Overview
 
"The purpose of art, is to wake us up: to our own situations. . . to our neighbors’ plights. . . to our own calling. . . to our own lives. . . to the world around us. . ."
Works
  • Bo Bartlett, Mainline Times, 2001
    Bo Bartlett
    Mainline Times, 2001
    Gouache on paper
    23 by 30 inches
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  • Bo Bartlett, Landlord's Daughter, 1995
    Bo Bartlett
    Landlord's Daughter, 1995
    Oil on canvas
    52 1/2 by 72 1/2 inches
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Biography
"Bo Bartlett is an American realist with a modernist vision. His paintings are well within the tradition of American realism as defined by artists such as Thomas Eakins and Andrew Wyeth. Like these artists, Bartlett looks at America’s heart—its land and its people—and describes the beauty he finds in everyday life. His paintings celebrate the underlying epic nature of the commonplace and the personal significance of the extraordinary.
"Bartlett was educated at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, where realist principles must be grasped before modernist ventures are encouraged. He pushes the boundaries of the realist tradition with his multilayered imagery. Life, death, passage, memory, and confrontation coexist easily in his world. Family and friends are the cast of characters that appear in his dreamlike narrative works. Although the scenes are set around his childhood home in Georgia or his island summer home in Maine, they represent a deeper, mythical concept of the archetypal, universal home."
– Tom Butler, excerpt from the book Bo Bartlett, Heartland
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