Born in 1939, a native of San Francisco, Russell Chatham has been an active artist in Livingston, Montana, where he still resides, since 1972. A talented, self-taught painter, illustrator, and writer, his works are often highly evocative with soft tonal qualities. He is also considered one of the world’s foremost lithographers.
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| "Spring Moonrise", Lithograph |
His grandfather, Gottardo Piazzoni (1872 – 1945), was a well known early California artist and is also remembered for his simple compositions and quiet, muted colors.
Russell Chatham’s landscapes often reveal his fascination with the changing seasons and the subtle nuances of light and shadow. His works often depict quiet moments of solitude and spirituality. Of his work, he says: "Creating art is an attempt to search for something beyond ourselves".
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| "Winter Moonrise" 12x16, Original oil on board - AVAILABLE NOW |
This painting shown above, “Winter Moonrise”, is signed by the artist, on the right side, with his personally developed calligraphic character, placed within a double oval. Chatham developed this character in his late twenties. It was based on the distinctive shape of the little slough that lies at the head of Tamales Bay in Marin County.
Chatham moved to Marin in 1949. He has placed this monogram, rather than a traditional signature, on all his works since his late twenties. He has said that this two dimensional calligraphic character “represents the epicenter of my relationship to the natural world”. He also noted that “I was never comfortable seeing my name written on the face of the pictures, partly I suppose because visual and verbal language seem so at odds with each other. But using the monogram, and doing so very discreetly, seems to help soften the presence of my hand, moving it into the shadows where it belongs.”
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| "Landscape" 7 x 9 inches SOLD |
His personal interests include fly fishing, hunting, and conservation, and he has written numerous essays and short stories on these topics. In 1990, he began working on a series of twelve large paintings for the Museum of the Rockies in Bozeman, Montana.
Chatham has had hundreds of exhibitions in galleries and museums over the course of his lifetime, though he is not a prolific painter. He continues to create his beautiful, quiet landscapes, and sometimes only completes six or seven large paintings a year. For additional information on available paintings by this remarkable artist, feel free to contact Patrick Kraft at William A. Karges Fine Art in Carmel, California at (800) 833-9185.





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