Carol Skinger

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Licensing my work for use: Schenley Park Map

January 7, 2016

Carol Skinger's Schenley Park Map - OptSchenly Pk map in Mary Schenley article Fall 2015 - OPT

I was excited when the quarterly magazine Western Pennsylvania History Magazine contacted me about using my Schenley Park Map (on the left) to illustrate a stunning and thorough 14 page article (125 citations!) about Mary Schenley titled “What’s in a Namesake” by Jake Oresick. It was published in Fall of 2015. Their publications are beautifully printed and designed and I could not be more thrilled to be part of it. This is the spread page where my map appears.

You can order a map from me and it is here on my site in two sizes 18″ square and 30″ square. It is a wonderful help in keeping my art supplies stocked and dealing with various dollar and cents issues we all have!

Listen to an NPR story about Mary Schenley written and produced by Margaret J. Krauss where she and author Jake Oresick talk about Mary Schenley.

I am always happy to discuss license agreements to use my work, and in the case of Schenley Park, the park has been a passion of mine since moving here from Boston years ago. Obviously this is a Depression Era drawing and I am not old enough to have drawn it myself. As an artist, when I found the black and white drawing in a file, it broke my heart to think Pittsburghers had no way to enjoy this map.

So I added color, information, history and a red border to make it more compatible with the Frick Park Map which people love to frame together as a set. Though at this point in time (2024) the Frick Pittsburgh Museum store does not carry Frick map anymore. I never set out to be a map seller but no one else I approached would take it over, so I decided to do it myself. It brings such pleasure to so many people who love that park and it is a beautiful piece to get lost in while studying it.

The BIGGEST audience for my print is children and men! So, Pittsburgh women or men who do not know what to get for your husbands, buy a print! Or folks who have to come up with a memorable baby present but don’t want to contribute to instant landfill, buy a print! Or alumni of Pitt, CMU and Carlow who are not fond of pennants or logos, this is your go to gift!

If you would like to discuss licensing any of my work shoot me a message through my site.

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Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: Carol Skinger, City Beautiful, Depression Era Drawing, Licence this art, Mary Schenley, Oakland History, Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh History, Romantic Park Design, Schenley Park, Schenley Park Map

Sketch on site, paint in the studio

October 14, 2015

Allegheny River from Highland Park Bridge by C. Skinger

“Downriver view from Highland Park Bridge”  SOLD                                                                   Watercolor ad Gouache

I like the idea of plein air painting, I really do but I don’t like doing it, at least it seems that way. Where would I go to the bathroom if I stood out on the bridge to paint this? Would I  dump a few gallons of water from cleaning my brushes over the side? Even if that was OK and its not, there is a chain link fence. The amount of stuff I would schlep is not appealing but it happens sometimes and I have been known to say I  like plein air painting, and in truth there ARE moments when I like it, but mostly I like the idea of it. Though working on site is good for sketching I rarely take a painting all the way through at the site.

People ask if I use photos when I create a painting. I very often do. Here are a few I took  to visualize a composition for this painting.  I see this view so often when driving over the bridge I wanted to paint it. There is a sidewalk on the bridge and I recommend walking it to slow down the view you see when driving.

A list of things seen in my painting is at the bottom of this post.

Some of the many pictures I took to help visualize this scene:c000 Lock No 2 Pittsburgh - Copyc000Downriver view from Highland Park Bridgec000Downriver view to Lock No 2 from Highland Park Bridgec 000 62nd Street BridgePittsburgh -

I walk out on the bridge and do a quick sketch and take a bunch of pictures. Then I put together my ideas indoors, where there is a sink, a bathroom, heat and air conditioning. Oh and a computer where I look at my photographs. So no. I am not much of a plein air painter. Not often anyway. I even take pictures of my painting while I am painting it and seeing them on a big screen helps me know what to do next. Pathetic words for a real plein air painter!

