Stephen Duren: A Life of Painting

Haas Center for Performing Arts Gallery (PAC 1121), Allendale Campus
August 28 - November 3, 2023
Reception: Thursday, September 14, 4:30-6:30pm

An Evening with Stephen Duren: Monday, October 30, 5-7pm

Hours:
Monday - 10am-5pm, Tuesday - 10am-5pm, Wednesday - 10am-5pm, Thursday - 10am-7pm, Friday - 10am-5pm   
Closed: September 4, 2023 (Labor Day)

Parking:
Guests and visitors may utilize the pay-to-park areas marked in green on the campus maps. Please use LOT H2 on the Allendale campus, across the street from the Haas Center for Performing Arts. When parking in pay-to-park, we highly recommend using ParkMobile. ADA parking is available in the KC LOT.  Large groups, please get in touch with the gallery for parking passes.

Self Portrait of Stephen Duren

Stephen Duren
Self, 1995
oil on canvas
Collection of the Artist

Stephen Duren was born in 1948 in Fairfield, a community set amidst the Coastal Ranges of California and located halfway between San Francisco and Sacramento. Growing up he would spend time on his grandfather’s ranch in nearby Vacaville, slowly being wooed by the light and landscape of the foothills. His time alone with the land would prove to be both formative and foundational in his approach to art and life. It drove him to paint outdoors, to seek solace from loneliness in nature, and to filter much of his painting through the land and amber light of Northern California.

At age 14, inspired by his uncle’s artwork that hung on the walls of his grandfather’s home, Duren began to paint and has never stopped. After high school he joined the Navy, serving a four-year tour and eventually becoming a staff artist and broadcast journalist. He returned home in 1972 and completed degrees at the San Francisco Art Institute and Sacramento State University, often eschewing the classroom and instruction for the outdoors. In 1978 he moved to West Michigan and began teaching, an endeavor that lasted six years before the lure of full-time painting drew him back into the field.

Sixty years have passed since Duren first took up a paintbrush. During this time, his work has experienced a push and pull between realism and abstraction, resulting in an evolving stylistic approach. Some of his works are direct renderings of nature from his experience painting plein-air (outdoors), while others are reductions of natural and artificial spaces into forms, lines, and colors. Stephen Duren: A Life of Painting explores this evolution, his extensive career, and his deep connection to the landscape in California, Michigan, and abroad. Organized by the Grand Valley State University Art Gallery and hosted concurrently with the Dennos Museum Center, the exhibition draws from several public and private collections. Between both venues, the exhibition consists of over 90 works of art, including landscapes, abstractions, self-portraits, still lifes, allegories, sketches, prints, and plein-air pieces.

Untitled Landscape

Untitled Landscape (G407833)
1998
oil on canvas
Collection of Steelcase Inc.

California Hills

West of Tomales, California
2006
oil on board
Collection of Jim and Marie Preston

Orchard in Fog

Orchard in Fog, California
2006
oil on board
Collection of the Artist

Figure with bird

Figure with Bird
1988
oil on canvas
Collection of Joan DuBois

Stephen Duren hoping a fence

Stephen Duren fence hopping in California, 1972

Artist Statement

My little granddaughter once asked, "Why do you have a pencil here?" I responded, "Why do you think I have a pencil here?" She replied, "Because you want to see what it does to the paper." After a pause, I said, "Exactly."

Maddie's refreshing perspective on the purpose of a pencil pretty much describes how I work.  I make a mark and watch to see what it does to the paper (or canvas), similar to the approach of the abstract expressionists of the 1940s and 1950s.  I rarely know a painting's end until I get there.

My work does not evoke strong insights into the human condition or display uncommon originality.  Rather, it falls into a category that the iconic critic Robert Hughes described as "…distinct from propaganda, complaint or 'cutting edge' ephemera."  

I am a late bloomer.  After a stint in the Navy, I enrolled at the San Francisco Art Institute and did not begin to mature as a painter until my early 40s.  Except for a brief cathartic exploration into figurative allegories in the 1980s, my main painting interests have ranged from total abstraction to stylized realism inspired by the landscape. 

