LiveAuctionTalk com Highlights Painter Johann Berthelsen in its Weekly Free Article

Released on = February 27, 2007, 6:14 am

Press Release Author = Rosemary McKittrick

Industry = Internet & Online

Press Release Summary = Rosemary McKittrick's website is one of the best sites
around for art, antique and collectible information. Visit the site and sign up for
a free weekly subscription.

Press Release Body = Feb. 27, 2007--Johann Berthelsen painted New York City snow
scenes again and again like he was reliving what it was like to be caught in the
middle.

Soaking wet. Drenched to the bone. Exhilarated and exhausted.

Berthelsen was a trained baritone who painted for 22 years in his spare time before
devoting himself to art full-time. At the age of 49, in 1932, he made the leap.

Through daubs of color Berthelsen recreated snowy Impressionistic renderings of
Washington Square, 5th Ave., the Brooklyn Bridge, Columbia University and Central
Park.

Each one a jewel. Each one a snapshot of New York buried under a blanket of snow. So
easy to picture these snowstorm oils hanging above a roaring fire. Safe inside
somewhere buried under an afghan.

Berthelsen captured the whiteout atmosphere of New York City in a way few others
did. He basically painted what he saw all around him. His time-specific scenes,
cityscapes, cars and trucks serve as time capsules of another era in history.

By the time Berthelsen started painting these sketch-like renderings in the
mid-1930's, Impressionism was accepted in America. People appreciated his modern-day
urban landscapes.

Studying Berthelsen's work is difficult at times because although he signed his
paintings, he rarely, if ever, dated them.

That being said, it's hard to miss this artist's oils with their bright colors,
glistening snowfalls and massive architectural backdrops. Working with small
canvases, he captured big views.

On Oct. 26, Shannon's in Greenwich, Conn., featured a selection of Johann
Berthelsen's paintings in its Fine American and European Paintings, Drawings and
Sculpture auction.

Read the entire article at www.LiveAuctionTalk.com.

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