Corinne Hartley
1924 - 2020
Over the years Hartley has felt equally at home working in several mediums – charcoal pencil, watercolor, and oil. In the 1990s she began exploring sculpture as well, energetically making it a capstone to a career that spans more than sixty years.
Accepting additional responsibility in her art life, Hartley found teaching a rewarding enterprise and continues today conducting studio classes and plein air workshops where students and teach grow together. She has an immense capacity for work, painting in the day-time hours, sculpting at night, teaching one day a week, and recently has been hard at work writing her very first book on “How to Draw Children.” Though her early records are incomplete, it is estimated she has created over 5,000 original works in her lifetime.
In an art world that thrives on diversity, and a public with eclectic tastes, Hartley is determined to stay within her genre. Her works are about humanness, the kind of undeniable realism that art can express, even over photography. There’s a certain innocence portrayed in these works – laughing children, smiling teens, serene, thoughtful adults, all done with an overlay of “I see the world like this” exuberance. She believes in the core values of human love, compassion, and joy, and her conviction is that art talent is a gift from a benevolent creator.
“I believe love can be made visible,” she says. “My desire is to bring joy to my audience – to put a smile on people’s faces. When I see that smile I know they’re touched in a special way. That makes me happy.”
Who cannot welcome such a worthy goal in days when art is being continually challenged to illuminate individual thought, express honest emotion, and thereby communicate with a world community increasingly conscious of its oneness.
Source:
https://corinnehartley.com/about
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