July, August and September exhibit of 27 Veteran Artists at Grand Junction City Hall. Opening Reception July 10, 5:30 pm
July 1 thru July 28 solo exhibition "Life on Canvas" by Veteran Artist Bob Maurer
July 3, First Friday Art Walk with Featured Artist Bob Maurer, Downtown Grand Junction at the Shade Tree, 618 Main Street, 5 to 8 pm.
July 3rd thru 17th - Watercolor and Drawing Classes with Bob Maurer
3 day and 5 day workshops - 3 hours per day, mornings, afternoons or evenings.
Born in Brooklyn, NY, Bob received formal art training at
Cooper Union and the School of Visual Arts in New York. While there, he
met the love of his life, a fashion illustrator, and married her 3 1/2 weeks later.
In 1959, Bob and Lydia moved to Denver, Colorado to start a family that would
eventually include 4 children. While in Denver, Bob worked as art director for
ABC TV. He later opened Studio 10, a graphic design company that counted
Pepsi among its clients. Avid campers, they decided to move to the foothills of
Boulder, where Bob became a graphics designer for the National Center of
Atmospheric Research.
In 1972 the call of the mountains grew stronger, and Bob and
Lydia moved to Lake City, a small town high in the San Juan Range. For
the first time Bob and Lydia worked together daily as fine artists. They
bought a 100 year old cabin and hand built an art gallery that also housed
their studio and print shop. After many years in this rustic mountain town,
Bob and Lydia moved to Grand Junction to open an art school and Gallery.
In 1985, after the oil shale industry and the city's economy collapsed, they
moved to The Old Chicken Farm Art Center in San Angelo, Texas. Here Bob
and Lydia continued to develop their craft painting and teaching classes at the
art center and on the local public television station.
In 1986, Bob took the plunge into computer design with the
purchase of his first computer, an Apple Mac Plus. Although they enjoyed
a great deal of success in San Angelo, Bob and Lydia missed the
mountains. In 1990, they moved back to Colorado and settled in Gunnison
where they opened a studio and small gallery. They also joined the
Paragon Gallery in Crested Butte, a 14 member cooperative where artists exhibit
their artwork and give back to the community by donating their time and portion
of their profit.
In 2007, Bob's life as a husband and artists took another
unexpected turn when he said goodbye to his wife, partner and creative muse
after 49 years of marriage. Lydia had only recently been diagnosed and
treated for cancer. Her memory and life continue to inspire and inform
his work. During his long career, Bob has been prolific in both quality
and quantity of his work. He has completed more than 1200 oil and
watercolor paintings, many of which have placed first in art shows and
competitions.
His work has been shown in the Denver Art Museum, the
Smithsonian, and in private and corporate collections throughout the United
States and abroad. In 2006, Bob's watercolor "Wildflower
Medley" was selected as the official poster design for the annual Crested
Butte Wildflower Festival. In 2011, Bob with the aid of Ivy McNulty was
instrumental in starting the local co-op 'Gallery 126' on Main Street, Gunnison.
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