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On the High Line
by Christopher Jenkins
Oil on stretched Canvas 24 x18
High in the mountains of Southwestern Colorado, a narrow gauge freight eases across a shaking trestle.
The painting is patterned after bridge 46 on the RGS. This vantage point would be impossible to achieve in
reality, except possibly by helicopter!
Autumn Fog
Oil painting by Christopher Jenkins
An Erie Lackawanna freight on a foggy fall morning.
18 x 14 inches on canvas board
There are few subjects that lend themselves better to painting than transportation machines. Only a rare photograph or a well executed painting can capture the soul of a machine. It can be the thrill of a passing train, the unstoppable momentum of a ship, or the decay of obsolete equipment that the artist must capture. A painting is the best way to visualize a bygone scene that can not be recreated, make a memory tangible, or observe a machine from a viewing angle that could not be otherwise attained.
All of the paintings are based on my original drawings, and are painted on canvas, linen or masonite using traditional oil painting methods.
NEWS AND ANNOUNCEMENTS
Three of my painting will appear in
All Aboard, and Exhibit of Trains opening at the Bryan Memorial Gallery in Jeffersonville, Vermont February 3, 2012.
A full page article about my paintings appears in the January 2012 issue of
American Art Collector Magazine.
My painting
Superpower at Scranton served as the back cover for the the fourth quarter 2011 issue of
The Diamond, which is the quarterly publication of the Erie Lackawanna Historical Society. That issue of the magazine provides excellent coverage of the DL&W station at Scranton, PA.
One of my paintings was included in an article in the November 2011 issue of
American Art Collector Magazine, and I have an advertisement in the magazine.
--My painting
Thunder in Cathedral Canyon was selected for inclusion in the Western Spirit Art Show and Sale in Cheyenne Wyoming,
in 2011, and my painting
This Way West wasl be part of the miniatures show.
Several of my paintings are now available at Silver Rails Gallery in La Palata, Missouri
In August 2010 three of my paintings appeared in the book
Railway Art, published by Artbox International of Tokyo
If you have questions or would like to check the availability of an original painting, please email me: trainsshipsplanes@comcast.net
Bridge Traffic
The New York Ontario and Western lives again! Columns of diesel exhaust are visible against autumn browns of the Catskill mountains.
Oil on Belgian Linen Panel. An edition of 50 giclee prints on canvas has been produced from the original.
NYO&W logo trademark used with permission of the New York Ontario and Western Historical Society
If you have questions or would like to check the availability of an
original painting, please email me: trainsshipsplanes@comcast.net