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Fletcher Crossman

Oil on Canvas


 

Fletcher Crossman
"Sauvigne Still Life" 24 x 20 Oil on Canvas

 

 
 

Fletcher Crossman Biography

 

Fletcher Crossman
Fletcher Crossman
Fletcher Crossman has established himself as a realist painter who creates very large, monumental pieces of an intensely personal nature.  Many of his recent exhibitions have been at public institutions and universities where the size of his pieces fit the scale of the venue.  However, Crossman's more recent work has been on a more human scale, and his new figurative studies keep the distinctive look of his previous work while making them accessible to people who wish to add Crossman's pieces to their own private collections.


 

 
 
Exhibitions
 
Solo Shows:
So Much To Say, Lake Eustis Museum of Art, Florida (June 2010)
Retrospective at Mary Martin Gallery, Charleston, SC

"The Age of Endarkenment," University of South Carolina, Columbia (2009)
"Great Big Paintings," Gaillard Auditorium, Charleston, SC (2009)
"Regeneration" Breman Museum, Atlanta, GA (2008).
"Fables" Chastain Art Center, Atlanta, GA. (2008).
“Illuminations In The Shadows” University of South Carolina, Sumter SC, (2007).
“Invitational Exhibition” Spoleto International Arts Festival, Charleston (2007).
"Regeneration", Yom HaShoah Commemoration, (2007).
“A New Machine” City Gallery, Charleston, SC (2003).
“Figure This” The Phoenix Arts Center, Devon, UK (1995).
“Underground” Millennium Commission, University of Exeter, UK (1988).
“Baby, I’m Gonna Save You” Royal Albert Museum, Devon, UK (1987).
“Power and Superpower” Young London Exhibition, UK (1986).

Group Shows:

Kulture Klash, Navy Base, North Charleston SC (2008)
Hudson Galleries, 707 Canyon Road, Santa Fe (2002).
Ann Jacob Gallery, 3261 Roswell Road, Atlanta (2002).
Charles II Gallery, Queen Street, Charleston (2002).
Maniscalco Gallery, 17728 Mack Avenue, Grosse Point, MI. (2001).
Alexander & Victor Fine Art, 312 Royal Street, New Orleans (2001).
New York ArtExpo, British Council Booth, Javits Center, NY. (2000, 2001)
302 Gallery, Peterborough, UK (1996).
Serpent and Hare Fine Art, Windsor, UK (1992)
Camden Art Fair, London, UK (1989)
East London Contemporary Art Center (1984)
 
 
Grants and  Awards
 
Juror, Extraordinary Art Show, Charleston County School District, 2009
"Best Visual Artist", voted by readers of Charleston City Paper, 2009
Grant, Ludwig Vogelstein Foundation, 2008
Approved Artist, South Carolina Arts Commission, 2008
Residency, Academic Magnet High School, 2008
Featured Artist, Reading Art Project, 2007
Grant, The Puffin Foundation, March 2006
Grant, The George Sugarman Foundation, 2005
Grant, Lowcountry Office of Cultural Affairs, Sept. 2005.
Winner, Redux Contemporary Painting Competition, SC, Sept. 2003.
British Council Exhibition Sponsorship, 2000 and 2002
Fellow of Fulbright Cultural Exchange Program, Washington DC, 1999.
West of England Painting Award, 1996.
Grant, Arts Council of Great Britain, 1994.
Grolsch UK Young Artists Award (London), 1990
 
