Charles Huckeba is a contemporary painter with a fine arts degree and graduate study from the University of California at Santa Barbara, where he studied under an outstanding faculty of contemporary artists such as Larry Rivers and Irma Cavat. His influences are varied, including Paul Klee, Jean Dubuffet, Adolf Gotlieb, Cy Twombly, Wassily Kandinski and Joan Miro. Charles and his wife, Jill, have spent years exploring and recording the rich lode of prehistoric pictographs and petroglyphs found in the Western United States Great Basin.
In 1993, Huckeba began combining and integrating various painting techniques developed from his academic foundation to render rock art designs he had seen into a contemporary presentation. The results are works held in corporate collections of The University of Northern Arizona, The University of California at Santa Barbara Art Museum, The CEU Prehistoric Museum, and The Museum of the San Rafael. His abstract contemporary art is also shown in several fine art galleries in Arizona. Huckeba’s paintings are held by numerous private collectors throughout the United States, England and France, including actress Lilly Tomlin and archaeologist and writer, David S. Whitley, Ph.D.
Huckeba states, “Rock art is the first American abstract art. What brings a petroglyph to life is the stone beneath the patina (a varnish created by the desert heat and elements over thousands of years.) As the surface patina of the rock is removed, the interior is exposed. This is how we see the prehistoric artist’s mark. My paint application is multi-layered and textural. The image elements are scratched, etched and scoured under and over the stratas of pigment much as the numerous superimpositions found in petroglyphs. My goal is to build a link between contemporary and prehistoric art.
Monday, Nov 25, 2024 at 8:30 a.m. MST
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Monday, Nov 25, 2024 at 9:00 a.m. MST
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Monday, Nov 25, 2024 at 9:00 a.m. MST
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