John Kilroy

About John Kilroy

A professional exhibiting fine artist for over 30 years and a unique progressive teacher of drawing, painting, design and sculpture for 23 years, graduated from The Art Institute of Boston, where he studied with Norman Baer and Walter Marks. Early influences on Kilroy were all the great artists involved with the Famous Artists School.He studied figure and landscape painting privately for 10 years with color master Robert Bliss, who was a student of Carolyn Wyeth.

Kilroy is especially influenced by the teaching and art of modern master Richard Schmid, whose brilliant, adaptive, grand manner, alla-prima painting techniques and philosophy Kilroy took to heart. John has been a charter member of Richard Schmid & Nancy Guzik's private painting group, The Putney Painters, for 12 years.

He was also inspired to become a painter because of a small group of Taos/Denver artists active collectively in the 1970's. Among this group including Ned Jacob, William E. Sharer, Mark Daily, Len Chmiel, and George Carlson that really influenced Kilroy to open up to the idea of contemporary "Fine Art" impressionistic realism as a personal direction.

Particularly influential is also San Diego artist John Asaro who gave Kilroy the knowledge of seeing light, color and the working understanding of sculptural form. A special thanks go to Washington State artist, William F. Reese, who in the eighties, got Kilroy to work outdoors, en plein-aire and taught him the essentials of the small sketch and continues to inspire with his excellence, integrity and generosity of spirit.

His major historic influences include such masters as Joaquin Sorolla, Anders Zorn, John Singer Sargent, Valentin Serov, Ilya Repin, Nicolai Fechin, Diego Velazquez, Michaelangelo, Jules Bastien-LePage, Isaak Levitan, N. C. Wyeth, Bernard Fuchs, Al Parker, Howard Pyle, to name a few

You can view John Kilroy’s work at www.johnkilroy.com
contact: kilroy@johnkilroy.com




The Office of Art in Embassies is not responsible for, and does not endorse, any content posted within the service. The Office of Art in Embassies does not have any obligation to prescreen, monitor, edit, or remove any content.