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Claude Seward new article content ...
Claude Stanley Seward was born in Peoria Illinois. His public school educators recognized his artistic abilities and procured him a scholarship art contest, which he won. As a result, he studied and apprenticed under several notable artists and developed a critically acclaimed style of geometry, space, philosophy and logic using color, shapes and the human form. His works have been displayed at the Lincoln Center and colleges across the United States.
He has 2 most recent works. One is displayed as a fine addition to the arts society and city government depicting prominent religious and stately buildings of Schenectady at the State Street Presbyterian Church. The other is a complicated intricate design for the magnanimous Edison Company; a hands on Edison Exploratorium. a museum that allows children to physically explore the ideas behind the basic inventions that we take for granteed every day. Claude Seward's mural depicts Edison at the center of a wheel of invention, an illustrates the impact on inventors, spokes on the hub of a wheel, and all of the following inventions that were made possible with the basis of Edison's primary discoveries.
Claude Seward murals are not much different than Edison, Van Gogh or Mark Twains observations and artistry. He is a master of Art history and understanding of color and the dynamics of painting. His own paintings, regardless of the mastery with which he painted them, are dwarfed by the genius or madness that is his mind; his brush becomes a samurai's sword. His creation is definitively born apart of those who call themselves artists and are hacks at best!
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