![](https://t1.daumcdn.net/cafefile/pds7/4_r_c_12G2g_AAsu_000_00_00000285_10) Sally
Swatland (b. 1946) A July Day Oil on canvas 20 x 24
inches
SALLY SWATLAND
(b. 1946)
Intimate Studies of
Childhood
Images of the
sea have long captivated our imagination and have been a popular source of
inspiration for artists who have found a sympathetic audience with their work.
Contemporarily, Sally Swatland’s images of young children playing on the beaches
are tinged with a sense of nostalgia that reminds us of a bygone time, when a
day at the beach offered respite from the busyness of daily life. Her sensitive images evoke the
reminiscences of a period when life was uncomplicated and happiness was found in
the simplest of activities. This is
just one of the aspects of Sally’s work that audiences are drawn to - the sense
that through her pictures one can retreat into the past. Her light-filled palette of rich colors
also expresses the richness of a flowering garden and the breeze of a summer
day. Her work has become highly
sought after for these qualities which are inherent in her work.
Sally was born on
September 20th,
1946 in
Washington, D.C. She grew up in a family that appreciated
the arts; her grandmother was a concert violinist, her aunt was a talented
artist, and her mother played piano and sang in several choirs. Drawing was second nature to Sally, and
she began painting when she was just five years old. Sally had two sisters who were also
encouraged to study drawing, painting, and anything that developed creative
expression. She always knew that
she wanted to become an artist; it was perhaps not so much a decision as a
general instinct which guided her.
Her family encouraged her natural talents by buying her paints and
easels.
At the age of seven her family moved
to Greenwich, Connecticut where they spent long periods in
the country and at various seaside locations. She remained in
Greenwich most of her life, relocating just
within the last decade. Most summer
days were spent at Todd’s Point on Long Island Sound, playing in tidal pools,
chasing minnows, collecting shells and exploring. The entire family shared a passion for
the beaches, sunshine, and fresh air.
Throughout her
childhood and teens Sally was always painting and drawing, developing her skill
of observation while recording the world around her. In both grammar school and high school
she enrolled in art classes in which she experimented with new techniques and
media. She chose her high school
specifically because of its art department, where her first lessons were in
charcoal, pastel, and oil. At her
graduation she had excelled to the point where she was given the art award for
her graduating class.
In 1964 Sally entered
Mount Saint
Vincent
College in
Riverdale, New
York as an art major. During her last year (1968) she asked a
family friend, Frank Swatland, to accompany her to the senior dance. Since Frank attended boarding school in
Connecticut, he and Sally established and
maintained a mutual, but casual, friendship during their youth. They would only occasionally see each
other during the Christmas holidays.
After her dance, the two parted ways. But a chance meeting just six months
later brought them together again.
They began dating in 1969 while Frank was living in
White
Plains, and spent many weekends in both
New
England and
New York
City’s Central Park taking photographs that Sally would
use for inspiration.
While spending more time with Frank
in New
York, she continued her desire to become
an artist but was in search of further training which would compliment and
enhance her previous studies. This same year, 1969, she entered the Art Students
League of New York, taking the train in every day to attend classes. There she studied formal figure and
portrait drawing and painting for six years under the direction of Robert Schulz
- an illustrator who continued Norman Rockwell's tradition and became famous for
his illustrations that graced the covers of many Zane Gray books. Schulz used a thoroughly academic
approach to his painting that was based on the Frank Reilly method – Reilly was
an illustrator and highly regarded teacher who worked during the fifties and
sixties. Each of the students first
perfected their drawing techniques before progressing to monochromatic wash-ins,
or what is now referred to as grisaille.
This method allowed students to establish the drawing values and planes
before adding color. The Reilly method was a structured and disciplined way of
teaching which allowed the student to gauge progress and reach their goals. During the summer months Schulz also
held numerous plein-air landscape-painting classes in the
New
Jersey countryside where Sally would drive
long distances to attend. These
classes taught her to observe nature and how atmosphere affects objects and
color. Continually inspired by her
surroundings, these studies were integral to the formation of her choice themes
and subjects.
Sally and Frank continued to date
during these busy months of her study at the Art Students League. The two married just one year later in
1970 in Greenwich, Connecticut and made their home in
White Plains, New
York. Sally remained devoted to her artistic
studies and received constant encouragement from Frank.
