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  • After nearly 70 years of painting, R. Tashjian still awestruck by Ne

    Albuquerque Journal (New Mexico)
    December 22, 2006 Friday

    love of landscapes;
    AFTER NEARLY 70 YEARS OF PAINTING, RICHARD TASHJIAN STILL IS
    AWESTRUCK BY NEW MEXICO'S SCENERY

    by DOTTIE INDYKE For the Journal


    One of Richard Tashjian's favorite places to paint is along the Rio
    Grande, in the villages of Embudo and Velarde and onward to Taos. In
    addition, as with thousands of painters before him, he's drawn to the
    stands of cottonwoods and red rock cliffs of Nambé, Ojo Caliente and
    Abiquiu.

    Ever since he landed in Santa Fe in the mid-'90s, Tashjian has been
    awestruck by the scenery of the region. His latest work, on view at
    Editions Gallery, features depictions of this landscape, as well as
    that of Canyon de Chelly and the Grand Canyon. A portion of sales
    will be donated to the Santa Fe Animal Shelter.

    A painter for nearly 70 years, Tashjian still experiments with
    watercolor, acrylic and oil. The Old Masters' medium, oil, allows
    easy changes and blending of colors. Acrylic, which he calls "the
    modern medium," provides "a fresh, quick approach." But watercolor is
    his favorite, and the material he's used since he was a 12-year-old
    boy growing up in Chelsea, Mass.

    "Watercolor is the basic medium for learning to paint," he says. "A
    lot of people cannot master it. It's a separate medium altogether and
    very spontaneous."

    Paintings exhibited at Editions include both oils and acrylics, begun
    on location with sketches and photographs. Tashjian employs the
    viewfinder of his camera as an aid in composing his canvases, but the
    work is always revised once he is back in his studio, where reality
    and imagination are married.

    Born in 1926, his earliest artistic memories are of sketching on the
    back of his sister's school notebooks. His uncle was a painter and
    the career impressed him so much that he enrolled at the Boston
    Museum of Fine Arts school, where he majored in commercial art and
    advertising.

    During WWII, stationed in Rhode Island, he was a Navy photographer
    training to shoot aerial photos. After the war he worked as an art
    director for advertising agencies and for Boston's Herald Traveler
    and took early retirement to paint, running his own studio and
    gallery in Massachusetts. Travel in Europe and the U.S. led to his
    first visit to Santa Fe, in 1995. Two years later he permanently
    relocated.

    Among his proudest accomplishments is the founding of the Armenian
    Artists Association of America. The group, all American artists of
    Armenian descent, held several shows in Armenia and America from the
    1970s through the '90s, and donated approximately 80 paintings to
    Armenia's Museum of Modern Art.

    "Armenia reminds me of Santa Fe," he says. "The mountains, the rocks
    ... and they even have Russian olive trees. The similarities of the
    land were very impressive to me."

    After a decade focused on New Mexico, Tashjian has lost none of his
    excitement about the painting possibilities. Driving along the Rio
    Grande to Taos this fall, he says, "It just hit me. There was some
    beautiful scenery to work with. It comes for every artist - you just
    explode when you see things like that."

    If you go

    WHAT: Paintings by Richard Tashjian

    WHEN: Through Dec. 31

    WHERE: Editions Gallery, 731 Canyon Road

    CONTACT: 820-6148, www.editionsfineart.com

    --Boundary_(ID_yyxy8yE5dr 99Ye8V+Z9BYQ)--
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