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home | gallery | Paul McMillan



The Alchemist
Paul McMillan



Passionate Pallette
Paul McMillan




Dia De Los Muertos
Paul McMillan




Night Roads
Paul McMillan




Fire in the Sky
Paul McMillan

A bit about Paul: Born in Kansas in 1954, Paul was raised in Texas. Paul's professional art career began in the late 1970s in central Texas. Inspired by the beauty of the Southwest, Paul moved to Taos, New Mexico in 1988 to explore the region's artistic possibilities. Paul took an apartment amongst fellow working artists on Martyr's Lane in the historic district of Taos in 1989, where he lived and worked for ten years. He was the last painter to leave Martyr's Lane in August of 1999. Paul subsequently lived in La Mesilla, New Mexico; Bellefonte, Pennsylvania, and Glen Rose, Texas before moving to Ithaca, New York and starting the McMillan Art Center. Paul now lives in the beautiful city of Pittsburgh PA.

Artist Statement: I want my artwork to reveal the joy of living. I work in a range of styles and believe that every genre exposes aspects of the human experience.

Landscapes show the generous beauty of the planet's ability to give life. Still life paintings tell a story through objects, and when written music and lyrics are added, chosen objects gain their own voice. Working in the surreal genre allows the privilege of lifting the surface to study the subjective reality beneath. In portraiture and figurative work, the human form becomes a window to the individual spirit. Nocturnes reveal the serenity and mystory of the nighttime world.

My process involves attention to detail and technique. My wet-into-wet oil painting technique with virtually no glazing allows detail and softness in the image and a smooth, buttery surface showing a little impasto where appropriate. I make my own medium from stand oil blended with a small amount of beeswax and mastic resin. My works are finished to protect the surfaces of the artwork without altering the texture or sheen of the image. I feel strongly about the merits of using quality materials and proven techniques in the pursuit of lasting and durable artwork.

When I was five I knew I wanted to be an artist, at the age of fifty-seven when this statement was written I have accomplished hundreds of sculptures, some five-hundred paintings and several hundred miniatures, twenty songs, thirty-ish poems, and a two-hundred page book. Yes at this point I am habitual regarding making art.