What you can see in this  painting looking downriver from Highland Park Bridge:

Lock No.  2 on left at foot of Morningside . The bridge you see is the 62nd Street Bridge. The first neighborhood on the right is Sharpsburg and the docks and island nearest you are where, in 2015 you can rent a pontoon boat at Sharpsburg Islands Marina. The water tower is in Sharpsburg. A new plan is underway to develop a wonderful waterfront park.  It is  the vision of Susan and Currie Crookston.  The Crookstons generated community support from the three municipalities the property runs through, Sharpsburg, O’hara and Aspinwall. The new  Aspinwall Riverfront Park which you cannot see in this view.  It is on the right and it is just on the upriver side of Highland Park Bridge.

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Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: 62nd Street Bridge, Allegheney River, Allegheny River Art, Aspinwall Riverfront Park, Etna PA, Highland Park Bridge, Lock for water transport, Lock No. 2 Pittsburgh, Locks, Morningside Pittsburgh, Not a plein air painter, Pennsylvania River, Pittsburgh, River painting, Sharpsburg Islands Marina, Sharpsburg Waterfront, Susan Crookston, water lock

Riverview painting commissioned for bookcover

September 5, 2015

Down River Orange Glow by Carol Skinger

On Garrison Keillor’s radio broadcast  The Writer’s Almanac on August 20, 2015 he read from Paul Martin’s most recent book of poetry Floating on the Lehigh published by Grayson Books where my Riverview painting was commissioned for the cover. It is Garrison Keillor’s daily summary of poems, prose, and literary history. The publishing process? The poet himself searched images of paintings of rivers online arriving at my  website where  paintings of the Allegheny River are housed. Martin contacted me directly and made the introduction to his publisher Grayson Books who commissioned the use of the river painting he especially loved for the cover.

Contact me about licensing or commissioning one time use of my images.

Poems by Paul Martin. Cover Art by Crol Skinger

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Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: Allegheny River, Allegheny River Art, clean painting, Cover Art, Fox Chapel Living Oct 2015, Orange and Blue, Orange Sky, Pittsburgh, River painting, simple painting, watercolor

A Best of Show Award from Freyda Spira for my paintings of Mobile Homes

April 24, 2015

Series of six 9" x 9" paintings titled 'Unscenic?' by Carol Skinger
Series of six 9″ x 9″ paintings titled ‘Unscenic?’ by Carol Skinger

So thrilled to be the recipient  a ‘Best of Show’ Award from Freyda Spira, Associate Curator in the Department of Drawings and Prints at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

My series of six 9″ x 9″ watercolor & gouache  paintings of mobile homes, trailers and manufactured homes were accepted for exhibit at a Pittsburgh Society of Artists juried art show titled “Intr(au)spective” at the 56th Annual Dollar Bank Three Rivers Arts Festival (TRAF) in Pittsburgh June 5- June 14, 2015 at  937 Gallery 937 Liberty Avenue Pittsburgh PA 15222.

I titled my series of six paintings which were awarded Best of Show  ‘Unscenic?’. The overall theme of Three Rivers Arts Festival that summer was Unseen Unheard, therefore I used one of the words in making my title. No I do not think mobile homes are unscenic. These homes remain an affordable  and needed housing solution. However I’d like to see progress in design. The interest in the Tiny House Movement  has never yet produced an affordable solution that can compete,  and cost of living is very much an issue.  I  hope someone can soon achieve scale in manufacturing a new series of modern designs.

Locust Grove near Pittsburgh 9 x 9 by Carol Skinger
Locust Grove near Pittsburgh 9 x 9 by Carol Skinger
Trailers in Bozeman 9 x 9 by Carol Skinger
Trailers in Bozeman 9 x 9 by Carol Skinger
Trailer in Winter Locust Grove near Pittsburgh, 9 x 9 by Carol Skinger
Trailer in Winter Locust Grove near Pittsburgh, 9 x 9 by Carol Skinger
Trailer in winter with Bridger Range beyond Bozeman, MT 9 x 9 Carol Skinger
Trailer in winter with Bridger Range beyond Bozeman, MT 9 x 9 Carol Skinger
Locust Grove near Pittsburgh in winter 9 x 9 by Carol Skinger
Locust Grove near Pittsburgh in winter 9 x 9 by Carol Skinger
Sisters in a pony cart ,trailers beyond in Stowe, VT by Carol Skinger
Sisters in a pony cart ,trailers beyond in Stowe, VT by Carol Skinger

Juror Freyda Spira, Associate Curator in the Department of Drawings and Prints at the Metropolitan Museum of Art awarded 3 Best of Show Awards and my series received one of them.

