Tag Archive for: P Buckley Moss

Spirit of Freedom

Spirit of Freedom is a giclee limited edition print by P Buckley Moss printed on paper. Colorful pastel background of turquoise lemon yellows and corals. Stately horse ih shades of tans and browns.

 

Spirit of Freedom is a large Giclee print that has garnered extreme interest and popularity with collectors especially those with the wall space to hang this exceptional image. Taken from an original watercolor that once hung in the permanent collection of the P Buckley Moss Museum, the Giclee reproduction process is nearly a perfect recreation of the original. The giclee is a digital process that is produced by a large printer that “spits or sprays” the ink onto the archival paper or canvas recreating both color and texture of the original unlike any other printing process.

Moss’ horses are almost always created with flowing lines which is a characteristic of her style and this work is no exception. The flowing main and flaring nostrils indicate the pronounced power of the horse as well as the symbolism of freedom and sensuality. Early in her career during a show, a person asked her why she didn’t paint nudes and she pointed to one of her horses and said, “Look at that beautiful horse,” to which the gentleman replied, “Touche!”

The soft pastel colors in the background, the indication of landscape in the very minimalist way speak to Pat’s artistic training as a professional artist and lends to a visual style like no other. Those who are not aware of this artist often recognize either her horses or her geese even if they don’t know who she is!

Spirit of Freedom  |  Issued in 2001 |  Giclee on the finest quality paper
Image Size: 44 x 21-1/4 Inches. Paper Size 46 x 23-1/4 Inches | Edition: 250 and 25 Artist’s Proof

 

Spirit of Freedom is a giclee limited edition print by P Buckley Moss printed on paper. Colorful pastel background of turquoise lemon yellows and corals. Stately horse ih shades of tans and browns.                 Spirit of Freedom is a giclee limited edition print by P Buckley Moss printed on paper. Colorful pastel background of turquoise lemon yellows and corals. Stately horse ih shades of tans and browns.

 

More Time In 2020

Leap Day graphic featuring the frog images of P Buckley Moss.

1440 Extra Minutes?

With so much “time” on our hands one would think we could accomplish the impossible, right?
How do we spend our time? So many hours in our day spent worrying or busy with “busy” work. You know how that goes, we get up with the best intentions and then before we know it the day is over, the sundown, and it times to go to bed. Let’s think about time this week and make it special.
With a whole extra day, I challenge you to think about the things you enjoy in life. For me, it’s reading. A good book, a comfortable chair, and off I go to the far places of adventure and travel, or perhaps it is history that has caught my attention this week or poems. I rarely take the time and this week I shall reconsider how I spend every minute, of every day.
When I look at this image I am reminded of my grandchildren. Oh, they are too old for me to snuggle up and read a favorite story, but I am comforted in knowing that occasionally they too will curl up and read something! Well, as I am reminded every now and then, they do read, you know, things on their phones, articles, stories, blogs, even an occasional magazine.

What is it for you?  What will you do with your extra Leap Year minutes this week? Think about it and make it the gift it is intended to be….the gift of time!Let Art Inspire for Leap Year with the P Buckley Moss frog collection.

 

Playful red frog hanging from a branch limited edition print by P Buckley Moss.

Frog Magic

Frogs are magical, time-traveling creatures. As they leap around us they travel through time reminding us to move toward what we desire in life. The symbolism of the frog appears in many traditions around the globe. It is generally associated with a transition which is why we see frogs in Leap years.

The frog is symbolic of:

  • Cleansing
  • Renewal, rebirth
  • Fertility, abundance
  • Transformation, metamorphosis
  • Life mysteries and ancient wisdom

Celebrate a 223rd Birthday with Limited Edition History Cards

History Matters

The History of Waynesville. One of the most fun projects I worked on last year was the collection of old photographs for the birthday of Waynesville. I went to the library and worked with the historian and to the Museum at the Friends Home and worked with several docents. Looked at pages and pages of images of this small town that blossomed through time, living moments of history.
Waynesville History Cards featuring the many historic buildings in Waynesville Ohio
We made the first series of cards and they were so well received by our visitors to town during our 222 Birthday Bash in 2019. Then we found so many new images!
Selling these cards is a labor of love! The total price is donated to the Waynesville Merchants Association so that we can continue to provide events that are fun for everyone. Come and check them out!

A Fun Visitor

Village of Waynesville, Ohio. Main street with retail shops and restaurants along the street.

On any day in Waynesville, there are visitors that come in the gallery with smiles for the art and curiosity about the treasures inside such a colorful place. One day last week I had a most unusual and delightful visitor who brightened my day and now I hope will brighten yours.

