David FeBland

David FeBland is an artist who paints urban landscapes. He has studios in Arizona and in New York City, in the United States.[1] His work has elements of Social Realism, and invites comparison to that of the Ashcan School,[2][3] or to the photographs of Robert Frank or Garry Winogrand.[4]

David FeBland
Known forpainting
Websitedavidfebland.com

Reception

A New York Times review in 1996 described his fish-eye view of the interior of a New York City taxi as "a model of bravura painting".[5] A Washington Post review in 2001 noted that "David FeBland continues to paint manic Manhattan streetscapes that remind us why we love New York and hate it, too."[6]

gollark: Turns out nuclear is very cheap in this.
gollark: Just put them in a numismatic dynamo for some amount of power dependent on material.
gollark: In this modpack coins have intrinsic value.
gollark: I imagine if we ended up trying to actually charge each other for power use it would get annoyingly complicated.
gollark: Well, you can measure it, by rightclicking a duct.

References

  1. Mark Jenkins (13 April 2018). In the galleries: Images in 'Weather the Storm' are both reassuring and ominous. Washington Post. Accessed April 2018.
  2. McCabe, Bret (24–31 May 2000). "City Lights – David FeBland at Valley House". The Dallas Met.
  3. Elizabeth Forst (September 2000). The Observable World. American Artist, September 2000, page 22. (subscription required).
  4. Joe Shannon (February 2000). David FeBland at Fraser. Art In America 88 (2): 134. (subscription required).
  5. William Zimmer (6 October 1996). From the National Academy, an Exhibition for Fairfield. The New York Times. Accessed April 2018.
  6. Dawson, Jessica (7 June 2001). "Painted from Memories". The Washington Post. Retrieved 21 December 2018.

Mark Jenkins, Review: "In the galleries", The Washington Post, April 13, 2018

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