In the early 1970s, Sally approached
her local Saks Fifth
Avenue store to inquire about their
exhibition space. She was granted
her first show, where she exhibited a group of flower, landscape and figure
paintings. The results were
positive – she sold many of the works on display.
After staging
her first solo show, her career and studies began to advance. At school she had become a monitor; an
honor given to the more talented and advanced students who were responsible for
running the classes while the professors were away. Their responsibilities included setting
up models, preparing students for the day’s assignments, helping them get
started and answering questions. In
her own personal style and work, Sally was still in an experimental phase, not
yet having decided just what theme to pursue. She had received an extensive amount of
training in both figure and landscape painting and had been introduced to
several different approaches; but she was in search of her own style and
audience. She liked the freedom
painting granted her, especially oils – they could be manipulated for various
effects. She also realized that illustration was not her niche since it required
an overly demanding lifestyle that would have probably prohibited her from
experimenting so freely with her own work and style. Soon enough she recognized that her
choice theme was exactly where she had spent so much time growing up; the
beach.
One day she was
relaxing with her mother at Todd’s Point and decided to snap some photos of
children playing in the puddles, capturing the relationship between them and how
they played. Sally describes it,
“The beach is a perfect place to capture children and their relationships
because they are carefree, intense, and happy. I spent many days and years on the
beach, I have visual memories of the water, sand, and atmosphere.” Since she was not able to paint right at
that moment, she took the time to absorb her surroundings, memorizing and
studying the water, sand, reflections, and the atmosphere. At home she used these photos and her
experiences to execute a small painting of it and showed it to friends who liked
the feeling of the painting. She
had found her subject, one that equally had a personal meaning and a freshness
of atmosphere.
1975 proved to
be a pivotal year for her career.
She concluded her studies at the Art Students League when her first
daughter, Noelle, was born. This
same year she was introduced to Alistair Stair whose gallery, The Incurable
Collector, was located in both New York City and Palm Beach. He loved her small beach studies to
which she had recently become more interested in, and displayed and sold her
pictures in his Florida gallery.
The two continued to work together throughout the 1970s. Her young daughter Noelle became one of
her models for her compositions.
Though living in
New York at this time, Sally still had strong roots in Connecticut and often
returned to visit her parents. In
1976 Sally was introduced by her mother to a local Greenwich
entrepreneur/businessman who owned a local gift shop. He took a liking to her work and offered
Sally a yearly Mother’s Day exhibition where she could show some of her beach
and figural paintings. It was
through the contacts made at these shows that Sally began receiving portrait
commissions. The following year
Sally and Frank moved back to Greenwich, where she began to see success with her
yearly exhibitions and commissions.
Clearly, Sally
had found her subjects and an audience for them - views of children playing on
the beach or in a lush garden, one that had a personal meaning and a freshness
of atmosphere. Her favorite images were of children playing in tidal pools,
yielding light filled and colorful reflections. As her children grew older – her second
daughter Katie was born in 1981 – the family traveled to discover other beaches.
They spent a good deal of time on
the West Coast exploring the coastal communities of California from Newport
Beach to Laguna down to Del Mar. On
the East Coast, they enjoyed the beaches of Maine down the North Shore of
Massachusetts and over to Cape Cod.
The beaches became an important and inspirational part of their family
life.
For much of the
1980s, Sally concentrated on her family, spending a great deal of time with her
children. She continued with her
portrait commissions and dabbled in capturing her young models playing on the
beaches and gardens they visited.
Her camera continued to be an important recorder for her paintings. She spent many summer days at the
beaches and gardens around Greenwich where she would take her daughters and
their friends and photograph them.
She would capture children on film in all types of beach and garden
activities. There was a significant
amount of bribery that went on between Sally and her children so that they would
cooperate in what she now calls her 'beach dress up photo archives'. The children knew it was a way to acquire
further summer treats and gain extra benefits; the children knew how to gain
favors - it was all quite amusing to Sally.
She carried a
variety of colorful clothing and an assortment of hats, spending a considerable
amount of time searching for the right apparel. The right umbrella, beach bag, sash, or
chair might bring an added touch of color to the painting. Her beach photo sessions, in particular,
would always draw a crowd, especially the young children, which allowed her
access to even more models. Because
of the strong relationship between Sally and her subjects, her paintings were
given a more personal reflection.
