This biography from the Archives of AskART:
| The following is submitted January 2004 Shelley Castello whose sources are Peter Falk, "Who Was Who in American Art" and Eva Englar, granddaughter of the artist.
CHEREPOV, George (1909-1987) Birth place: Lithuania
Addresses: Greenwich, CT
Profession: Painter, instructor
Studied with professors Konstantin Wisotzky, Riga, Latvia & Aalexis Hansen, Dubrovnic, Yugoslavia.
EXHIBITIED Allied Artists America New York, NY Academy Artists Association Springfield, Massachusetts Southern Vermont Art Center Manchester Grand Central Art Galleries New York Hudson Valley Art Association
AWARDS Best in Show, First Award, Allied Artists America 1968 Gold Medal, Hudson Valley Art Association 1969 Medal of Honor, Kent Art Association Conecticut, 1971
MEMBER Fellow of Allied Artists of America Hudson Valley Art Association, Member Board of Directors Academy Artists Association Grand Central Art Galleries Southern Vermont Art Center
COLLECTIONS: Museum, Kempten, W Germany Town Hall, Memmingen, W Germany State Bank, Munich W Germany Stamford Museum Connecticut Museum of Art, Tucson, Arizona
COMMENTS Preferred Media: Oils. Teaching: Art instructor at Greenwich Art Center, CT 1955-1957; art instructor Westchester County Center, White Plains, NY, 1961-1967; art instructor, Scarsdale Adult Education 1962-1970.
Source: Peter Falk, "Who Was Who in American Art" --------------------------------------------------------------------- George Cherepov (1909-1987) was known for painting an exceptionally broad range of subjects. He was a vigorous painter, finely attuned to nature with a highly developed sensitivity for mood, color and composition.
Born in Lithuania, educated in Riga, Latvia and Yugoslavia, he traveled widely in Central Europe during the years of WWII turmoil. During this time he painted everything from a portrait of King Alexander of Yugoslavia to movie posters and advertisements
In 1952 he was able to bring his wife Klara, a noted handweaver and designer, and my mother along with several members of his family to America where they ultimately settled in Greenwich, CT. He quickly fell in love with the New England countryside, especially the brilliant displays of fall foliage. Moving between his homes in Connecticut and Vermont, he produced countless canvasses of the various moods of these captivating landscapes. His theory was always to work "on the spot" "en plein air' and there are many photos of him bundled up in a woolen winter coat with his signature French painter's beret painting away at a canvas in some bucolic scene. My grandmother was often a few yards away-equally bundled-patiently working on her knitting or hemming a woven wall-hanging.
Cherepov quickly established himself as a popular painter in his area and gave exhibitions in Vermont, Princeton, Philadelphia, and New York. Between 1958 and 1970, he gave ten one man shows at New York's Grand Central Galleries. As a teacher, he worked in Greenwich at the North Branch Club, in Mount Snow Vermont, at the Asilomar Institute in California, and through Painting Holidays.
In 1971 he authored "Discovering Oil Painting" and coauthored "The Oil Painting Book" through Watson-Gupthill NY.
He was a member of Grand Central Art Galleries, Allied Artists of America, American Artists Professional League, the Southern Vermont Art Association, and the Hudson Valley Art Association.
Never one to limit himself, he also painted portraits, still lifes, nudes, shore and dock scenes. The remaining collection also includes paintings from New England as well as many of his travel destinations: the American West, Mexico, Carribbean, Europe, and the Adriatic.
Source: Eva K. Engler, granddaughter of the artist
|
| ** If you discover credit omissions or have additional information to add, please let us know at registrar@AskART.com. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|