|
|

|
Renowned
guitarist will share his personal art collection
with students
BY Nicki Bruce Logan, Herald
Lifestyle Editor
January, 26, 2003
|
|
With inspiration packed in a
portfolio that contains some of the most beautiful
works of art known to modern man and with a guitar
tucked under his arm, Christian Thomas Lee will be
at Plainview High School Thursday and Friday to
inspire Plainview students.
The public is welcome to attend the
sessions. Those planning to attend should call Rob
Knight at PHS, 296-4051.
"Everyone is welcome to come see
Christian Thomas Lee," says Knight. "Just call so
we will know how many to expect, then come to
school and check in at the principal´s office
first."
Lee, whose classical guitar playing
has earned him world renown, says the fruit of his
labor has afforded him the opportunity to collect
pieces of the world´s finest art.
|
Violin Boy,
Edward Matalon, 1998
Photographic Montage, 16 x 20 i nches
Acquired from the Artist
The Christian Thomas Lee Collection of Fine
Art
|
|
He will select works from this
collection to bring to Plainview.
"I want children of all ages have
the joy of viewing, studying and appreciating
priceless works of art and music, things they may
otherwise never see or hear . . ." Lee says,
adding, "An inspired life is a life with hope,
direction and meaning. This is our mission, to
inspire children."
Lee has a unique way of inspiring
students. He brings the art to them during a class
session.
"I show each piece, describe it and
take questions. I always allow the students to hold
and feel the art. These are interactive sessions
designed to capture the heart and mind of the child
and engage them in fine art."
"Along with the art, I incorporate
selections from the classical repertoire on
classical guitar."
And, while Lee hasn´t
announced which pieces of art from his collection
he will bring to Plainview, he talks about the
impact on children who are able to hold and study a
famous painting.
Spanning 3,000 years, his personal
art collection holds more than 70 pieces of fine
art including works by Pablo Picasso, Peter Carl
Fabergé, Rembrandt Van Rijn Harmensz, Ken
Duncan, Edward Matalon, Clyde Leon Keller and
others.
"Many mediums and periods are
represented including impressionistic oils,
sculpture, tapestries, photography, mixed media,
Greek and Egyptian antiquities and historic
documents," says Knight, who is in charge of
Lee´s appearance at PHS.
"My collection is brought into a
classroom and studied by children for the
enhancement and encouragement of their own artistic
abilities," Lee explains.
To date, portions of the collection
have been viewed by more than 50,000
children.
|
Christian Lee hands a student the
life-mask of English Poet, John Keats
During an afternoon of Art in Schools
|
Recent acquisitions to the
collection include two Keller impressionistic
paintings, including Keller´s1926 "After the
Storm;" a priceless and one-of-a-kind silver-gilt
tea glass spoon by the famed goldsmith to the court
of Imperial Russia, Peter Carl Fabergé,
acquired from Sotheby´s London; three rare
French Aubuson tapestries, a matching set from
1840; a title page leaf from a 1599 printing of the
Geneva Bible; a Boeotian Terracotta Statue from the
6th century BC, acquired from the Santa Barbara
Museum of Art; an Italian Renaissance engraving by
Giovanni Battista Pasqualini done in 1624 titled
"Christ Delivering the Keys to Heaven to Peter" and
the conclusion of a commercial treaty between Great
Britain and Prussia signed by King George IV in
1824, acquired from Sotheby´s New
York.
When talking to a class of
students, Lee explains composition terms and points
out small idiosyncrasies, riveting students´
interest in the details of the piece of
art.
|
|
For example, when showing
Picasso´s drawing of a clown, "Pour Bernard,"
he mentions that goauche (pronounced "gwash") is
similar to watercolor paints but the pigment does
not bleed into the paper as with
watercolors.
"If you look at this, you can see
where Picasso drew so fast that his pen skipped on
the (clown´s) upper left-hand cheek," says
Lee. Lee also points out that most of the drawing
was done with one painterly line, with Picasso not
lifting his pen from the paper until the drawing
was complete.
One of his recent acquisitions,
Clyde Leon Keller´s famed "Hills of Lavender,"
was painted in 1930 by the noted American
Impressionist, and is specific to the California
school.
"Impressionism is drawing what the
eye sees and not what the mind knows," says
Lee.
Another treasure is a priceless
one-of-a-kind silver-gilt tea glass spoon fashioned
in 1908 by Peter Carl Fabergé, goldsmith to
the court of Imperial Russia, The Czar used the
hand-crafted spoon to stir his tea. According to
Lee, it took Fabergé himself around 200
hours to craft the cloisionné and enamel
spoon specifically commissioned by the Russian
Czar. Lee explains the spoon was probably used once
and never again. The piece was originally acquired
from Sotheby´s auction house in
London.
"There´s a lot of history
here," says Lee.
Another commissioned piece, a
Fabergé Egg that was an Easter gift from the
house of Fabergé, given to Czar Nicholas of
Russia for his wife, was the "Imperial Rose Bud
Egg" created in 1895. The jeweled-egg is made from
enamel, metal and Austrian Crystal. Inside the
Fabergé Egg is a yellow rose bud that gently
rests inside the shell. And inside of the yellow
rose bud rests a delicately-jeweled full-length
necklace.
Moving to a different category of
art, Lee shows the death mask of Scottish poet and
novelist Sir Walter Scott which was created upon
his death in 1832. Lee explains that before the
advent of the camera, a person´s likeness
often was preserved by casting a wet plaster mask
of their faces.
"The face on the white mask looks
like it is sleeping, having the eyes closed," he
explains.
Lee also is a classical concert
guitarist who studied under the Japanese classical
guitarist Koichiro Koshikadake. Lee has toured on
the international concert circuit for more than 10
years with audiences that have included royalty,
U.S. presidents, foreign dignitaries and captains
of industry.
On the Web:
www.artmercyhope.org
(Nicki Bruce Logan can be contacted
at 296-1362 or e-mail
nicki@texasonline.net)
From The Plainview Daily
Herald
|
To Return to
Previous Page, Click Your Back Button or Click Here For Main Menu Page
|