Her success and
images continued to proliferate. In
1986 she had a chance meeting with the owners of the greeting card company
Caspari. This turned into a job and
over the next 14 years she worked at creating over 150 original designs that
were used on numerous greeting cards.
She kept very busy creating these compositions and through numerous
personal and professional contacts was becoming a much sought after portrait
painter.
For the next 15
years Sally continued designing cards and completing her portrait
commissions. Then in 2001 Sally’s
husband, Frank, was searching for information on marketing Sally’s work to a
wider audience and while surfing the Internet he came across the Rehs Galleries,
Inc. web site. Frank called the
gallery and during a lengthy conversation sparked their interest. An initial meeting was set up, one that
would set the wheels in motion, creating another pivotal point in Sally’s
career. The owners of the
gallery were not only impressed with Sally’s artistic talent, but her ability to
capture the subjects emotionally and convincingly … they immediately agreed to
market her work exclusively.
While Sally has,
and still often paints from her studio, she relies less on her photographs and
has resumed instead plein-air
painting, which captures more fully the coloristic nuances of the atmosphere and
light. So often has she sat at the
beach or a local garden, looking for new subjects and inspiration that she
almost no longer needs to rely on photographs for execution of her paintings;
instead it has become second nature to her. She knows the water and flora so well
that she can rely on her senses.
Often she executes small paintings en plein-air and then pieces them together
to complete an entire composition.
It is not difficult to find her inspiration for this type of painting
since her favorite artists are the earlier American and European Impressionists,
and her attraction lie in their use of bright, light color. She defines her style as “Realism with
Impressionism” since her main goal is to tell a story and to show the
relationship between the figures in her work, offering an emotional appeal to
her audiences. Still, Sally is not
confined to any set method and prefers instead to experiment with different
styles, techniques, and approaches.
Her style is all her own, gleaned from personal experiences, joys, and
relationships.
Even though her
work is based on summer scenes filled with the bright summer sunshine, Sally
works diligently throughout the year.
In her early career she completed commissioned portraits during the
winter months, with most of her work coming from referrals, but remained a
student of the summer scenes and now concentrates on these throughout the
year. Sally uses her extensive
“dress up photo archives” as inspiration for her warm and colorful images of
childhood.
While Sally has
devoted much time to her themes and subjects, she continues to search for new
methods of painting, studying the practices of the Old Masters. She is always looking for new ways to
expand her style and oeuvre, and this is what inspires her to continue her
work. She says that “art is a
constant learning experience.” Her
devotion to her art is apparent in her works. Her husband reflected upon her work when
he wrote that “Going to the beach with children was so rewarding to her. Children would interact with her…so
well. That is one reason why I feel
there is so much emotion in her paintings.
Other mothers and fathers must relate to these summer experiences.” She also shares her own feelings about
why she does art, saying that “I can translate my ideas, feelings and emotions
to canvas and share them with people who enjoy my work.” Sally has clearly done just that,
imbuing her compositions with a sense of intimateness and personal reflection
which have brought her an audience who appreciates her work for the coloristic
and emotional qualities conveyed by her choice of
imagery.
Sally has
exhibited with a number of national organizations including Oil Painters of
America, Catharine Lorillard Wolfe Art Club, Hudson Valley Art Association, and
the American Society of Marine Artists. At the 11th Annual Marine Art Exhibit at
the Coos Art Museum her painting Newport
Surf won an Award of Merit and was runner up for the Peoples Choice Award.
At the Cape Cod Art Association’s Open Juried Spring Exhibition Todd’s Point received the Second Award
and at their 2004 New England Exhibition Noelle was awarded the Second Prize in
Oil. Sally is currently a member of
the Copley Society; American Society of Marine Artists; American Impressionist
Society; Oil Painters of America and the Cape Cod Art
Association.
In the 1990s
Sally was selected from a number of Connecticut artists to paint the Governor’s
Christmas card for two years. Throughout her career she has involved with
numerous charities; these include the American Cancer Society, Sloan Kettering;
Saint Thomas More Church; Greenwich Lyme Association; Brunswick School;
Greenwich Academy; and the Putnam Indian Field School. |