Eco Visions July 12, 2017 - October 5, 2017

Jan Dilenschneider

September 28, 2017, Reception:  5:30-7:30pm.

Please RSVP by Tuesday, September 26, 2017
Suggested donation: $5

To reserve your tickets please Click Here.

Twenty new paintings by Connecticut artist Jan Dilenschneider will be featured in an exhibition entitled, Eco Visions. The exhibition will be curated by Gail Ingis.

Ms. Dilenschneider’s works have been successfully featured for the last four years at the prestigious Galerie Pierre-Alain Challier in the historic Le Marais district in Paris.  Ms. Dilenschneider is the only living American artist to have her work on display at the Grand Palais in Paris.  In the past year, her exhibitions have been featured at the Lyme Academy College of Fine Arts Sill House Gallery and at the Bellarmine Museum in Fairfield, Connecticut, where she broke attendance records.  Each of these exhibitions were solo shows.

“Wandering Waters,” Oil on Canvas, Dyptic, 30” x30” 2017

The prestigious French newspaper Le Figaro reviewed the 2015 exhibition, Nature at its Most Melodically Colorful and said, “Dilenschneider expresses her artistic sensibility unhampered by the trends and tyrannies of the art market.  She wields her brush with wild passion and tremulous elation, bringing trees, flowers, grass, and reeds to calm majestic life.”

“I love to highlight the beauty of nature through my paintings of vegetation, clear waters and their beautiful colors,” said Dilenschneider. “Through my paintings, I encourage the viewer to fall in love with nature all over again and consider ecology at all times.”

“One of the most exciting moments of my life was when I was entering a painting in a juried show and Roy Lichtenstein helped me put the hooks and wire on the back,” said Dilenschneider. “He was the juror and gave me first prize for The Mourners. I was 17 years old.”

“Waters in the Distance,” Oil on Canvas, 36”x36”, 2017

Dilenschneider has painted all her life but she is relatively new to the art scene, when it comes to its marketing aspect, as she began selling her work in the spring of 2013. “My everyday surroundings in Connecticut by the sea are a vast a resource of inspiration,” says Dilenschneider. “I am continually influenced by shore grasses bending in the breeze, blue skies reflected in the cool water, and extraordinary trees silhouetted against green lawns.” Although the French magazine LUX, among others, called her work “the new Impressionism,” Jan considers herself an Expressionist who loves the Impressionists’ palette. Dilenschneider’s most recent work combines landscapes and abstract images. One can see in them her gradual merging of the abstract into the landscape canvases.

The French Magazine, LE MAG, wrote of Dilenschneider’s work, “Dilenschneider avoids figuration and abstraction, instead painting highly charged landscapes with strong lines and bold sometimes clashing colors.  But the result is so harmonious that viewers want nothing more than to lose themselves in the contemplation of the glorious nature before them, and to make sure that it remains as stunning for generations.”

“Dramatic Flora,” Mix Media, Oil on Acrylic under painting

The exhibition will be part of the tours’ general admission and schedule: Wednesday through Sunday, 12-4 p.m.45-minute tour: $10 Adults, $ 8 seniors, $6 children 8-18 years old;90-minute tour: $20 adults, $18 seniors, $16 children 8-18 years old.

The Lockwood-Mathews Mansion Museum is a National Historic Landmark.