I first studied painting with Dick Goetz at the Malden Bridge School of Art in the summer of 1968. During the following months, my Senior year in high school, I studied with Betty Warren at the Albany Institute of History and Art and then for the next three summers I studied with both Dick and Betty at Malden Bridge.

After high school I attended the Boston University School of Fine Arts and I received a BFA in May of 1973. Among my more influential teachers at B.U. were Reed Kay, who taught both Materials and Techniques and Drawing, and Jack Kramer, who taught Anatomy.

Beginning in the summer of 1971 I
studied with Henry Hensche at the
Cape School in Provincetown. I
returned to Provincetown to study
with Henry throughout the '70's,
and even after I stopped studying in
his classes, I continued to have a
close association with him, and I
lived in various of his studios
during the summer through the
'80's and into the '90's.

After graduating from B.U. I
devoted myself to improving
myself as a painter. In 1976 I was
awarded a Greenshields Foundation
grant, which is awarded to
promising young artists.

During the '70's I began to enter
juried exhibitions and I participated
in group exhibitions. I had my first one-man shows in 1979. In 1985 I began to show my work at the Arts Exclusive Gallery in Simsbury, CT, and I continue to do so now. I was affiliated with the Hilda Neily Gallery in Provincetown for several years. Currently I exhibit with the Cortile Gallery in Provincetown, and I also show at the Sorelle Gallery in Albany, NY.

I began to teach classes at the Cape Cod School of Art in the early '90's and I still teach summer classes at the newly resurrected Cape School of Art.

During the mid-'90's I began to explore other avenues of visual expression, and eventually I developed a line of work that is very different from the more “traditional” work that I had done previously. My “contemporary” work has been awarded a number of prizes in juried exhibitions, and I have had several one-man shows of this work as well. I was also awarded a grant by New York State. Some have suggested that I should pursue one direction and not the other, but I have never been comfortable with that. I find that my more “contemporary” work satisfies a part of me that my more traditional work does not, but I still find that my “traditional” work is very satisfying, fulfilling something that the other work cannot, so after much thought, I decided to work at both.

And I shall continue to do so.

In addition, I have been exploring new directions in landscape painting. My Urban and Highway paintingsare the result. Though the subject matter is not necessarily conventional, the paintings originate from the same source within me.
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