Raimonds Staprans

Raimonds Staprans

Raimonds Staprans (Latvian: Raimonds Staprāns) is an artist and playwright. Staprans was born in 1926 in Riga, Latvia. He now lives in San Francisco, California with his wife, scientist Ilona Staprāns.[1] He has two daughters, Maretta Staprāns-Barlow and Alda Staprāns-Mednis.

After living in occupied Latvia and in a Displaced Persons camp during World War II, Staprans immigrated to the United States with his family in 1947. He studied art at the University of Washington under Alexander Archipenko and Mark Tobey, then moved to the San Francisco Bay Area to begin graduate studies at the University of California, Berkeley. He studied with Hans Hofmann and Karl Kasten, among others, and graduated with a Masters of Fine Arts in 1954. Staprans began exhibiting his art in the Maxwell Galleries in San Francisco. He currently exhibits at the Hackett | Mill Gallery in San Francisco [2] and at the Peter Mendenhall Gallery in Los Angeles.[3] Many secondary market works are available through ModernArts and ModernSculpture.com as well.[4]

Staprans' work is held in the permanent collections in the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, the San Jose Museum of Art,[5] and the Portland Art Museum, among others. A career retrospective of his art opened at the Pasadena Museum of California Art in March, 2006, was shown at the Hackett-Freedman Gallery [6][7] and traveled to Riga, Latvia where it was exhibited in the Latvian National Museum of Art later that year.

Staprans' skillfully constructed still life and landscape paintings are notable for the artist's sensitive response to light and color. A recent review of his work exhibited in Los Angeles compared the "tasteful seriousness" of his paintings to that of Cézanne.[8] Staprans is said to examine the "architecture" of everyday objects in his art using explosive color and flattened compositions, creating a "tension between representation and abstraction that plays with viewers' expectations."

Staprans is also an accomplished playwright. Most of his plays are set in Latvia during the 20th century. His play "The Freezing" was produced in 1979 by the San Francisco Little Theater and the Latvian National Theater in 1980. His 1989 play, "Four Days in June", depicted the Soviet occupation of Latvia in 1940. It was performed in Riga to more than 100 sold-out audiences, and later won first prize in the Baltic Theatre Festival. "Four Days in June" is regarded as having played an integral part in the pro-democracy movement in Latvia during the momentous changes following the end of the Soviet Union.

In 2003, Staprans was awarded Latvia's highest civilian honor, the Order of the Three Stars, the Latvian equivalent of the United States Presidential Medal of Freedom.

An extensive interview with Raimonds Staprans was conducted by the Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution, by Paul Karlstrom in 1997.[9] Karlstrom later published a fully illustrated book entitled "Raimonds Staprans: Art of Tranquility and Turbulence".[10]

References

  1. "Journal of the American Heart Association" (pdf). American Heart Association. Retrieved 2008-12-22.
  2. "Raimonds Staprans, Recent Paintings". Hackett-Freedman Gallery. Retrieved 2008-12-22.
  3. "Raimons Staprans". Peter Mendenhall Gallery. Retrieved 2008-12-22.
  4. "Raimonds Staprans, Recent Paintings". ModernArts & ModernSculpture.com. Retrieved 2016-05-01.
  5. "Raimonds Staprans". San Jose Museum of Art. Archived from the original on May 22, 2008. Retrieved 2008-12-22.
  6. "Raimonds Staprans, Fifty Years". Hackett-Freedman Gallery. Retrieved 2008-12-22.
  7. Kenneth Baker (2006-07-29). "Anxiety invades calm of Staprans' still lifes, abstract work". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved 2008-12-22.
  8. David Pagel (2008-12-18). "Review: Raimonds Staprans at Peter Mendenhall Gallery". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2008-12-22.
  9. Paul Karlstrom (1997-08-14). "Oral history interview with Raimonds Staprans, 1997 Aug 14-Sep". Archives of American Art. Smithsonian Institution. Retrieved 2008-12-22.
  10. "Art Books" (pdf). University of Washington Press. Retrieved 2008-12-22.

Further reading

Selected exhibitions

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