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AT HOME WITH ART: Paintings by Glasscock and King hang in their Freestone, Calif., residence.
Penny Wolin |
sonoma county artists Pamela Glasscock and Tony King are married,
but they don’t share brushes. “We really
make an effort to be independent,” King says.
They paint in separate studios on their land high in
the hills overlooking Freestone Valley.
So when both were featured in a recent Sonoma County
Museum exhibit, it was a rare opportunity for collectors
to see their work together. The mixed-media show, Botany
12, featured plant-inspired work from a dozen artists.
“No one had done a show with Sonoma County artists
in a comprehensive way, and this was our attempt to
do so,” said curator Natasha Boas. “Pamela
and Tony engage in very different artistic practices
and yet they approach their work with the same intensity
and scientific precision. ”
A Massachusetts native, King entered Stanford as a science
and math student. But art courses, including a lithography
class with his lifelong friend and mentor Nathan Oliveira,
inspired him to change direction. After sophomore year,
King studied drawing and painting for a year at the
New York Studio School before returning to Stanford
to compete his BS in math.
Glasscock, from Colorado, studied fine art, but she
didn’t meet her future husband until 1974, after
she moved to New York, where King had made his home.
During the '70s and '80s, the couple pursued
their careers in Manhattan—with King exploring
conceptual and abstract work, and Glasscock focusing
on landscape and still life in silverpoint, a Renaissance
drawing technique. “There was a real community
of artists in Soho and a wonderful sense of possibility,”
King, 61, recalls.
The couple spent summers in California until 1992, when
the family—by then with two sons—relocated
permanently to Freestone.
With the move, King began painting vivid plein air landscapes.
Glasscock shifted to painting flowers. “Practically
all my models came from our garden and friends’
gardens,” she says. Her beguiling, meticulously
rendered watercolors sometimes take several years to
complete. In her studio, flowers in various stages—from
tight new buds to overblown blossoms—sit in pots
and bottles on her drawing table, like actors waiting
to perform.
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BLOOMS TAKE A BOW : Glasscock's watercolors treat flowers like performers.
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“My work is botanically accurate, but also metaphorical,
an opportunity to make theatrical presentations using
plant elements, as if I’m directing them on a
stage.”
With their sons off at college, both painters find the
focus of their work is changing again. “When you
are painting plants, there are always new things to
see. I’ve spent 25 years with roses and other
garden flowers. Now I’m also working with orchids
and natives,” says Glasscock, 54. King is working
on a series of large-scale paintings of coastal images,
depicting “the chaos at the edge of land and water.”
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