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Cards of Christmas Past: The Magi on Camels
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In 1979 the Wise Men or Magi were arriving on our card. Printed from one screen with different inks, staggered, in three printings displaced for effect.
Artists of W 18th Street Margo Mavrantonis Johnson Margo Mavrantonis Johnson is a W 18th St artist who is still active, although no longer living on our block. Margo is retired from her art teaching career but continues to paint professionally. She paints a variety of subjects, but my favorites are the structures and streetscapes from her frequent European trips, especially to her second home, Greece. We treasure her Christmas cards which depict a peripatetic snowman who has visited New Castle, Tuscany and Greece, but has yet to experience a meltdown. Margo has a studio and gallery representation in the Opera House, 304 Delaware Street in old New Castle, Delaware, and a web site at https://margojohnson.artspan.com/exhibits.html. There is an extensive gallery of her work there.
Artists of W 18th Street John Matassa Several years after Ralph Scharff moved from 2625 W 18th St another artist and family moved in. John Matassa wasn't a native of the area, but paintings of the landscape and architecture of the Brandywine Valley were part of his eclectic output. I remember John more for his drawings than his paintings. He was born and received his art education in New England, but had a career as an art teacher at Wilmington Friends School in parallel to his professional art career. We do not own any of John's art, but a portfolio of detailed Delaware steamboat paintings are posted at https://steamboats.com/museum/matassa1.html. I have not been able to find the back story for this collection or its present location. Several are clearly marked "Wilson Line," the Wilmington based steamship line founded in the 1880s and lasting until the 1960s. Here is the "City of Wilmington." Hagley Museum owns a John Matassa Draw...
Holy Trinity 1 A Movie and a Coke , the subject of my August 31 post, was the first of three 24 x 18 watercolor paintings I did as a commission from Nick Vouras. The original Kozy Korner restaurant was an obvious choice for this painting. The subject for the second painting was equally obvious. Nick had long been active at Holy Trinity Greek Orthodox Church on Wilmington's N Broom St. Since Nick had chaired the annual Greek Festival there several times, I chose to depict the church with festival dancers circling around the church. At the time I did this painting the church's dome was in an incomplete stage of repair, covered with a black rubber membrane and its future was not then settled. I presented the dome ambiguously, subject to the viewer's interpretation. Holy Trinity was built in the late 1940s on the site of the former Coleman DuPont residence at 808 N Broom St At the time Mary was living on W 8th St with a backyard ...
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