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Jacob Collins, 1964 | Realist / Figurative painter


Jacob Collins is an American realist painter working in New York City.
He is a leading figure of the contemporary classical art revival.
He has founded several schools of art including the Water Street Atelier, the Grand Central Academy of Art and the Hudson River Fellowship.
Jacob Collins was born in New York City.
He comes from a family of artists and scholars. His great-uncle was Meyer Schapiro.


As a child, he started copying works by Old Masters in the Metropolitan Museum of Art. From a young age, Collins knew that he wanted to be an artist, although his interest and skill lay in a classical style that was out of favor in the late 20th century.
Moving away from Modernism, he identified instead with works of 15th–19th century masters and their techniques and aesthetics.
He studied in Europe and at the New York Studio School following his graduation from The Dalton School.

He earned a BA in History from Columbia, attended the New York Academy of Art (NYAA) and the Art Students League of New York. His teachers included painters Aaron Kurzen, Ted Seth Jacobs, Michael Aviano and the sculptor Martine Vaugel.
This education brought together Collins' modernist background and his classical inclinations.
He also copied from the masters at the Musée du Louvre, the Museo del Prado and the Uffizi Gallery.


After his studies, his New York studio became the center of a new evolving classical art scene.
These painters worked to regain the skills and spirit of Classical art.
A number of them have gone on to successful careers and leadership roles in the traditional realist art movement.

The Paint Group at Hirschl and Adler Modern in New York, NY was a significant exhibition of the works of this group During this period, Collins painted portrait commissions and started showing professionally at the Salander-O'Reilly Galleries in New York City.
He lives and paints in New York City. He and his wife, the writer Ann Brashares, have four children.


In 2007, he created the Hudson River Fellowship. The purpose of this school is to facilitate the building of a new movement of American art, modeling itself after the artistic, social and spiritual values of the Hudson River School painters.


In 2014, he opened up his largest campus yet in a 12,500-square-foot (1,160 m2)-converted warehouse in Long Island City, near the Museum of Modern Art satellite PS1.
The facility serves as another of Collins' art schools, as well as:
"an art incubator, and an artist clubhouse for at least 50 painters who have come out of Collins’s intense multi year program over the past two decades, along with hundreds of students who now [attend] his classes and workshops".


Work

Jacob Collins's style is considered Classical Realism, and his subject matter focuses on the figure, portraiture, still life and landscape as well as the occasional interior.
Collins' figurative works, especially, reveal a point of view that is distinctly contemporary, and his setups are simple, incorporating at most a bed sheet and a length of fabric.

Collins' drawings and paintings have been shown with museums and galleries in North America and Europe, and he has been commissioned to paint portraits of J. Paul Getty Jr., President George H. W. Bush and U.S. Supreme Court Chief Justice Warren E. Burger.
Collins is represented by Adelson Galleries (New York), the John Pence Gallery (San Francisco) and Meredith Long and Co. (Houston).| © Wikipedia