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In
Norway, mountains cover 70 percent of the land. The coastline
is deeply indented, and rugged mountains rise abruptly from
the sea. The highest peaks are in a south central mountain
group called Jotunheimen, "Home of the Giants,"
a name that discloses the country's deep-seated affinity for
mythic creatures and the landscapes they inhabit. It is also
a place where Thomas Grønbukt has spent considerable
time, both as a mountain guide and as an artist.
Thomas
Grønbukt was born March 29, 1970, in Sarpsborg, a small
town in southeast Norway. Up until Thomas was 10 years of
age, the family moved every two years due to his father’s
position as an Air force pilot. Most of these moves kept the
family close to Oslo and Trondheim, except for a two-year
stint in Canada. Eventually, they settled in the very south
of Norway in a small town on the coast.
Grønbukt
grew up captivated both by the varied landscapes surrounding
him and by the folk tales they had inspired for centuries.
Ever since he can remember, he has spent time both drawing
and painting. Grønbukt won his first drawing competition
at age 6, sold his first watercolor landscapes at age 10 and
went on to win a Norwegian national drawing competition at
age 14.
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Since he was four years old, Grønbukt has hiked and
skied cross-country through the Norwegian mountain ranges,
leading a life of travel and adventure that continues to this
day. He has traversed India, Nepal, Thailand, Laos, Cambodia,
Vietnam, Malaysia, Singapore, Sumatra, Bali, Australia, New
Zealand, Fiji, and the United States. "I also traveled
around Europe, and spent a season skiing in the Alps,"
he notes, which gives the 34-year-old an impressive world
of experience upon which to draw.
For eight
seasons Grønbukt has worked in the National Parks of
Norway. "Most of those years I worked as a mountain guide.
I would take people mountaineering, ice climbing, glacier
hiking, climbing and caving," he reports. During this
time, he supplemented his income by selling his paintings
of the surrounding areas and by hanging an occasional exhibition.
"I
always create art when I travel. I typically do watercolors,
pen and ink, color pencil and small acrylic paintings. I've
also spent a lot of time on photography. At a cabin in the
National Park in Norway, I had time to do a lot of plein air
paintings, including some on the glaciers. I like to get to
those remote places you have to hike to and then paint from
there. There's just something special about the light and
colors when you get up above the tree line and have the mountain
ranges surrounding you." |
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Rock
climbing is still one of his favorite activities. Grønbukt,
who now resides in California with his wife, is a locally
competitive climber and boulderer, but "Very low key,"
he emphasizes. "Climbing brings you to areas you would
often not go. I also have a love for [painting] mountains
and rock that is partly because of my love for climbing."
His every pigmented boulder and sheer rock face are interpretive
evidence that he knows his subject in a very physical and
therefore, literally sensual, way.
From
his earliest work onward, landscape dramas have been a key
focus of his art. One of Grønbukt’s first commissions
came from publishers of Norwegian folk tales. A natural pairing
of talents since his earliest memories is of his father reading
to him from books with extraordinary pictures of trolls by
turn-of-the-century Norwegian illustrators. “My only
inheritance,” he laughs, “is a large book of illustrations
by Norwegian artist, T.H. Kittelsen. |
“A
July Day” oil on canvas 12” x 24” |
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Many
other illustrators influenced Grønbukt's childhood
in the form of comics by Frazetta, Will Eisner, and Bernie
Wrightson. In addition to the classic Norwegian fairytales,
he sought out similar fairytales from China and Japan.
As a
young boy he read Grimm's Fairytales, 1001 Nights, Aesop's
fables, Peer Gynt and all of Tolkien and C.S. Lewis' books.
His fascination for trolls, fairies and the like, combined
with his love of nature, led Grønbukt to the Academy
of Art University in San Francisco, where he began his formal
art studies in 1998.
Grønbukt
started painting in oil, acrylic and pastels six years ago.
His color choices infuse his landscapes with an emotional
dimension that runs from breezy to intense. He credits his
mother, a fabric designer, with laying the foundation for
his sense of color and design. "She was always focused
on color harmony, warms and cools," he remembers. Along
the way she taught him sewing, knitting and weaving, and together
they developed a tradition of painting Ukranian Easter eggs.
