
J. Peeler Howell Fine Art will showcase the late artist Dale Conner in a legacy exhibition of his 50-year career that inspires and provokes thought long after his passing.
As a young boy, Conner fantasized about piloting a fighter aircraft, and after college he worked in a factory that manufactured 500 pound bombs intended to be used on the people of Vietnam. His romantic notions about war were quickly crushed by the reality of the ominous gray steel canisters designed solely for the purpose of destruction. He left that job after one month.
Despite the works’ dark and shadowy subject matter, Conner’s palette can be bright and cheery, adding a keen sense of irony. His paintings are revelatory; bursting with an animated yet controlled impasto. His portraits are evocative and expressive and, at times, piercing and mysterious. The work speaks both to the aesthetic and to the ethical.
The exhibition will remain on display through July 31.
J. Peeler Howell Fine Art will showcase the late artist Dale Conner in a legacy exhibition of his 50-year career that inspires and provokes thought long after his passing.
As a young boy, Conner fantasized about piloting a fighter aircraft, and after college he worked in a factory that manufactured 500 pound bombs intended to be used on the people of Vietnam. His romantic notions about war were quickly crushed by the reality of the ominous gray steel canisters designed solely for the purpose of destruction. He left that job after one month.
Despite the works’ dark and shadowy subject matter, Conner’s palette can be bright and cheery, adding a keen sense of irony. His paintings are revelatory; bursting with an animated yet controlled impasto. His portraits are evocative and expressive and, at times, piercing and mysterious. The work speaks both to the aesthetic and to the ethical.
The exhibition will remain on display through July 31.
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Admission is free.