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Gallery Of Paitings By Gregory Manchess - Usa
0 Comments | 1 Like | Gallery | Paiting | Gregory Manchess | Usa

Gregory Manchess - USA
Creating a moment that communicates emotionally with the viewer is the essence of Gregory Manchess’ artwork.
A native of Kentucky, he earned a BFA from the Minneapolis College of Art & Design in 1977, but is largely self taught in drawing and painting.
He spent two years as a studio illustrator with Hellman Design Associates before striking out on his own in 1979.
Ryhythm and timing, conveying emotion through brushwork and achieving a balance of concept and aesthetics are essential components of his technique.
This has garnered prestigious assignments from an ever widening list of clients.
His art has highlighted covers for Time, National Geographic, Atlantic Monthly, and the Major League Baseball World Series Program; spreads for Omni, Newsweek, National Geographic, and Smithsonian; countless advertising campaigns and book covers.
For Federal Express he created five paintings for display in the company’s corporate headquarters, which were then reproduced and distributed as posters and greeting cards.
He has also illustrated movie posters for Paramount, Columbia, and Disney; conceptual work for The Chronicles of Narnia.
His portrait of Sean Connery was used as the defining climactic moment in Warner Brothers’ Finding Forrester.
Manchess’ interest in history and his excellent figure work has made his paintings a favorite choice of the National Geographic Society on many occasions, including an expedition to the Fond du Lac river in Canada for the 1996 article David Thomson: The Man Who Measured Canada, and illustrations for The Wreck of the C.S.S. Alabama.
Gregory has completed a large portrait of Abraham Lincoln and seven major paintings depicting his life for the new Lincoln Memorial Library in Springfield, Illinois.
Currently, he has finished ten mural paintings for a National Geographic exhibition on an actual pirate ship.
Entitled, Real Pirates: The Untold Story of The Whydah, from Slave Ship to Pirate Ship that will tour 15 cities and is currently showing in Philadelpia at the Franklin Institute.
He lectures frequently at universities and colleges nationwide and gives workshops on painting at the Norman Rockwell Museum in Stockbridge, MA.
Gallery

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