Alan Feltus

Works
  • Alan Feltus, ANNA EVA, 2009
    ANNA EVA, 2009
  • Painting of a woman
    ALBA, 2009
  • Painting of a man and woman
    DOPPIO RITRATTO, 2009
  • Painting of three women on chairs
    INNER VOICES II, 2007
  • Painting of a man and woman at a table drinking wine
    WINE AND WORDS, 2004
  • Portrait of a woman
    ELANA, 2004
  • Self portrait painting with blue shirt
    SELF PORTRAIT, FALL OF 2001, 2001
  • Man in a blue shirt and a woman in a red dress sitting on a bedroom floor
    ALONE TOGETHER, 1998
  • Self-portrait painting
    SELF PORTRAIT WITH SLEEPING GYPSY, 1997
  • Painting of a woman
    ANNA, 1986
  • Painting of two women
    AUTUMN, 1986
  • Painting of a woman
    MINKU'S INESCAPABLE SPACE, 2010
  • Painting of a woman
    NATASHA, 2001
  • Painting of a woman with a red jacket, holding a letter
    THE RED JACKET, 2008
  • Painting of two women
    TWO STANDING WOMEN, GREENSLEEVES, 1982
  • Portrait of a Dark Haired White Woman in front of a landscape
    UNTITLED (WOMAN & LANDSCAPE), 1997
  • Female head portrait with dark hair and light skin
    HEAD, 1980
  • Alan Feltus, HEAD, 1980-87
    HEAD, 1980-87
Biography

Alan Feltus (b. 1943, Washington, DC) studied at the Cooper Union where he received his BFA in 1966, and at Yale University where he received his MFA in 1968. Feltus is well-known for his paintings of female figures inspired by classical Greek sculptures and early Renaissance art. Created without the use of live models, Feltus’s paintings are intuitive, portraying the complexities of human relationships through the use of negative space. About his work he says, “I am interested in the psychological play that can be variously interpreted between my figures.”

 

Feltus’s work has been shown in many solo and group shows including exhibits at the Lux Art Institute in Encinitas, CA, and the Boulder Museum of Contemporary Art. His work is found in the collections of the Smithsonian American Art Museum, the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, the Arkansas Museum of Fine Arts, the Huntington Museum of Art, the National Academy of Design, the Oklahoma City Art Museum, and the American Academy in Rome, among others. He was awarded the Rome Prize Fellowship in 1970.

 

Feltus currently lives and works in Italy.

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