** Robert Gerrard (Thomas Kinkade) **
River Seine

Year of Release - 2006
From the Single Release Series


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+++++ What Thomas Kinkade said about his Robert Gerrard work +++++
"As a young artist exploring my style, I attempted to find inspiration from the French Impressionist viewpoint. I created a brush name, "Robert Girrard", that allowed me to create paintings with the carefree abandon of Monet, Renoir, and the other grand masters of the Impressionist style. Impressionism has always seemed to me a most romantic painting style - so emotionally charged, so free.

By using the Girrard brush name, I have achieved absolute artistic freedom. This freedom led to a joyful experimentation that resulted in numerous breakthroughs and advances in my artistic techniques and talents. Accomplished in the creation of mood and atmosphere in landscape, the broadened palette I acquired during the Girrard years allowed new dimensions to be employed in how I handled the subtle beauties of the qualities in a broad variety of contexts."

~~Thomas Kinkade


+++++ What Thomas Kinkade said about this work +++++
"Impressionism has always seemed to me a most romantic painting style - so emotionally charged, so free. When I first put on my beret and assumed my Robert Girrard persona, the circumstances certainly were romantic. My young family's first visit to Paris was accomplished on a shoestring - we lived on the streets for five days in a borrowed RV until the gendarme asked us to move on.

During those five days, I set up my canvas in the open air and painted feverishly. The bold strokes and evocative colors of those early plein air paintings were my earliest experiments with the Impressionist style. I painted River Seine with my easel on a bridge, much like the one in the canvas, overlooking Paris' great river. The Seine is a busy body of water; tug boats and barges and pleasure boats move commerce and people along its banks. The warm light of dusk seemed to draw me into the heart of the City of Light. I used broken colors and broad strokes to evoke the emotional response to my beloved Paris that still touches me so many years later."

~~Thomas Kinkade


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