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Through the Eyes of An Artist

photo of Margaret Stanton

Since her birth in Cleveland, Ohio on August 4, 1960, Margaret Stanton has viewed the world through the eyes of a true artist . . and has lived her life accordingly.

Raised one of six singing and performing children of Eileen and Don Stanton in Albuquerque, New Mexico, Margaret, know to all as Peggy, was immersed in that city’s rich art and musical culture from a young age, she first bloomed both on and off the stage at numerous successful Civic Light Opera and Old Town Studios Theatre productions. Her passion for color began right there on and behind the sets of these theatrical productions, along with the vision and the confidence to paint her first mural during High School.

 
   
Margaret served for several years as Art Director for her family’s Stanton Creative Services, Inc. -- a full-service advertising, public relations and video production agency. – Margaret’s creative passion was to paint. Following that passion, in 1983 she moved to San Diego to study and work with one of that city’s finest and best known professional artists – Lawrence Mansker. 
 
     
 

In the ten years that followed, Stanton produced original oils and watercolors for Art Consultants, Collectors and Interior Designers.

Today, her commissioned paintings and murals can be seen in homes, hospitals, libraries, hotels, restaurants, office buildings, airports and other public spaces throughout the United States.

Image
 
     
   
San Diego County Law Library 1988
 
       
       
 
Never Imitate

Stanton's first exhibition– created in conjunction with sculptures by renowned artist Doran Rosenthal for the very first San Diego ArtWalk -- featured twelve large oil paintings.  At first glance these were simply huge desert landscapes . . but a closer look revealed a surrealistic interior level that incorporated imaginative and unique sub-themes.

 

The Stanton/Rosenthal Exhibition was photographed and written up by the local news media -- and as a result, Stanton's desert paintings
continued to sell well through a Santa Fe Gallery for several years.
 
       
       
       
 

Stanton's permanent move to Hawaii in 1993 seemed to mark a turning  point for the artist. All of her artwork from that point on had a new look. 


Both her inspiration and her methods were changing. First, the transition was propelled by her visits to Europe, where she and her husband, a native of Prague, visited museums and galleries. For the first time her life, Stanton was able to see in person countless masterpieces from impressionism - Cezanne to Picasso to Matisse - and the experience had a profound impact on her. Secondly, Stanton  began painting with acrylics. So, not only was she looking for new pictorial avenues to explore, but she was discovering new ways of painting in the new medium.

The Eye of an Artist
 
   
30" x 40" Oils 1988
 
       
       
 
Hospital Mural

For a while, however, Stanton continued to paint in a variant of realism, a style that allowed her to achieve a lot of success.

For instance, in the commissioned murals she painted at that time, her own personal brand of realism continued to exhibit some traces of
surrealism, wherein the subjects were being pulled together, arranged into a scene, and altered to heighten a certain presence or perspective.
However, now there was an added vivacity and sparkle of color, influenced by the impressionistic masterpieces she had just seen.

 
 
8ft. x 36ft. Mural, Hilo Hospital 1998
   
       
       
  In the above 1998 painting titled "Hamakua Coast", the land ocean and sky all seem to be moving together in an energetic swirl of exciting, layered brushwork - clearly impressionistic. The public responded to the enlivened look of this painting with a "People"s Choice" award at the Waikaloa Center's annual juried exhibition
Hamakua Coast
 
   
36" x 48" Oil 1998
 
       
       
 
Stanton
At that time, Stanton began spending entire summers in Europe developing a looser painting style in the open air in Prague and around Macha's
Lake in northwest Bohemia. The unpredictability of the new medium and the challenge of the open air tested Stanton's abilities, and for a few years she worked to develop her methods. The greatest influence on Stanton's recent work was a visit to the Blue Rider's Exhibit in Munich in 2001. Simple, yet brilliantly colored impressions of village life truly impressed the artist.
 
       
       
 

Through their influence, the paintings of Margaret Stanton were now more dazzling in their use of primary colors; red, yellow and blue. These
colors, the colors of Kandinski, Gabriele Munter, Franz Marc, and the American Artist Alfred Maurer, are evident in the 2004 seascapes by Stanton.

A discussion of color can be found in the  detailed description for "Red Road" in Stanton's Island Seascape Gallery

Red Road
 
       
       
       
 
Onomea Bay
Stanton's seascapes incorporate these primary colors with a highly charged surface; far different from the smoother, tighter surfaces of her
earlier work. Stanton's method, now, was to start each painting in the open air, and then work on each one in the studio, giving each painting a
chance to develop extremely brilliant color and a highly expressive surface.  As a result of the innumerable touches and layers of paint on the
surface, these paintings have a far larger internal scale, a larger sense of size than their 16" x 20" dimensions would indicate. The depth of the
temperature felt and expansiveness of the atmosphere sensed in these paintings owes just as much to the interesting surface treatment as it
does to the color.
 
       
 

Since 2005 Margaret Stanton's work has been represented by The Harbor Gallery on the northern Kona coast of the Big Island with a featured exhibition that same year. 

As an active member of the East Hawaii Cultural Center, Margaret's Art is  frequently exhibited in juried shows both there and at the Wailoa Center in Hilo, Hawaii. All of Margaret's work is presently showing at HawaiiArt.com,
Margaretstanton.com and numerous Art directories on the World Wide Web.
In pursuing her new way of painting as a colorist working in a new medium, Stanton remains involved in the act of drawing.

However, it is her work in acrylics that defines the characteristics of her recent paintings and a more modern art. 

  Waterfall montage