 
Selected Publications
 
Charleston City Paper, "Best of Charleston" profile (March 2009)
Columbia City Paper, exhibition preview (Jan 2009)
The Charleston Review, artist profile (Jan. 2009)
The State Newspaper, exhibition preview (Jan. 2009)
Post and Courier, exhibition review (Nov. 2008)
The Easel, artist profile (June 2007)
South Carolina Magazine, interview (June 2007)
Jewish Voice, interview (May 2007)
Carolina Arts, exhibition review (May 2007)
Moultrie News, exhibition preview (April, 2007)
The Item Newspaper, USC exhibition review (Sept. 2007)
Charleston City Paper, “Cave Dwellings”, review (May 2007)
Post and Courier, “Illuminations In The Shadows”, review (May, 2007)
Charleston City Paper, “RDS Goes Upscale”, review. (March 2006)
100 Ways To Paint People, feature in book. (IA Publications, 2005)
International Herald Tribune, columns. (Feb. and March, 2004)
The State Newspaper, columns. (October and Nov. 2004)
New Humanist Magazine, article. (November 2004)
InformArt Magazine, article. (Feb 2004)
Artist and Designers Market, article. (Writers Digest Books, 2001)
 

 
Museum Exhibition 1
 
Fletcher in His Studios

 
Fletcher Crossman - The Apple Thief

 
Fletcher Crossman - The Endarkenment

 
Fletcher Crossman in Museums

 
Fletcher Crossman - The Apple Thief

 
More Fletcher Crossman Works

 


http://www.fletchercrossman.com/regeneration/regeneration.html


 

 

During the 1990s Crossman worked as an artist and illustrator in London, UK. Following a year as a fellow of the Fulbright Program in the United States, Crossman was sponsored by the British Council to represent the UK at the 2002 New York ArtExpo. Moving permanently to the States in 2003 Crossman became the invitational artist for the 2007 Spoleto Festival USA, an exhibition which featured large-scale figurative and political pieces. Crossman's work was subsequently exhibited at the University of South Carolina, the Tallahassee International and the Katzen Arts Center at the American University in Washington, DC. In 2005 he was granted awards by the George Sugarman Foundation and the Ludwig Vogelstein Foundation.

In 2008 Crossman was commissioned to paint a 15-foot high installation at the Circular Congregational Church in Charleston SC, featuring a female crucifixion, and its unveiling coincided with "She Shall Be Called Woman", a symposium on the role of women in world religions.

Following an exhibition examining the Iraq War from a European perspective, the New York Times commissioned two op-eds from Crossman in 2003, one of which was cited by Senator Carl Levin on MSNBC's Scarborough Country as "a timely call for balance" in the American debate regarding the Iraq War. Crossman’s 2009 exhibit State of Shock, which examined violence in American public life, was the subject of several stories in the local media due to its depiction of real-life political figures, and it was met with organized protests when it opened in Charleston, SC.  Crossman was subsequently voted Artist of the Year in Charleston’s City Paper. State of Shock was brought to New York by Eye Level Art in 2010 to coincide with the midterm elections.

Notes and references[edit]

  1. Jump up ^ Smith, Nick. "Illuminations in the Shadows". Charleston City Paper. Retrieved 2 June 2013. 
  2. Jump up ^ Hewitt, Mana. "USC in Columbia, SC, Features Works by Fletcher Crossman". Carolina Arts. Retrieved 2 June 2013. 
  3. Jump up ^ Crossman, Fletcher. "We're not cowards. It's that we know war.". New York Times. Retrieved 2 June 2013. 
  4. Jump up ^ Mercer, Amy. "Fletcher Crossman examines anti-Obama rage with controversial show". Charleston City Paper. Retrieved 2 June 2013. 
  5. Jump up ^ Iserman, Kaitlyn. "Best Local Visual Artist". Charleston City Paper. Retrieved 2 June 2013. 
  6. Jump up ^ "The Art of Shocking Politics". Revolution Art Magazine. Retrieved 2 June 2013.

 
Mary Martin Gallery I is located on 103 Broad Street, Charleston, SC 29401    843-723-0303
Mary Martin Gallery II is located at 143 East Bay Street, Charleston, SC 29401
 Mary Martin Galleries have been selected as the best galleries in South Carolina for thirteen years in a row and amd selected as one of the top 20 galleries in the nation,  Also, MMG has been selected as the best gallery by several local publications.