I occasionally leave my studio to paint outdoors directly from nature (plein air) and indulge in the romance of impressionistic realism.  The challenge here, of course, is the avoidance of clichés.  How does a painter of nature sidestep visual platitudes?  Does it even matter?  Are we less enriched viewing an image of rolling pastoral fields for the millionth time? 

The paradox is obvious; a cliché points to an essential truth that we want to revisit again and again and then jades us to that truth through its repetition.  Still, I am willing to risk creating a potentially mundane painting in order to enjoy an intimate conversation with nature and immerse myself in the sensuous and mystical ambiance of the outdoors.  

Painting out of the car

Stephen Duren plein-air painting out of the back of his car, 1987

Michigan's Leelanau Peninsula offers me that transcendent conversation.  Its rolling hills are similar to the terrain of my youth in northern California, where roads curved and undulated through wonderfully patterned orchards, vineyards, and cow pastures bathed in amber light.  As a child, those elements of the countryside served as a kind of surrogate parent for me, which might explain why they remain integral to much of my work.

At the time of this writing, I have not picked up a brush since losing my sight in one eye several months ago.  My depth perception and peripheral vision are gone, and I am experiencing hand tremors.  These constraints have me reflecting on the possibility that my best work may be behind me, and at 75, this retrospective exhibition could be my swan song. 

And then I am reminded of the maxim, The greatest roadblock to creativity is the lack of restrictions.  I wonder what Auguste Renoir would have thought about this adage.  For the last 30 years of his life, he suffered from crippling arthritis, forced to paint sitting down while others placed a brush in his gnarled hands.  I suspect he would have preferred to work without these constraints and would have been just as creative.  Me too.

For now, my joy of painting has been replaced with the pleasure of gardening, grandparenting, and working on a book –– mainly a visual memoir that will include numerous paintings not seen in this retrospective.  Maybe as I continue to reflect upon 60 years of painting, my physical restrictions will spark a fresh approach and renewed curiosity about what a pencil can do to paper.  Or brush to canvas. 

- S. Duren

GVSU Art Gallery Exhibition Dates

August 28 - November 3, 2023

Untitled Landscape

Untitled Landscape (620)
2020

oil on paper
Collection of Rosanna and John Nelson
On View: GVSU Art Gallery

Dennos Museum Center Exhibition Dates

September 17, 2023 - January 7, 2024

Untitled Landscape

Untitled Landscape (4519)
2019
oil on canvas
Collection of Julie Duisterhof and Randy Damstra
On view: Dennos Museum Center

Stephen Duren Catalog Cover

Exhibition Catalog

Title: "Stephen Duren: A Life of Painting"
Authors: Joel Zwart, Stephen Duren, Henry Luttikhuizen, Sigrid Danielson, Ellen Adams

Sixty years have passed since Duren first took up a paintbrush. During this time, his work has experienced a push and pull between realism and abstraction, resulting in an evolving stylistic approach. Some of his works are direct renderings of nature from his experience painting plein-air (outdoors), while others are reductions of natural and artificial spaces into forms, lines, and colors. Stephen Duren: A Life of Painting explores this evolution, his extensive career, and his deep connection to the landscape in California, Michigan, and abroad. This 84-page catalog, published in conjunction with the exhibition, includes all the works from both exhibition venues and a number of essays.

View Digital Catalog >>

Stephen Duren at GVSU

We are proud to be the largest public collection of Stephen Duren's work, with over 150 and counting.  To view them and find locations throughout our campus, please visit our online collection of Stephen Duren.

Untitled Landscape

Untitled
1990
oil on canvas
GVSU, 2007.004.1, Anonymous Gift, In Honor of Stephen Duren


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Location

August 28 - November 4, 2023

Haas Center for Performing Arts Gallery (PAC 1121)
Haas Center for Performing Arts, Allendale Campus
1 Campus Dr.
Allendale, MI 49401

Contact

For special accommodation, please call:
(616) 331-3638

For exhibition details and media inquires, please email:
Joel Zwart, Curator of Exhibitions
[email protected]

For learning and engagement opportunities, please email [email protected].



Page last modified September 28, 2023