became increasingly dedicated to outdoor painting. Frux worked most often in Lower Manhattan; along the East River; and in Brooklyn’s Park Slope, Coney Island, and Gowanus Canal areas, painting on site in oils. Frux is deeply engaged with the layers of urban history seen in abandoned and repurposed buildings, industrial architecture, and the resurgence of nature along the harbor. His cityscapes have received recognition with exhibitions at Brooklyn Borough Hall, Brooklyn College, the Coney Island Museum, Long Island University, the Brooklyn Public Library's Central Library,[2] The Tabla Rasa Gallery[3] and a commission by the Metropolitan Transportation Authority.[4]

Frux is deeply interested in the wilderness both aesthetically and as mountaineer. His climbing career has dovetailed with creative work in increasingly remote locations. Frux has served as artist in residence in four national park units: Weir Farm National Historic Site in Wilton, Connecticut; Glacier National Park; Joshua Tree National Park;[5] and Death Valley National Park. He has painted in the Rocky Mountains, Andes, Sierra Nevada, and Mojave Desert, including ‘portraits’ of significant peaks such as Cerro Fitzroy, Sajama and Lotus Flower Tower. This work have been included in the permanent collection of the National Park Service and exhibited by the American Alpine Club. In December 2007 Frux traveled as artist in residence aboard the cruise ship Orlova to the Antarctic Peninsula;[6] his paintings of "Half Moon Bay, South Shetland Islands"[7] have been published as a print. He worked as an artist aboard ship "Midnatsol" in Arctic Norway, November–December 2009.

Publications

Collections

Institutional Collections

Shown on loan

Private Collections

Notes

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/9/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.