Location: United States
Douglas G. Campbell is a painter, printmaker and mixed media artist living in Portland, Oregon. He is Professor Emeritus of art at George Fox University where he had taught painting, printmaking, drawing and art history courses since 1990. He earned his Ph.D. in Comparative Arts at Ohio University and his M.F.A. in Printmaking from Pratt Institute.
His art is in the collections of the Portland Art Museum, Oregon State University, Ashford Pacific and George Fox University and included in numerous private collections. His style, content and choice of media are varied, as he once said “My work ranges from the sublime to the ridiculous; I like to play both sides of the street.”
In addition, his artwork has appeared in or on the cover of a number of publications, including the Mars Hill Review, The Other Side, The Pebble Lake Review, the Indiana Voice Journal and the Intergalactic Poetry Messenger.
He has written about art for Art Journal, Artweek, the Encyclopedia for Twentieth Century Architecture, the Liberal and Fine Arts Review and other publications. His book Seeing: When Art and Faith Intersect was published by University Press of America in 2002, and Parktails was published by Wipf and Stock in 2012.
Since late 2005 I have been painting in a way that I label Photo Expressionism. Typically, I use intense expressionistic or Fauvist colors to heighten the visual intensity of my painted subjects.
I have intentionally chosen traditional subjects such as portrait, landscape and still life settings. I aim to combine the accuracy of photography with the high intensity color sense of expressionism, and encourage viewers to relook at subjects they might not linger on because they are traditional and perhaps un-dramatic without the intense color and value.
It is my belief that everyday occurrences are just as important as those seemingly more singular events on which the media would focus our attention.
With this approach, I hope to relocate our attention on family, friends, or places in a way that revives interest in what we might sometimes label mundane.
2007. 39”x48”. Framed canvas. $2000
2010. 48”x25”. Framed canvas. $1,200
2008. 36" x 38". Framed canvas. $1,150
2005. 35”x56”. Framed canvas. $1600
2005. 35” x 55”. Framed canvas. $1700
2011. 52”x26”. Unframed canvas. $1200
1996. 26"x32”. Framed canvas. $850
1996. 48x36”. Framed canvas. $1400
My recent mixed media artwork are part of a series I call “Gleanings.”
I give the series this title because these artworks incorporate metal washers, nuts, plates and other metal debris that I find along streets and highways as I walk.
My intention is to take what is serendipitous and unplanned (that which is discarded or unintentionally lost) and combine it with the intentional (that which is chosen and intentionally planned or organized).
2000. 30"x24". Framed canvas. $650
2012. 18" x 28". Canvas. $475
2012. 18”x 26”. Canvas. $475
“The Morning Stars Sang Together”
2012. 15 ½”x11”. Unframed. $175
1997. 18" x 14". Framed canvas. $225
I am excited about the possibilities of monoprints and have come to like the similarity between monoprints and humans.
Monoprints, as opposed to monotypes, make use of the same plate for several printings. Humans too, have much in common with each other physically, intellectually, spiritually and emotionally, but they are in no way uniform in the ways they look and act.
Monoprints, though they have an underlying similarity dictated by the execution of the printing plate, can be quite diverse in impact.
A change in paper, color and means of application can lead to subtle or extreme differences, and with each printing of the same plate the nature of the visual dance is altered.
2003. 24"x18". Framed Monoprint. $500
2001. 12"x12". Unframed monoprint. $175.
2007. 10"x7". Framed mixed media. $200
“Jordan River is Deep and Wide”
2002. 24’x18”. Framed monoprint. $650.
2001. 12"x9". Unframed monoprint. $200
1986. 16"X12". Unframed. $250
2001. 25.75"x18.5". Framed oil pastel. $500
“Guide Our Feet Into The Way of Peace”
1994. 18”x 26”. (500 prints available). $15
“Dancing Around The Golden Calf”
1986. 17"x27". Framed original pen & ink. $650
1985. 11'x18.5”. Framed. $175.
2007. 19"x27". Framed. $850
1994. 26"x18". Framed. $850
1984. 19"x26". Framed. $650
My recent mixed media artwork is entitled: After The Storm, which is a continuation of a series from 2012 I called Gleanings.
Gleanings originated from incorporating metal washers, nuts, plates and other metal debris that I found along streets and highways. My intention was to take what was serendipitous and unplanned (discarded or unintentionally lost) and combine it with an intentionally planned and organized theme, of rebuilding and renewing for a greater purpose.
After The Storm picks-up where Gleanings became a life interrupted. It reflects a process of creation that began with no plan and no message, but rather the simple act of sitting in my studio and starting somewhere to see where the journey through art would take me. My purpose was to create; to reengage with my artwork through an intuitive process, and to find my voice through art once again.
The journey through this body of work has given me the desire and inspiration to begin moving towards creating some of my former styles of artwork.
2015. 25”x19”. Mixed media on canvas. $400
2015. 36”x24”. Mixed media on canvas $550
2015. 21”x16”. Mixed media on wood. $400