For this exhibit 92 artists submitted 160 pieces of artwork. Spira selected 34 pieces by 30 artists to be shown. My second submission was also accepted titled “Trailer Toile”.

Serving as juror for PSA’s Intr[au]spective is Freyda Spira, Associate Curator in the Department of Drawings and Prints at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. She earned her Ph.D. from the University of Pennsylvania, and specializes in Early Modern German art and works on paper. Spira has curated exhibitions including, Dürer and Beyond: Central European Drawings in the Metropolitan Museum of Art (2012); and Imperial Augsburg: Renaissance Prints and Drawings (2012). Presently, she is curating an exhibition entitled Prints & People: The Building of a Metropolitan Collection, 1916-1966, which will be accompanied by a catalogue (2016). She has also curated numerous smaller exhibitions on nineteenth and twentieth century visual culture, including Legends of the Dead Ball Era, Century Posters, Life Magazine and Pop Art, and A Sport for Every Girl.

Freyda Spira Juror’s Statement:

“50 years ago a hardy band of eight artists formed the Pittsburgh Society of Artists with the mission to facilitate and promote the exhibition of original art by its members. Today more than 380 artists living within a 150-mile radius of Pittsburgh comprise PSA. The title of the show is a playful twist on PSA’s 50th anniversary nodding to the periodic table and the 79th element of gold, but it also reflects the interior life of the artist and the introspective nature of traversing the mindscape where the image and inspiration for the artwork first appear.

The provocative work submitted for the Intr(Au)spective exhibition ranged from beautifully detailed craftwork, to abstract paintings, sculpture, and prints. As varied as the artists who submitted the works, the questions posed, lives exposed, and continuing battles fought spoke to the underlying idea of the exhibition and demonstrated not only the artists own musings, but also set into motion open-ended reactions. As a juror, I was constantly engaged by new ideas, new ways of seeing, and this was a complete pleasure. The three works that I selected as “Best in Show” prompted in me the greatest introspection. Unscenic? (2015) posed the question of pride in our home, and captures the movement of the eye as it crosses a familiar but perhaps not faultless landscape, creating snap shots with the fugitive media of watercolor and gouache. Untitled (Salt 0806) (2015) fascinated as the perfect rendering of details of the mind as it distills and crystallizes into actionable thought. Unsee (2015) rather than bringing into focus the movement of the mind hides it beneath layers of wax and collage, leaving the viewer to search and grapple for clarity.
As the juror who had the privilege to select the works for the Intr(Au)spective exhibition, I thank the Pittsburgh Society of Artists for this honor and congratulate the guild on reaching this special milestone and a future that shines brightly towards its next 50 years.”

-Freyda Spira
Associate Curator in the Department of Drawings and Prints at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York

Writer Brandon Getz engaged by Pittsburgh Cultural Trust write this about the exhibition:

“For its golden anniversary, the Pittsburgh Society of Artists has put together a fantastic exhibition of work from 30 local artists. From abstract paintings to sculpture to magnified photography, the 34 pieces in the PSA’s 50th anniversary Intr[Au]spective at 937 Liberty Gallery were handpicked by nationally recognized juror and curator Freyda Spira, each a variation on the Dollar Bank Three Rivers Arts Festival’s 2015 theme UNSEEN/UNHEARD.

Spira, an Associate Curator in the Department of Drawings and Prints at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, is a specialist in paper-based and print works, especially Renaissance-era and—at the other end of the spectrum—“American visual culture from the 19th and 20th centuries,” including advertising prints. “I have a broad appreciation,” she says. “Because I’m not often working with contemporary art, it’s something I can bring fresh eyes to.”

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Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: Best of Show, Bozeman, Carol Skinger, manufactured homes, mobile homes, paintings of mobile homes, Pittsburgh, trailer park

Get a pen and draw your street!