While working at the back of the gallery a young man and his mother walked in and started looking intently at the artwork.  I greeted them and struck up a conversation about the pieces they were looking at together. I was curious about their day in Waynesville and asked how the visit was so far, thinking the boy would come back with a negative response since a day walking around was not anything like video games with friends. To my surprise, his face lit up when I asked about their visit and he said, “This is a great place! I love coming here!” 

Pleasantly surprised, I asked what he liked most about Waynesville. He responded that he loved art, but that he was also excited to visit all the antique stores. Hmmm, I thought.  Here is a ten-year-old boy who loves art and antiques?! 

So, young man,” I said in surprise.  “What do you love about antique stores?”

 

Gallery wall at Canada Goose Gallery displaying the art of P Buckley Moss. Turquoise Treasure is a large turquoise cat on canvasHe thought for a moment and began to tell me how much he loved seeing things from so many years ago.  He loved looking at all the tools, toys, and treasures of an antique store and imagining how they were used and who may have used them.

Well,” I said with a big smile. “It is a rare person indeed who truly appreciates the value of a good antique!” 

 

Before I could continue, he and his mom started telling me how much they liked so many of the P Buckley Moss prints and originals in the gallery.  They were astounded at the different styles and subjects but as I suspected, the print they were the most excited about was Turquoise Treasure which features a standing cat, with such a playful attitude that happened to be painted turquoise.  But then it wouldn’t be a cat if it didn’t have an attitude, right? 

 

Turquoise Treasure is a limited edition print by P Buckley Moss released in several different sizes on paper and canvas

 

 

I too am a huge fan of our Turquoise Cat.  It is one print almost everyone comments on when they peruse our gallery.  And I just love that old art lovers and younger new ones just love how this wonderfully simple and colorful piece can make you smile, even on the gloomiest of winters days!

 

Window display at Canada Goose Gallery in Waynesville Ohio with art and gifts by P Buckley Moss

They walked around and asked questions about certain pieces that caught their eye.  Before we knew it, they were mindful of the time and wanted to get outside to continue their planned day in town.  Before they left, I asked if he was “On the Hunt” for any antiques in particular and he looks up at me with a big smile and said, “Of course! I collect Pez dispensers.” The gleam in his eye brought a smile to my face and we talked about his Pez collection, although he was quick to point out that it was not technically a real collection since he only had about 100 of these candy dispensers. 

OK, only 100?!  I leaned in closer and told him that anytime you have 100 of any one category of items…it would definitely have to be considered a collection!  He smiled and looked up at his mom with pride. But now he had me quite curious.

 

I asked him more about the tiny candy dispensers and he told me that he would expect to pay around $15 to $25 for one of the old Pez dispensers if he was lucky enough to spot one in any of our antique malls. “The really early ones are worth thousands of dollars,” he told me. Who knew? 

Without blinking an eye he said, “My 1979, Tweety Bird!”  

Tweety Bird Pez Dispenser

 

So,” I continued. “What is your absolute favorite Pez dispenser from your collection at home?”

Without blinking an eye he said, “My 1979, Tweety Bird!”  

Of course, it was!  

 

He made sure to also tell me how much he enjoyed the artwork of P. Buckley Moss.  He and his mom promised to come back when they had a bit more time to learn more about her and all the beautiful artwork.  They both agreed that coming into the gallery was a delightful surprise and a reason they would return again. I made him promise to return with his 1979 Tweety so I could see what I missed from back in the day and made a mental note to keep an eye out for “Pez” dispensers when I get around to cleaning my basement. 

Gallery wall at Canada Goose Gallery in Waynesville Ohio featuring the artwork of P Buckley Moss.

As they headed out the door, I stopped and looked around the gallery.  Through the eyes of a ten-year-old, I was seeing the fun and magic that art brings into our everyday life.  I glanced at the turquoise cat and gave her a wink. There is something for everyone!  

He made my day and I was so very happy they would come to Waynesville to walk around and just enjoy new experiences as a family.  That is what life is all about–exploring, learning, and setting out on a “hunt!”

Art can be so fun!

Canada Goose Gallery

See Turquoise Treasure
See other prints

The Rise Of An Iconic Artist

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Iconic Artist: P. Buckley Moss

An artist in the 1960s was faced with cultural shifts and upheaval, not unlike the changing landscape of todays rapidly moving world.  But one thing was sure for Patricia Buckley Moss, motherhood and artist were not always a welcome combination back then!

