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Playful Portraiture
By Regan M. White
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For
Patricia Buckley Gotwols, there was never a question concerning her life’s
calling. “I was born knowing I was
going to paint. It was not something I
chose. It’s something that chose
me.” Growing up in Medford,
Massachusetts with a slew of pets and a keen love of animals, it seems that
Pat’s subject matter was a given as well.
A
graduate of the New England School of Art and trained at the Maryland College
of Art, Gotwols spins her classic portraiture training to whimsically and
humorously illustrate the alter egos of our favorite animals. Dogs take midnight drives, ducks saunter to
the bathtub and dashing, debonair monkeys don three-piece suits. Gotwols’ love
of animals and their true characters is more than apparent in her honest and
playful paintings.
While
trained in classic oil painting, Gotwols developed a sudden allergic reaction
to flaxseed and turpentine, rendering oil painting impossible. Given the situation, her options were: paint
with acrylics or not paint at all-thus, acrylics it is. Her paintings are quite large, generally
15x36 and Pat is sure to paint every day.
Due in small part to the nature of quick-drying acrylics and in large
part to her amazing skill level, Pat paints very, very quickly-she can do a
painting in just a couple of days. She had
been painting every other day but spaces them out a bit more now to allow ample
time with her five grandchildren.
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In
terms of subject matter, Gotwols simply loves animals and always has. She says, “I try to paint dogs and animals
with great faces. Humor is usually the
angle I am coming from – animals and pets just bring such joy!” Pat is continuously able to approach painting
in a new light thanks to the observations and experiences she has in real
life. Her latest slant is to paint the
dogs with their faces close up and their bodies behind, creating the effect
that they are soft and close to you.
Every new observation brings a new angle, a new perspective, a new
painting. All of the dogs that she
paints are dogs that she knows.
Featured in many of her paintings and particularly dear to her heart is
her Golden Retriever, Bo, whom she recently lost. She’s interested in getting another one from a rescue group soon,
but isn’t home enough these days to do it just yet.
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About
Goldens and Labradors, Pat just can’t say enough. “They’re the two dogs I’d have around my grandchildren. They have
love for everyone. You don’t even have to worry about them around anyone. They
just love unconditionally. There’s not any other breed like them.” It seems Pat’s children have taken a few
lessons from her as well. “My kids have Labs and Goldens. I had every kind of
pet imaginable growing up and when you have that as a kid you want that for
your children, too. I guess that passes on.” It doesn’t hurt that two of her
children are artistically inclined – guess that passes on as well.
Pat
shares her life and her comical cast of creatures with her husband of 40 years,
Bruce, a physicist. Obviously, the left and right-brained contrasts of the
household are well covered.
To view an array of Pat’s colorful work visit
her site. To purchase her Labrador
prints, visit our All Labs’
Art Gallery.
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