Shawn HUCKINS
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Pride Portrait II (after Mengs)
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Various Fabrics, Portrait of a Woman (after Kneller)
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American Portrait II: Mrs. Joseph Hooper (after Copley)
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Portrait of a Young Gentleman: I'm not sure I trust him, But he's too gorgeous
Still-Life With Apples and Pears: Laughing Out Loud, Meh.
Robert E Lee: UGH
Julia Dodd: Wait What?
Martin Van Buren: A Sign of Frustration or Excitement
Happily Never After (Spring in the Valley, Erasure No. 11)
If Only I Could Remember Your Name (Mary Elizabeth Woodbury, Erasure No. 8)
My Button Is Bigger Than Your Button (Marquis De Lafayette, Erasure No. 7)
Planet B (Pastoral Landscape, Erasure No. 6)
My Favorite Show Is America (Sarah York Jackson, Erasure No. 15)
Moderation On One Side, Prudence On The Other (James Madison, Erasure No. 9)
Tell It Like It Is (First Lady Caroline Harrison, Erasure No. 3)
We Kind Of Have A History (Benjamin Henry Latrobe, Erasure No. 2)
He Said. She Said. She Said. (Julia Gardiner Tyler, White House Art Collection Erasure No. 18)
The Truth Is An Arbitrary Thing (Daniel Webster, White House Art Collection Erasure No. 17)
Disagree To Disagree (John Tyler, White House Art Collection Erasure No. 21)
Summary
Shawn Huckins is known for both his brilliant humor and technical skill as a painter. In his most notable series to date, ‘The American Revolution Revolution’ and ‘The American ___tier,’ Huckins satirizes social media, asking whether the devolution of language in the face of technological advancement weakens our ability to empathize and connect to one another in a meaningful way. By layering early American portraiture and landscape with text taken directly from the internet, Huckins confronts the priorities of our society in comparison to simpler times. What would George Washington post on Facebook? How would Lewis and Clark communicate their progress westward via Twitter?
Huckins’ works are meticulously hand-painted, including the letters. The portraits, landscapes and pastoral scenes are sourced from public domain records and museum collections of classic American paintings.
A New Hampshire native, Huckins now lives and works in Denver, Colorado. His work has been displayed in private and public collections across the country, including The Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, MA, The Tucson Museum of Art, The TIA Collection, and The Vicki Myhren Gallery at The University of Denver. Huckins has received grants from The Haven Foundation of Maine, The Artists’ Fellowship Inc. of New York City, Colorado Creative Industries, and The Connecticut Commission on Culture and Tourism, among others. His work has been featured in notable publications such as Forbes, Juxtapoz, Hi-Fructose Magazine, Huffington Post, New American Paintings, The Jealous Curator, and The Advocate. 5280 Magazine named Huckins as one of five artists to collect now in 2015. Huckins studied at Keene State College in New Hampshire and The University of Wollongong in Australia and received his BA in Studio Arts in 2006.
Press
Shawn HUCKINS
Shawn Huckins press release 2020
2020-11-05
Shawn HUCKINS
[Forbes] Figurative-Paintings-Meet-Digi Culture
2018-08-22
Shawn HUCKINS
Shawn HUCKINS press release
2018-06-26