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Brad Stroman

Biography | Portfolio

As an artist-activist Brad combines his passion for making art with his concerns for our environment. His paintings have won acclaim from environmentalists and art lovers alike. Today his work is exhibited nationally in both solo and juried group shows. Currently represented by galleries in Pennsylvania, Colorado and North Carolina, Brad’s original paintings are included in nearly 100 private and corporate collections.




During his 34 years spent as an art educator he received several honors through “Who’s Who of American Teachers” and the 1990 national ‘art teacher as artist’ award from the Marie Walsh Sharpe Art Foundation. He belongs to several professional organizations, one of which includes the Colored Pencil Society of America where he achieved Signature Status.

Brad grew up in south-central PA and resides today in Lancaster County with his wife, two cats and two rescued ex-racing greyhounds.

Artist Statement: As a contemporary realist, I am drawn to the everyday visual stimuli of my environment, from the intricate texture of a fallen leaf or the subtle colors within a simple creek stone to the timeworn surface patterns in man-made brick, stone or wooden structures. My responsibility as a socially and politically conscious artist is to interpret those stimuli in not just representational creations, but rather as a personal statement about man’s affect on his environment and the constant struggle by nature to survive in the ever-encroaching world of civilized society.

My painted compositions based on the above premise have been compared to the Japanese aesthetic principle of “Wabi-Sabi”. “Wabi-Sabi”, in very general terms, is the aesthetic balancing of opposites - old and new, rough and smooth, natural and man-made. I begin most of my work by using a simple round form, usually that of the millstone, once so prevalent in our country, or a circular rusted metal disk. Centering the circular form inside its opposite shape, the square, both geometric shapes in turn become the formal stage for interpretations of that continuous struggle between man and nature; that tenuous balance between destruction and life. Most often the composition will start with a conscious arrangement of natural items such as sticks, leaves or stones placed in front of or on the millstone or metal disk. Impaling the circular shape or the natural items with rusted nails; wrapping them either in constrictive strips of rusted metal, barbed wire, rope or chains; or simply altering the forms with imaginary tools allows me to express my concern for man’s overzealous use and abuse of nature and the continual alteration of our environment.

Even my approach to my smaller, more traditional still life compositions that involve subject matter from nature still have a subtle message of concern for our environment. Items from nature such as broken branches or leaves, creek stones or seashells, feathers or nests are arranged in limited depth of field compositions that create a sense of tension and intimacy with the viewer.

I hope that through my acrylic paintings I create a heightened awareness, whether it is political, social or spiritual, of just how delicate a balance there is between man and nature. I am constantly bombarded with visual images that lend themselves to this struggle and I will continue to find new textural surfaces and altered natural forms to become new players on my painted stage. Unfortunately for nature, those possiblities seem endless.

-Brad Stroman
 
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Monsoon Gallery, 11 East 3rd Street Bethlehem, PA 18015

Located in the heart of Southside Bethlehem's Arts District,
the gallery can be easily reached via routes 378 and 412.

Phone: 610-866-6600 . Or simply Contact Us
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Monday: 10:30am - 6pm
Tuesday: 10:30am - 6pm
Wednesday: 10:30am - 6pm
Thursday: 10:30am - 6pm
Friday: 10:30am - 6pm
Saturday: 11am - 6pm
Sunday: By Appointment

 

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