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John Whalley
(B. 1954)

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Born in Brooklyn, New York, in 1954, Whalley's mother, herself an artist and graduate of the Pratt Institute, encouraged him to draw and paint from an early age. He completed his first oil painting at eight years of age at his childhood home in upstate New York, amid the beauty of rural countryside with its woods, hills, and lakes.

After considering a career in architecture, Whalley pursued formal art training at the Rhode Island School of Design, where he majored in illustration and minored in drawing and painting. In 1976, he moved to Bridgewater, Massachusetts, where he regularly contributed artwork to a number of New England publications, including Atlantic Monthly and Yankee magazines. At this time, he taught painting workshops at the Brockton Art Center.  In 1979, he moved to Lima, New York, and then toHarrison Valley, Pennsylvania, in 1981. In Harrison Valley, he helped develop a therapeutic art program for abused and abandoned children at an orphanage set on a private 300-acre farm. It was the remote and rustic setting of this farm and its surrounding hills that inspired many of Whalley's early works.

After the birth of his two sons, the Whalleys moved to Standish, Maine, near where Whalley spent many summers as a youth. Here he completed a series of paintings in oil and egg tempera and began working on an extended series of large-format graphite still lifes, which were represented for many years through Capricorn Galleries in Bethesda, Maryland. He also pursued a special interest by participating in several short-term outreaches to homeless children in El SalvadorColombia, and the Amazon region and served as a volunteer worker and teacher from 1997 - 2003 at the New Horizons Youth Ranch in central Brazil.

Over the years, Whalley's work was exhibited widely in the museums of the Rhode Island School of Design, Purdue University, The University of Wisconsin at Eu Claire, University of Florida, and the University of Georgia at Athens. Exhibitions of his work have also included the Sheldon Swope Museum of Art, Dedland Museum of Art, The Fort Lauderdale Museum of Art, South Bend Regional Museum of Art, the Tampa Museum of Art, and The Coral Springs Museum of Art.

He had a solo exhibition of his drawings and paintings at the Office of the Speaker of the House at the State Capitol in Augusta, Maine and was awarded a 2005 Good Idea Grant by the Maine Arts Commission.

Whalley currently lives and works in Damariscotta, Maine.  He is represented by The John H. Surovek Gallery in Palm Beach, FL.

 

 

 

Little Red Schoolhouse, Palm Beach, 1886 (2009)
Graphite on Paper
23 3/8 x 18 1/8 inches
Ice Wagon, Palm Beach, 1900 (2009)
Graphite on Paper
16 5/8 x 25 ¾ inches
Easter, 1905 (2010)
Graphite on Paper
12 x 18 1/16 inches
A Day at The Breakers, 1902 (2010)
Graphite on Paper
23 ½ x 16 inches
Worth Avenue (2010)
Graphite on Paper
30 x 39 inches
Bicycle Taxi, Palm Beach, 1910 (2009)
Graphite on Paper
12 3/8 x 18 inches
Edgeworth (2007)
Graphite on Paper
21 1/16 x 29 inches
The Inlet, Palm Beach, 1905 (2009)
Graphite on Paper
28 x 19 ¼ inches
Inez Pepper and Family, Palm Beach 1906 (2010)
Graphite on Paper
10 x 12 inches
The Old Palm Beach Pier (2010)
Graphite on Paper
18 x 28 inches
Seminoles of Old Palm Beach (2010)
Graphite on Paper
11 ½ x 12 inches
Music of the Spheres (2008)
Graphite on Paper
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Fire (2008)
Graphite on Paper
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The Gator Hunt, Palm Beach, circa. 1903 (2010)
Graphite on Paper
8 ½ x 10 ½ inches
Carriage Ride, Palm Beach(2010)
Graphite on Paper
8 ¼ x 12 1/8 inches
Huston (2009)
Graphite on Paper
20 x 22 inches
Leatherbound (2009)
Egg Tempura on Panel
15 x 14 1/8 inches
Palm Beach, 1905 (2009)
Graphite on Paper
17 x 46 inches
Pemaquid Crab Claw (2009)
Oil on Panel
15 ¾ x 21 ¾ inches
Rueben’s Pipe (2009)
Graphite on Paper
16 x 17 7/8 inches
“Art History” (2008)
Graphite on Paper
21 ¼ x 11 inches

 
“The Gentleman” (2009)
Graphite on Paper
19 15/16 x 14 ¾ inches
“Picture Day” (2009)
Graphite on Paper
29 ¼ x 32 ¼ inches
“Mr. Lincoln” (2009)
Graphite on Paper
25 1/8 x 19 9/16 inches
 
   

 

 

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