
|
| |

photo
by Liz Linder
|
Dan Hermes, audiovisual artist
|
Dan Hermes Fine Art provides unique, customized
moving digital paintings for collectors, hotels, commercial, and
retail.
"Dan Hermes has ingeniously incorporated the tools of a new
millennium to pioneer a new medium of visual art."
- Metronome Magazine
|
| Dan
Hermes, born 1970, is an internationally recognized audiovisual
artist combining visual design and technology into an emerging art
form: moving digital painting.
Moving digital paintings are designed for display on framed, flat
screen televisions. In 2008, his work The Violinist was awarded
by the 12th Annual IIDA/Hospitality Design Magazine Product Design
Competition as winner in the artwork category. Recent digital paintings
include adaptations of oil paintings by internationally recognized
painter Maggie Siner and Scott Cahaly, on staff at the DeCordova
Museum. Recent exhibitions include several Boutique Design events
in 2009, Healthcare Design 09, Hospitality Design Expo 2009 in Las
Vegas, Festival Der Nationen in Austria, Athens Video Art Festival,
and the Boston Design Center.
Mr. Hermes' moving digital paintings draw on his unique cross-training
in drawing, film, technology, animation, music composition, production,
and performance. Self-trained as a visual artist, Mr. Hermes studied
drawing and painting privately, owing much to Maggie Siner, who
studied with Robert D'Arista, who can be traced back to Sickert.
With a twenty-year background in software development, Mr. Hermes
has built and overseen the development of enterprise systems for
clients such as Fidelity Investments, EDS, Blue Cross Blue Shield
of Massachusetts, and Computerworld Magazine. As composer and pianist,
his debut CD, “Hermes Orchestra: Live”, aired on National
Public Radio and in Europe in 2004. He was sound editor on NYC-shot
short film “Malefactor”. He is author of the workbook
series "Classigroov: Modern Improvisation for the Classical
Musician" and has taught this method at the Boston Conservatory.
He has authored multimedia art reviews for Media-N, the online journal
for the New Media Caucus, and the Computer Music Journal(MIT Press).
Mr. Hermes studied computer science, classical composition, and
piano performance at the College of William and Mary. Jazz composition,
improvisation, music production, recording, and engineering studies
at Shenandoah Conservatory and the Berklee College of Music. Performance
study with Carla Bley, Steve Swallow, and Stephen Drury. ASCAP has
awarded Mr. Hermes an Artists Grant in 2004, 2005, and 2006. In
2007, he attended Art Summer University at the Tate Modern in London,
studying with Miranda Pennell, Guido van der Welve, and Hans Op
de Beeck.
Mr. Hermes' work continues the lineage of American painters in the
vein of French Impressionism and Abstract Expressionism in a 21st
century medium: moving digital paintings.
More
about Dan Hermes
|
painters
Maggie
Siner
American artist Maggie Siner paints exclusively from life. In this way
she directly confronts her subjects, sensing their three-dimensionality,
their particular light and their potential movement. Born in 1951, in
Rhode Island, Siner studied painting at Boston University and was a student
of Robert D'Arista at American University before moving to Europe. She
has lived for extended periods in France and The People's Republic of
China. Her paintings are in hundreds of private collections around the
world. She has been a visiting professor at Xiamen University in China,
artist in residence at the Savannah College of Art and Design, Dean of
the Washington Studio School, on the faculty of l'Institute d'Université
Américaines and the Lacoste School of Art in France.
Scott
Cahaly
Working in a semi-abstract symbolist language, Scott
Cahaly draws heavily on his background as a sculptor. Through physical
deconstruction and stained-glass shapes and color juxtapositions, his
paintings explore “the metaphysical, the transcendent, and a sense
of timelessness and mystery”. Cahaly studied painting at the University
of Vermont and the School of the Museum of Fine Art. He currently teaches
sculpture at the Decordova Museum School in Lincoln, Massachusetts.
|