31 min listen
Marilyn Borglum on “A Painter’s Perspective on Monet”
FromThe Art Elevator
ratings:
Length:
33 minutes
Released:
Jul 20, 2021
Format:
Podcast episode
Description
#15 Marilyn Borglum has been a professional artist for over twenty-nine years. She is Co-Founder of Borglum Art Education and Move America. Marilyn received her Master of Fine Arts in painting from Colorado State University in Fort Collins, Colorado, in 1993. While she was a student there, she was awarded the graduate teaching position for printmaking. While she had been drawing and painting horses since she was a young girl, she began her in-depth study of the horse, as an art student as both a printmaker and painter. Her exploration of the horse’s form has expanded for over two decades, often working on very large-scale life-sized equine portraits. Her equine paintings have been featured in Dressage Today, Hanover Lifestyle Magazine, Inside Hanover, The Laurel Magazine, and many online periodicals. Her new large-scale narrative portraiture series demonstrates her mastery of the acrylic medium, her attention to detail, and her love for the intellectual challenge in creating narrative work. She has been influenced by the expressionist works of William de Kooning, and Ben Shahn, and the equine work of Deborah Butterfield and others. I’m so excited to bring my interview with artist Marilyn Borglum with you today. In our conversation, you will learn: How the best of us struggle, and how this can bring new ways of seeing The importance of understanding color as an artist, and as a viewer The journey of Monet as an artist, from the perspective of an artist How to see what artists have created more clearly And much more!
Released:
Jul 20, 2021
Format:
Podcast episode
Titles in the series (38)
Alvah Beander on “Different Kinds of Value in Art”: #2 Today, I'm interviewing Alvah Beander, who is a fine art appraiser specializing in Traditional and Contemporary African Art, art by African Americans, including Folk Art and Art by people of the African Diaspora. She is a member of the... by The Art Elevator