June 30, 2011

Carol Skinger holds her drawing of Dollar bank, standing on the steps of Dollar Bank  Photograph by Renee Rosensteel

Tonight I presented at Pecha Kucha Vol 8 in Pittsburgh at Nina Barbuto’s space assemble! Pecha Kucha was started in Japan by two Australian architects (I think). Architects are long winded, they ought to know- therefore each presentation is limited to 20 slides and the presenter can give 20 seconds of chit chat per slide. Period. You are DONE! In no way is it for architects only. It is wide open to anyone to submit an outline of their talk and a few images for consideration. Appeals to artists, graphic designers, writers, comedians, and actors and well- the list might go on and on. There were 8 presenters, and it was well attended. Pretty good entertainment for $5! Thanks to AIA and AIGA Pittsburgh for hosting and to graphic designer Greg Coll receiving our power points, lining them up and operating all the visual effects- so everything runs smoothly!

I was so blown away by the presentations! I look forward to seeing the work of my fellow presenters develop and to following their work in real time and on the internet. Pecha Kucha read and see more.

After you have been accepted for making a presentation, you create a power point of 20 slides and send it in via YouSendIt . Then they have it projected on a big sceen. You are off and running! A little over 6 minutes later you are done.

I used the silly ink drawings I create of street scenes to tell a story about how I started drawing them and why I do them. Contrasting my silly non-conforming drawings of buildings of crazy perspective with the precise work I execute in interior design and space planning was the core of the presentation. Seeing illustrator Alice Blodgett draw our house for a brochure when I was in first grade was like magic, and having our art teacher in 8th grade give us pen and ink and tell us to just walk to over to Main Street in Stowe, VT and draw the buildings was another piece of luck. When Ben & Jerry set up their first ice cream place in a former gas station in Burlington, VT they hung my drawing of Church St. on the wall. When I returned from a trip they told me it was something everyone wanted a copy of and that is when I began printing them.

Tonight at Pecha Kucha people especially liked seeing a drawing in process where I use drawings of the buildings on tracing paper and move them around to get a good arrangement.

2 cyclists coming down 6th ave in pittsburgh.

This is Sixth Avenue in Pittsburgh

Then I showed the work of 5th graders at Grandview Elementary School where I photographed facades of their main street, Warrington Avenue and they created artwork based on the facades. Their artwork was shown in the storefronts of Warrington Ave. Watch a short multi media slide show on that project by Annie O’Neill and Diana Nelson Jones.

It’s my mission I guess to share the possibility of drawing your street!

Photographer and blogger Renee Rosensteel was all over the Three Rivers Arts Festival 2011. She took some wonderful photographs of kids painting prints of my Dollar Bank VERY silly ink drawing. Here is a slide show of the kids at work and her blog about it for Three Rivers Arts Festival.

Finally one of my photographs of one of the kids who had a blast painting my Dollar Bank drawing.

a happy participant holds up her painting

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Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: Dollar Bank, Dollar Bank by Carol Skinger, Fourth Ave Pittsburgh, Grant St Pittsburgh, ink drawing, Lion sculpture, Pittsburgh, Taxi, Taxi Cab

Homage to famous Pittsburghers

July 12, 2010

Homage to Rachel Carson
Homage to Rachel Carson -purchase a 17″ square print here
Homage to August Wilson
Homage to August Wilson- purchase a 17″ square print here
The first layouts for a print series where I pay homage to famous Pittsburghers were completed in November 2009. My photographs and my electronic alterations to my photographs are the media. What I would consider an original version using 4 images per piece, was shown, “honorably mentioned” in Pittsburgh Society of Artists “Small Works” exhibit, written about and sold at Borelli Edwards Gallery in Pittsburgh in April 2010.

Here are the first two images as high quality digital prints, copyright 2010 by Carol Skinger
Kurt Shaw’s review of “Small Works” has an explanation for the images I choose to put together in each homage.

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Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: August Wilson, August Wilson Carnegie Library, August Wilson Hill Distruct, August Wilson Pittsburgh Home, Hill District, Pittsburgh, Rachel Carson, Rachel Carson Homestead, Springdale PA

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