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Richard T Scott
The Sophist Oil on Linen, 17" x 20", Painting by Richard T Scott
Born1980 (age 43–44)
Stone Mountain, GA, United States
NationalityAmerican
EducationUniversity of Georgia
New York Academy of Art
Odd Nerdrum
Known forPainting, Numismatics
Patron(s)Philip Anschutz, Morad El Hattab, Alan Howarth, Baron Howarth of Newport, Richard Epes[1] and Robert C. Kennedy Ph.D
Websitehttp://www.richardtscottart.com

Richard T. Scott (born 1980) is an American history painter and writer living and working in the Hudson Valley, New York. His paintings are in the permanent collections of museums in North America and Europe. He was formerly a member of the Artistic Infusion Program, a group of artists and illustrators contracted to design coins and Congressional Medals for the United States Mint.[2]

Biography[edit]

Scott pursued a BFA in painting in the Lamar Dodd School of Art at the University of Georgia, followed by an MFA in painting from the New York Academy of Art. After graduation he worked for two years as a painter for Jeff Koons, then three years as a studio assistant to Odd Nerdrum in Norway and Paris, France. Scott worked for the United States Mint from 2014-2018.[3]

Art career[edit]

Scott is known for his classically influenced history paintings and narrative portraits.[4] His current body of work explores the historical origins and legacy of systemic and social discrimination as well as gun violence in American Culture.[5] The first major piece in the series "When the Man Comes Around" is in the permanent collection of the Georgia Museum of Art.[6] His largest work to date, "Hearts of Men" was unveiled at Paul Booth Gallery in New York City August 2016. His second major work "New Amsterdam", which traces the legacy of slavery in America from the Dutch settlers to mass incarceration, was unveiled at Spalding Nix Fine Art in Atlanta, GA in February 2018.[7]

Donald Kuspit has said that "Adam Miller, David Molesky and Richard T. Scott are what I have called New Old Masters; that is, they use Old Master styles to mediate modern reality and to give emotional and cognitive depth to events that the mass media would treat superficially (one more momentarily hot news story, here today, gone tomorrow)". [8]

Scott is a contributing author to The Nerdrum School, a collection of paintings and essays by students of Odd Nerdrum.[9] Scott is a proponent of an alternative philosophical superstructure for figurative painting, which he calls a Post-contemporary paradigm, separate from that of the Contemporary Art world.[10]

Scott has designed coins for the United States Mint: notably, the 2016 Fort Moultrie quarter.[11] as well as the private American Mint. Richard Scott was also the first to design an African American Liberty for the U.S. Mint's 2015 High Relief coin.[12]

In 2010, Scott told the New York Times that Facebook was censoring classical paintings of nudes, which had been deleted from the accounts of many painters as well as established institutions such as the New York Academy of Art.[13]

Scott's work was included the book Kitsch More than Art.[14]

Collections[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "The Augusta Chronicle: Local & World News, Sports & Entertainment in Augusta, GA". The Augusta Chronicle.
  2. ^ [1] Coin World, May 22, 2014.
  3. ^ [2] Newington Cropsey Cultural Studies Foundation, September 2017.
  4. ^ [url=http://www.rfi.fr/en/culture/20111001-oh-mirror-exhibition] Radio France International, Jan 10, 2011
  5. ^ [cite web|url=https://combustus.com/boulevard-broken-dreams-richard-t-scott-paints-americas-identity-crisis%7Ctitle=Boulevard of Broken Dreams, Combustus Magazine
  6. ^ arnoldk (4 August 2016). "Georgia Museum of Art Acquires Painting from Dodd Alum".
  7. ^ [3], "City Lights", interview by Lois Reitzes, February 14, 2018.
  8. ^ "Realism Redivivus And Universal".
  9. ^ [The Nerdrum School] Huffington Post [4]
  10. ^ Michael Klein [5], [American Painting Video Magazine] Volume II, Winter 2012.
  11. ^ [6] Coin News, Nov 14, 2016
  12. ^ [7] Coinworld, Jan 26, 2015
  13. ^ Miguel Helft [8] The New York Times, Feb 2011.
  14. ^ [Kitsch: More than Art] Schibsted Forlag, September 30, 2011 [9]

External links[edit]