Philip Zuchman
Philip Zuchman (born 1942) is a contemporary American landscape painter living in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Early life
Philip Zuchman wasborn in Queens, New York and started painting when he was seven years old.[1] At age 14 Zuchman's mother died and he left home to live in various lofts iaround New York City. At age 18,he and a friend built kayaks for themselves and paddled from Bordentown, N.J. to the Carolina Sea Islands.[2][3]
Education and writing career
Although Zuchman did not finish high school, Queens College accepted him in 1961. He studied philosophy and writing there, graduating in 1965. He won the Peter Pauper Press Award for two novelettes: Father Never Went to Church But Loved the Soil and A Mass for an Ass. In 1966 Zuchman served as a psychological research specialist and French interpreter in the U.S. Army. While stationed in Monterrey, California he wrote a script based in O. Henry’s story "The Gift of the Magi" that was directed by Edward Bach and performed by the Presidio Players.
After his discharge from the army, he returned to Manhattan in 1968 to paint. During this time, he studied with Arthur Foster at the Art Students League of New York. In 1971 the Salmagundi Club awarded him its four-year Young Artist’s Scholarship. Zuchman moved up to a small farmhouse in Walden, Vermont that year to pursue an MFA in painting at Goddard College where he studied with James Gahagan. In 1973 he moved to Philadelphia, PA, where he married fellow artist Deborah Gross.
Painting career
Zuchman has served as president of the National Forum of Professional Artists, vice president of Philadelphia Artists Equity, and vice president of the Philadelphia Watercolor Society. He was a Professor of Studio Art and Aesthetics, Emeritus, at the Art Institute of Philadelphia until 2013. Zuchman’s paintings have been exhibited internationally as part of the U.S. State Department’s Art in Embassies Program, for which he is a Cultural Ambassador.
Philip Zuchman currently lives in West Philadelphia with his wife, painter Deborah Gross-Zuchman. The couple has restored their 19th century home and studio and occasionally hold arts and culture events there. The house features their paintings, carvings, mosaics and murals.[4] In 2013, Philip was named an Honorary Lifetime Member of the Philadelphia Watercolor Society.[5]
Artwork
Zuchman works primarily with oils and encaustics. For much of his career, he has focused on painting landscapes en plein air. Zuchman explores in his paintings humanity’s interdependence with nature: "Meaning for me is heightened in places where man has not yet subdued nature and where we remain a part of it."[6] In this fundamental sense, his work also explores broader themes like social ecology, war, and the possibilities of humanism. "Artists work to expose the nature of existence, to communicate feelings, to activate consciousness, increase human knowledge, to promote justice, and education. They are activists and pioneers who struggle in their lives against forces of isolation, poverty, discrimination, bad legislation, and being misunderstood by the public," he wrote in his "Call to Action."[7] His commitment to art as a social practice has led to his inclusion in several exhibits -- "Art From Detritus" in NYC and "All of Us or None."
Describing Zuchman’s use of color in his introduction to Summer on a Hill, Peter London writes, "And it is here in his choice of color schemes that Philip is most inventive. The closely matched greens of mid summer are now replaced with a wider range of tones and tints. And these in turn are now given to us in layers of contrasting hues and saturations. The effect of this broadening and layering is to animate the flat surface of the painting to equal the vibrancy of the constantly changing light, the twirling shift of surfaces of the millions of leaves, grasses and clouds, all within yawning depths of space of nature just as it is. The scarlet and rose and mauve and sepia and chartreuse and cerulean of Philip’s palette replace nature’s own infinite variations on green. And how nature forms its own endless variety of twigs, pebbles, leaves and grasses is now replaced by Philip’s wide range of textured application of paint. Smears, glazes, washes, impastos, scumbles, blotches and the like build an uneven surface of the painting making the whole pulsate, again, like the shimmering of the light on any portion of nature’s beauty."[8]
References
- ↑ "A Call to Action". People's State of the Union. Retrieved 2016-03-24.
- ↑ "Home Is Where the Art Is". philly-archives. Retrieved 2016-03-29.
- ↑ Wick, Mike (Summer 2009). "A Coming of Age on the Water" (PDF). The Ash Breeze (Summer 2009). Retrieved March 28, 2016.
- ↑ Thornton, John. "The Zuchmans, A Marriage of Artists." Jan 1, 2014. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=riMSjloikUo
- ↑ Philadelphia Watercolor Society Newsletter, August 2013, found at <http://www.pwcsociety.org/Resources/Documents/Newsletter%201308%20Revised.pdf>, accessed March 28, 2016.
- ↑ Zuchman, Philip (2016). "Philip Zuchman". philipzuchman.com.
- ↑ Zuchman, Philip. "A Call to Action". People's State of the Union. U.S. Department of Arts and Culture. Retrieved March 28, 2016.
- ↑ Zuchman, Philip (2012). Summer on the Hill: Paintings by Philip Zuchman. New York: Abingdon Square Press. pp. 3–4. ISBN 978-0-9830762-3-0.