Dennis Sheehan

Works
  • Dennis Sheehan, 103513
    Dennis Sheehan
    103513
    10x10
    Oil
  • Dennis Sheehan, 103518
    Dennis Sheehan
    103518
    10x10
    Oil
  • Dennis Sheehan, 103529
    Dennis Sheehan
    103529
    10x10
    Oil
  • Dennis Sheehan, 180718002
    Dennis Sheehan
    180718002
    40x40
    Oil
  • Dennis Sheehan, Before the Last Light
    Dennis Sheehan
    Before the Last Light
    16x20
    Oil
  • Dennis Sheehan, Fall Twilight
    Dennis Sheehan
    Fall Twilight
    30x20
    Oil
  • Dennis Sheehan, Last Light Tiger Sky
    Dennis Sheehan
    Last Light Tiger Sky
    40x20
    Oil
  • Dennis Sheehan, Serene Meadow
    Dennis Sheehan
    Serene Meadow
    36x48
    Oil
  • Dennis Sheehan, Serene Snow
    Dennis Sheehan
    Serene Snow
    30x40
    Oil
  • Dennis Sheehan, Untitled 10158
    Dennis Sheehan
    Untitled 10158
    30x30
    Oil
  • Dennis Sheehan, Untitled 10318
    Dennis Sheehan
    Untitled 10318
    24x36
    Oil
  • Dennis Sheehan, Untitled 103496
    Dennis Sheehan
    Untitled 103496
    30x40
    Oil
  • Dennis Sheehan, Untitled 103504
    Dennis Sheehan
    Untitled 103504
    30x40
    Oil
  • Dennis Sheehan, Untitled 19010201
    Dennis Sheehan
    Untitled 19010201
    30x20
    Oil
  • Dennis Sheehan, Untitled 20010908
    Dennis Sheehan
    Untitled 20010908
    26x36
    Oil
  • Dennis Sheehan, Untitled A10039
    Dennis Sheehan
    Untitled A10039
    18x24
    Oil
  • Dennis Sheehan, Untitled A255
    Dennis Sheehan
    Untitled A255
    28x41
    Oil
Biography

Dennis Sheehan was born in Boston in 1950, has works in major public & private collections, including the White House. Sheehan paints in the Barbizon mode with remarkable authority & faithful adherence to his 19th century precursors. In the tradition of the tonalist painters, Sheehan creates landscapes of mood, affected by nature's changing seasons. “Today, in a cultural firmament that has been defined as Postmodern, a new generation of American painters is returning to the old landscape seeking a renewed vision. The cultural strategies that they employ are as diverse as any from the past; in most cases, these painters consciously strive to enter into a dialogue with the history of the White Mountains art. Their work, grounded in a sophisticated appreciation of what has come before, is in many cases deliberately discursive with a tradition that has been all but erased twice by historical and cultural forces.” The contemporary work of Dennis Sheehan, for example, affords a great nineteenth-century-predecessor George Inness. Like Inness, whose influence is consciously acknowledged, Sheehan employs the dark palette and thickly pigmented surfaces of the French Barbizon School. Maintaining a muted tonalist chromatic scheme, Sheehan, like Inness before him, has temerity to eschew picturesque scenery-his Conway Meadows avoids any reference to the traditional climax view of Mount Washington—in the interest of evoking atmospherics and the appearance of the natural world as it is observed. Optical truth combined with poetic resonance—the search for some ineffable quality of nature beyond words –constitutes the probity of his art. Yet, also like Inness, Sheehan’s paintings are produced in the studio. His work is the product of the conscious distillation of prior imagery ranging from the American Barbizon to the abstractions of Franz Kline. For all of the references to history—and there are multiple—there is no mistaking the artist’s debt to the more recent past. Without the legacy of action painting, Sheehan’s art would be less forceful and evocative than it is.