Office: FAB 317 | Phone: (308) 865-8084 | Email: fronczakje1@nextathai.com
In August 2001 my wife Janice, our young son Gabe, and I moved from Chesterfield County, Virginia. The reason for the move was Janice’s new teaching position in the Theatre Program at the University of Nebraska, Kearney. Prior to moving to Virginia in 1984, and up until about 1989, I was devoted to exclusively abstraction, participating in the occasional exhibition in Richmond. In 1989 I began developing a series of realistic oil paintings of the James River, which eventually segued into highly refined architectural paintings that focused on the complex overlay reflections in store front windows. By the time my family and I moved to Kearney, I had established a meaningful reputation among corporate and private collectors in Richmond.
In Nebraska, between 2002 and 2006, I worked as Preparator for the Museum of Nebraska Art, and was an adjunct instructor in the Art Department at the University of Nebraska, Kearney. In 2006 I acquired the position of Lecturer and Director of the Walker Art Gallery in the 体育菠菜大平台 Department of Art and Design, subsequently promoted to Senior Lecturer in 2012.
Since 2001 I divide my time and energies more equally between (for lack of a better term) abstract work and the sort of highly realistic work I created in Virginia.
Education:
M.F.A. (Painting) Miami University, Oxford, OH 1975
B.A. (Printmaking) California State University, Stanislaus,Turlock, CA 1973
Course:
Drawing I, Color & Design, Art Appreciation, Independent Problems Painting, Senior Project, BA Studio, Senior Project, BA Art Education, Senior Project, BFA Studio, Painting.
Teaching Experience:
Museum and Gallery Experience:
University Service:
Professional
John Fronczak sample artworks
Statement:
“Image making for me is not only a means of negotiating life so that it is made coherent and intelligible, but also a refuge. Painting is an act of faith insofar as it is an exploration of my own sense of fascination and compulsion in the hope that meaningful provocations result.”