| Charles Lundgren American 1911 - 1988 Fine marine painting is much
more than the illustration of ship and water. It is the evocation of salt and tar, wind and sail, the light, the movement of water ... the affinity of man and sea. As an experienced yachtsman,
historian of the sea, as well as an acclaimed marine artist, Charles Lundgren captured this complex harmony in his paintings. Looking every bit the part of the ancient mariner, himself,
Lundgren's love and respect for deep water was reflected in every painting. Combined with his consummate skill as an artist, this resulted in marine painting at its finest. Study at the New York
School of Fine and Applied Art (Parsons), the Paris School of Fine and Applied Art, as well as schools in Germany and Italy, plus extensive travel throughout Europe and Africa enabled Lundgren
to develop his talents and perfect his technique. One art critic praised him with these words: "He is, in my eyes, much more than a painter of the sea. He is a believer in it. A historian of the
days when men reached new continents by sail and stars alone." Lundgren's painting skills were sought by individuals --- he often painted "portraits" of the boats and ships owned by the rich and
the famous --- as well as museums and companies. Not suprisingly, his works were acquired for such collections of Huntington Hartford, J.P. Morgan, Mrs. Dwight D. Eisenhower, John Wayne, Pegeen
Fitzgerald, Cornelius Walsh, George Jensen and Eric Sloane. |