 

As a graduate of the prestigious art school, Cooper Union College in New York City, Pat Moss was filled with talent and skills that would certainly bring her the recognition she deserved.  But for women, all women in the 1960s, motherhood was a much higher calling and few dared to cross out of that expected role and venture into others that were mainly held by men. Yes, even art!

 

When Patricia Moss and her growing family moved to rural Virginia for her husband’s job, motherhood became a role much easier when surrounded by mountains and trees rather than urban concrete parks.  The artist in her relished in the colorful scenery and inspirational role models that surrounded her family in the Quaker community that they had found themselves.  So many wonderful lessons to be learned! So many wonderful scenes and gifts of nature to paint!  And luckily, for Pat, so many delightful and important “Art Fairs” too!

 

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With children in tow, artist P. Buckley Moss shared her work with visitors from neighboring Washington D.C. and the surrounding communities in Virginia through the bustling street fair scene in small towns along the Virginia Coastline in 60s and 70s.

 

“Of course I am a mother!” Pat would proudly say as she carried her canvas pieces from the family station wagon to the main street art fair scene.  It was a routine that is embedded into the hearts and memory of her five children.  Following their mother, like little ducks in a row, they waited just long enough to be shushed away so they could explore and play together while watching beloved pieces of art being carried away by new fans. It would be the beginning of movement by women of the time.  Following Pat from show to show and embracing her vision of the world; loving her unique talent and imagery, and propelling this mother of five into an iconic rise to fame.

 

Art is something that makes us stop in our tracks, even if just for a brief moment. It fills our senses with color and perspective.  It isn’t just the scene or the subject we embrace.  Art is much more.  Our eyes focus on one detail then will move to another.  Our mind searches for meaning, through a memory or even a reminder of something we experienced before.  Art is a moment when the noise around us ceases and we are inside our own experience.  It is a feeling of being truly present.

 

For Pat Moss, art was her pathway to embracing her own talents; and motherhood was a role she owned and loved (still does!) but in the beginning, when Pat became “P,” her greatest fans were the laughter of her five children and the people who saw talent first.  It is almost hard to believe today the struggles that women had back then, but those struggles gave Pat an eye for a world much kinder and more welcoming.

And that world in rural Virginia holds many lessons we might consider embracing once again, but I’ll save the lessons of the Quakers for another post.  For now, I celebrate with you the artist, the woman, and the mother: P. Buckley Moss. A combination of talents that will make anyone stop in their tracks to enjoy!

 

#PBuckleyMoss #AmericanArtist #Motherhood #VirginiaArtShows

CanadaGooseGallery.com Exclusive Gallery of P. Buckley Moss Art

 

 

Welcoming Summer

The Shades of Blue…

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The Color: Lakeshore Blue

Where to Use It: No matter where you live, nothing is as inviting as a cool body of water on a summer day.

Get the same feeling in your living areas by immersing the room in this cool shade.

For a dramatic effect, use the color on upholstered pieces, drapery panels, and accessories.

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I think that no matter where you place a shade of blue,

it just has a way of bringing out the freshness of the space.

And I love how the blue softens the black too! 

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Playful walls are most inviting!

Blue skies and blue seas–they make us long for summer

and the laughter that most often is included with it!

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A gallery in a child’s room is an amazing way to teach and share

that is not  burdened with digital dings and pings.

Children today need to glance over at art and see that

not everything need have a thumbs up in appreciation.

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Enjoy the Shades of Blue in Our Lakeshore Blue Collection of Limited Edition Prints

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How To Start Collecting Art

When considering what to hang on your walls, which can be anything from Fiber art, Native American masks, photography, or paintings – the ultimate in wall art – take your time making a decision, and go with your heart.

Establish a relationship with a gallery that understands how to preserve the value and beauty of your art or follow an artist who shares your aesthetic values and understands your unique perspective of the world and allows you emotional connections to the artwork. A gallery owner is an individual who should be someone you feel comfortable with and that you trust understands your need and vision for your home and art collection. They should ask about the rooms and space that you wish to add such works of art so that you can achieve your goal of making a space for you and your family that feels just the way you wish.  Read Full Blog Post

Kentucky Derby Red Brings Out the Best in P Buckley Moss Art

PBuckleyMoss-art-limitededition-horse-Kentuckyderby-prints

 

It’s time to start planning your Run For The Roses gathering! I just love that expression and I love the Kentucky Derby.  All the hats and fancy dresses, tiny finger sandwiches, and of course, the excitement of the race!  I haven’t been, but it makes me happy to think of all the fun and excitement of being around horses.  If I had to pick a favorite that Pat Moss paints I would have to say that her horses are some of the most lovely and inspiring images to grace a wall.

