Joseph
Holodook is one of America's finest painters of naive country Americana. In
the small towns and villages of Holodook's America you can sip the cider,
sit by the cracker barrel, go sugaring and skating in the winter and enjoy
life as it used to be, and perhaps ought to be.
Joseph
Holodook has been drawing and painting as long as he can remember. One
family member snapped a photograph of Joseph at age 2, sitting at the
kitchen table sketching his mother on the back of an envelope. This
love of drawing and art continued throughout his childhood and took a giant
leap forward when his priest gave him a set of oil paints when he was only
9.
As he grew and his
abilities increased, it became known in the small Hudson River town of
Hudson, New York that Joseph had a natural ability, one which his teachers
did their best to nurture. In high school Joseph was allowed to use a
classroom, alone, for three straight periods a day so that he could paint
and draw without interruption.
After high school he
worked hard during the day so that he could afford to study art at the local
college in the evenings. It was in college that he came under the
tutelage of Lawrence Montaldo, professor of art and former head of the art
department at Marist College in Poughkeepsie, New York. At about this
time Joseph was introduced to famous landscape painter John E. Hesse who
critiqued the young painter's work and had a profound influence on his
future art.
In 1976 Joseph won his
first honor, the Love and Heritage Award, for one of his works of folk
Americana. He went on to exhibit at the Columbia County Fair, the
Hudson NY Art Fair, Columbia-Green Community College in Greeneport, NY, and
the Columbia County Courthouse upon the special invitation of the Treasurer
of the County. He also had an ongoing one-man show at the New Leaf
Gallery in Hudson, NY from 1991 through 1997.
Over the years Joseph
Holodook has created hundreds of pieces of art, many of them folk art and
Americana that sold quickly in the traditional markets and galleries of the
Hudson River Valley, and many of his works grace fine homes as well as major
corporations, among them Ernst & Young and ITG Boston. He has also
created restoration artwork for the Sacred Heart Church and for the St.
Nicholas Ukrainian Catholic Church, both in Hudson, NY.
In recent years
Holodook has turned his interests toward another St. Nicholas -- Santa Claus
-- as well as other holiday-related images which show the influence of the
works of Norman Rockwell and the Wyeths on his art. Joseph paints
primarily in oil on canvas, and his works range in size from 16x20 to 36x48.
After joining
Porterfield's Fine Art Licensing, Joseph Holodook began to license his
artistic works into a broad range of home decor and decorative
products. These efforts have broadened public awareness of his art and
increased his name recognition throughout the United States and have helped
make him one of America's best-loved painters of country Americana themes.
For more information
about licensing Joseph Holodook's artistic works for your products, please contact
Lance J. Klass at Porterfield's, (800) 660-8345, or email
Porterfield's now.