Later, in her forties, she studied sculpting, painting, metal
arts and printmaking. "She still does quilting and woodworking,"
he says, "But I leave that entirely up to her."
Grønbukt
struck out on his own at age 19, studying for a year in mountainous
central Norway at a school for outdoor life. He then spent
his mandatory year in the Norwegian military, followed by
a few years in Oslo (1991-1994) where he attended the Merkantile
Institute to study graphic design. Grønbukt also worked
for several years as an art teacher at a school for brain-damaged
children aged 4-18. Since 1994, he has worked seasonally in
Norway's national parks and continues to spend a few months
working in Norway every year. The rest of the year he usually
spends traveling.
"Wherever
I go, I love to render the landscapes. Every place in the
world has it's own unique light and look. The geography of
a place can be similar to another location, but most are separate
and distinct. I love to try and capture that uniqueness with
my paintings. I want a viewer who has traveled there to recognize
that place in my art and to be transported back to it from
observing my paintings. And if they have yet to go there,
it is my hope that my art would ignite in them the desire
to see that place for themselves. "I love to collect
and capture all of these different places in the world. As
an example, I have close friends in the wine country, specifically
in Ukiah, that own a vineyard. For the last year or two I
have developed an interest in landscapes around the area.
The rolling hills with gold fields and clusters of oak trees
and the lush vineyards embedded there, make for rich colorful
landscapes with interesting design. I am also fond of painting
California seascapes. And like so many artists before me,
I am captivated and enthralled by the scenes in Yosemite." |
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My
paintings are like a travel diary of where I have been and
the powerful influence a particular place has had on me. "I
think we all wish we could freeze exquisite scenes or moments
in time when we experience contentment, joy or awe. I hope
that through my landscapes, I can return to the viewer to
that place and to those feelings."
Since graduating in the fall 2001, Grønbukt has decided
to make the United States his home and to pursue his fine
art while serving as a drawing and painting instructor at
The Academy of Art University in San Francisco.
He has
also just completed a set of book covers for several Gold
Classics -- Robin Hood and The Hunchback of Notre Dame,
among others -- for a Norwegian publishing company. And Grønbukt
has "loose plans" to publish a collection of classic
stories with his illustrations. |
Bookcover
design by the artist |
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| EXHIBITIONS,
PRIVATE & PUBLIC COLLECTIONS |
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| Louis Aronow Galleries, San Francisco
& Sausalito, CA |
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2004 |
| James
Harold Galleries, Tahoe City, CA & The Resort at Squaw Creek,
Olympic Valley, CA |
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2004 |
| Chip
Express Art Competition, Moscone Center, San Francisco, CA |
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2004 |
| Exhibition
Poster. 12th Annual Norway Day 2004 Exhibition, San Francisco,
CA |
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2004 |
| Norway
Day Art Exhibition, San Francisco, CA |
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2003,
2004 |
| Norwegian
Club, San Francisco, CA, Permanent Collection |
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2004 |
| Norwegian
Consulate, San Francisco, Permanent Collection |
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2002,
2003, 2004 |
| Whitehouse
Vineyards, Ukiah, CA, Permanent Collection |
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2003,
2004 |
| W
Hotel Exhibition, San Francisco, CA |
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2003 |
| Academy
of Art University, Faculty Shows, San Francisco, CA |
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2002,
2003 |
| Academy
of Art Spring Show, San Francisco, cA |
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1998,
2000, 2001, 2002 |
| Presidio
Alliance Show, San Francisco, CA |
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2000 |
| National
Parks Exhibition, Leirvassbu, Norway |
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1998,
1999, 2000, 2001 |
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| AWARDS |
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| Winner,
Best Advanced Illustration, Academy of Art, San Francisco |
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2001,
2002 |
| Society
of Illustrators Competition entrant |
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2000,
2001 |
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| PUBLICATIONS |
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| Gyldendal
Forlag, Publishers, Norway -- Children's book illustrations
including Robin Hood, The Hunchback of Notre Dame, Around
the Word in 80 Days, Ivanhoe & The Snow Dragon |
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2003,
2004 |
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