KentuckyDerbyRedNewsletter

An Artist Gets Her Wings: Who is P Buckley Moss?

From humble Staten Island beginnings, Patricia Buckley Moss was born to Italian immigrants who absolutely had no interest to be discussing with teachers their daughter’s inability to sit still in class. Had it been the 1990’s and not the early 1940’s, Pat would have been diagnosed with dyslexia (which she later was) and put into a different class. But Italian practicality from her mother demanded that they give her something to do worthy of her imagination. So the head of the school sent her to the art teacher and that was the day that an artist got her wings!

Artist, P. Buckley Moss; Painting an original floral; at Cooper Union Fine Arts, New York

Fortunately for Pat, the art teacher helped her find success and a scholarship to a fine arts high school and then admissions into the prestigious Cooper Union School of Fine Arts in New York City.  At a time when women were not recognized or respected for their artistic talents, Pat had to become P. Buckley Moss to get the recognition and scholarships she deserved.

Taking the City Out of the Artist

When Pat married soon after school, her husband moved their growing family to the Shenandoah Valley. It was the perfect match for this no-nonsense mother of six.  Breathtaking views of mountains and trees, streams, horses, stone barns, and the beloved simplicity of the Quaker culture that surrounded them.  Her paintings of horses and the life in the valley brought her out of the street art fairs and into the White House as a beloved American Artist.  By 1985 she was so well known that people began to criticize her growing art business and fame, but Pat didn’t care less about what people said or thought.  She loved to paint and paint she did.  Growing her audiences were easy as Pat began to expand, not only her view of the world but her own style of painting as well.

Most creative people see the world in a different way, but for Pat, living in the country gave her a whole series of breathtaking new perspectives. Her colors were bright or muted. Lines are drawn delicately or loose and impressionistic. The world around us has no particular style or pattern, so the art of P. Buckley Moss reflects the wonders of the world as it exists around us–ever changing. Over the years, Pat continued to paint the Amish and Mennonite community that surrounded her family. The love of this simple community began to spread and the public began to embrace her “plain people” who valued modesty and family values. These signature and iconic images were sold around the world as a piece of country life that was still strong and valued. For Pat, they were just a wonderful part of the scenery that was part of her American life.

“They thanked me for depicting them in a way that is wholesome,” Pat said of the Amish community. Today there is a new generation that thinks of these works as “vintage” since Google doesn’t often search for such perspectives of life. But things are beginning to change quite rapidly. Today, new, young homeowners will come into the gallery and ask to see those “Boho” people dressed in black.  “There is something pleasing about having a piece of simplicity in your home,” said one young lady. In the digital age, where attention spans are six whole seconds…it is refreshing to know that a new generation is finding new ways to embrace art and culture in their homes.

Titles: Society Friends Children Art Collection, Amish Man, Pair, & Woman in a collector home Boho Collection,  Autumn Glow Fall Collection

Diversity in Art

Over the years Pat’s work has become popular because of the broad number of subjects she embraces –landscapes, horses, architecture, even an impressionistic flower or two.  Her style is what makes her collectible not to mention you cannot get it everywhere.  Through a hand-selected limited number of art dealers, P. Buckley Moss has been able to maintain her collectors and the value of her work.

Canada Goose Gallery in Waynesville, Ohio has the largest selection of Pat’s work with rare items, original pieces of art, and valuable favorites that are no longer in print. Collectors come from several states to see her vast collection and the artist comes every October to meet people and sign her work.  People are looking for something that they can relate to in their art and decor and Pat paints the people (and some really incredible horses) with an eye for detail and color. This beauty in her work adds a richness to people’s lives and homes.

 Title: The Matriarch, Giclee  Horses Collection

Although the artist began her rise with the simplicity of the Shenandoah Valley, over the years collectors have found that all of the subjects in Pat’s work speak to something that is missing in our world today.  It is amazing the number of pieces that some collectors have hanging in their homes.  And today, a younger audience is opening its eyes to her work for an entirely new reason.  Her story as a woman American artist really resonates with millennials.  Pat is the real deal and her celebrity has not changed the way she lives or paints.  Almost every year she paints a special piece for National Public Television in their annual fundraising campaigns. This charity perspective is important for young people today.  They like to support businesses and artists who give back to the community and Pat has been doing that since she first picked up her brush.

Title: Egret Romance Birds Art Collection; Collectors in Canada Goose Gallery; P.Buckley Moss on Blue Ridge Public TV

Virginia Tech has adopted Pat as their patron hometown artist.  Opening the Moss Center for the Arts on campus, the community has embraced her and the wonderfully diverse works of art in Pat’s collection.

