James Miller – Gardens of Stone

Dec 6—Dec 28, 2019
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  • Blue Moon Over Ladies Lookout

    James Miller

    Oil on panel
    36 × 36″
    2019

  • Morning On The Terrace

    James Miller

    Oil on canvas
    36 × 36″
    2019

  • Treasure Island

    James Miller

    Oil on canvas
    48 × 48″
    2019

  • Silver and Gold

    James Miller

    Oil on canvas
    48 × 48″
    2019

  • Gardens of Stone Passage 1

    James Miller

    Oil on panel
    48 × 48″
    2019

  • Unveiling

    James Miller

    Oil on canvas
    30 × 48″
    2019

  • Morning Tide

    James Miller

    Oil on canvas
    48 × 48″
    2019

  • Being There

    James Miller

    Oil on canvas
    36 × 72″
    2019

  • Fortress

    James Miller

    Oil on canvas
    48 × 48″
    2019

  • Oasis

    James Miller

    Oil on canvas
    36 × 36″
    2019

  • Dogberry Wine

    James Miller

    Oil on canvas
    36 × 36″
    2019


Christina Parker Gallery is pleased to announce Gardens of Stone, an exhibition of oil paintings on canvas and panel by painter James Miller. The exhibition opens December 6, with an opening reception on Friday, December 6th from 5:00 – 8:00 pm and continues until December 28th.

 

“I have been exploring and painting the landscape and seascape of the island of Newfoundland for over 35 years. This series of works, Gardens of Stone, is the continuation of my artistic journey and discovery.”

 

There’s a breadth – and a breath – to James Miller’s landscape paintings. While he doesn’t compose en plien air, he starts with and in the natural world, crafting numerous studies that will build to the crescendo of a finished work in his studio. So it’s not just the colours and forms that resonate from the canvas, but atmosphere and texture. A scrim of salt water riffling itself to shore. Erratics in granite barren bloom. A blue moon in a blue sky. We are there.

Miller was born in St. John’s, but grew up in the States and then Montreal where his father, an employee of National Cash Register, was transferred. He came back to St. John’s to finish high school at PWC, where two pivotal events occurred: he was taught by Reginald Shepherd [1924-2002], and acclaimed painter of poetic realism, and he saw an exhibition of 18th century Dutch realism at what was then the MUN Art Gallery. He went on to study at the Ontario College of Art as well as in Montreal and Halifax.

 

He describes his work as realism, classic and contemporary, but some of his influences are, unexpectedly, surrealists like Salvador Dali and Max Ernst. “Because what they give you is freedom. Dali said there are no rules, I am making my marks, some of it is real and some of it isn’t.” Miller’s works are embedded with symbolism, juxtaposition, metaphor, and trompe-l’oeil. Every element is important, precisely selected, and part of a story.

His affinity for classical Dutch landscape has not waned. It’s found in his every horizon, allowing for lots of sky and especially clouds, with their drama of contrasting lights. And in his very subject, not a lush Italian countryside (or wherever) but his own lived environment. He knows these cliffs, that sea; he’s walked it, he’s sailed it.

 

“In the exploration of the landscape and coastline I am always inspired by the simple beauty of a tree, a stone, or a wave,” Miller says. “Individually they are unique living sculptures designed by the wind, the sun, the calm, and the storm.” It’s an artistic trek, and a physical one, too, taking him to “the far places, the places that are difficult to attain, the places that are off the beaten track.” Spaces where hills beckon, and windswept trees and timeless stone stand like sentinels. “Every coastline is a symphony of the sea meeting the land, thunderous in the percussion, and then suddenly muted in a moment of tranquility, while another wave builds strength and explodes into the ragged edges of the land.” 

 

To this Miller brings his technique and attention, his palette and configuration. It’s capital R Romantic but also wild, because this – his – North Atlantic island is wild. Miller hikes it and surveys it. He absorbs it, takes it in. And then he paints it as he sees it.

Exhibiting Artists