At an age when she should be sitting in her studio painting away the hours, Pat Moss is traveling around the country visiting collectors, talking with children, and helping to raise money where she can.  “Art saved me,” she once said when asked about her school struggles.  The Moss Foundation was created to serve children who learn differently and Pat enjoys moments with children who often reflect her more carefree philosophy of life.  “You should do the thing that suits you,” she is fond of saying.  Even if that that “thing” is painting a kitchen cabinet with a prancing horse (which is in her home] or painting a center swatch for a charity auction,  or even something more elaborate–like painting a bedroom wall over a summer holiday!

Christmas show at the P. Buckley Moss Barn; Artist, Pat Moss signing art in front of a hand painted quilt square for charity; Mural painting

P. Buckley Moss has certainly earned her artist credentials.  She still thinks that is tough being a woman artist, but she is encouraged as more and more of this new young audience discovers her artwork and finds new and creative ways to share it.

Artist P. Buckley Moss lives in Blacksburg, Virginia and still travels around the country meeting collectors and finding new inspiration to paint.  See her work exclusively at Canada Goose Gallery, 97 South Main Street, Waynesville, Ohio 45068. (937) 631-4444  www.canadagoosegallery.com

Article was written by M. Bereket

Who Is American Artist, P Buckley Moss

The Artist P. Buckley Moss has a unique perspective of the world.  One of the things most fascinating about her (and there are many things) is her remarkable memory for details. If you ask her what inspires her to paint she will tell you that the world is rich with details. I have been to her studios through out the years and have seen first hand the sketches on paper, tissues, napkins, envelopes….tiny pieces of visual notes to be expanded upon when she finds herself alone with only brush and canvas.

On my first visit to one of Pat’s painting studios, I was in aw of just how much artwork I saw there. There was artwork everywhere! I saw stacks of paintings piled high on her tables and cabinets in no particular order, several paintings at the ready on her drawing table and I gasped when I saw how many were just laying on the floor. The day I visited, she even had a large painting under a see-through mat on the floor. I was considering each drawing or watercolor a treasured piece of artwork to be protected while Pat seemed to have to spread them all out to get a feel for what would inspire her next. Propped against the windows were paintings in upright position in different stages of completion; large pieces and small pieces positioned so she could glance their way and envision how to finish what she had started.  When asked, “Which piece do you work on next?”, she answered, “I rarely know when I walk in my studio each morning what I will work on. I look around me at all the unfinished paintings and I know when one calls me, that will be the painting I work on that day”.

The Earth at Rest print by P Buckley Moss

“The Earth at Rest” takes me back to my younger years, as I loved to be able to visit my grandparents farm.  It seems that my grandfather always included me in whatever he was doing.

Erith Shoup, my grandfather, loved to farm, and would take us little ones with him while he was out doing what he did best and even along with him while he was hunting for our Thanksgiving meal.

The most memorial time for “The Earth of Rest” was after the winter months where he planned for his spring planting.  He not only planned for his fields, but also his many garden beds, which would be full of flowers and vegetables in the spring and summer.  He loved to be out in his God’s world, working with the land, but also bringing joy to the people who would stop at his “The Gardens” to purchase flower plants, fresh flowers bouquets, along with the many vegetables he also grew.

Fall was the time to ready the earth for its rest.  Grandfather taught me that we must take time to rest after working, but to also reflect on the care of mother earth, and to enjoy what God’s hands have provided for each of us.

As I grew, my grandfather always shared what he was doing and the why, and this alone has helped me love the farm and its life.  I loved by grandfather and am so thankful for his love and his love for the earth and what he taught me.

Farming of yesterday was, and farming of today is still the mainstay of life as we knew it.  The farmers today, may have ease of larger equipment to use,  but the work and the hours are still the same. Up early each morning, and to bed late many nights as it takes many famers to grow not only the food for our country but also the world.

My husband and I have many farm families as friends, and they,  in turn are passing their love of Mother Earth to their children for the future generations, just as my grandfather did for me.

I have been extremely blessed to live on my husbands farm, and to have worked beside him, with the sheep, cattle and hogs that we raised in the past, along with working beside him with the various crops that were raised.  We still enjoy the fruits of our labors as we still grow a small plot of vegetables each spring to enjoy during the summer and into fall.  While, “The Earth is at Rest”, we rest, waiting for the spring to again bring the seasons of life to life again.  Earth at Rest (Small)  The Earth at Rest (Medium)