Art Chartow
b. 1951, New York City, NY
Art Chartow’s current work focuses on the structures and artifacts of heavy industry that have shaped the American landscape. Power stations, factories, steel mills and infrastructure represent strength, industrial might, the ability to vanquish nature. Yet all such structures are, like anything else in this world, ephemeral, transitory, vulnerable to the vagaries of global economics and technological progress. These places are strange, sinister and forbidding; beautiful, fragile, sometimes abandoned and decaying. Such landscapes speak of loss, transience, the passage of time and the brave futility of human endeavor when set against the inevitability of change.
Coal Yard, South Branch Chicago River
oil on panel
24 x 48 inches
Price: 4,300.
[This scene is from the Loomis St. bridge over the South Branch Chicago River.]
Protected Area
oil on panel
19 x 24 inches
Price: 2,700.
US Steel installation on Zug Island
Double Overtime Shift
oil on canvas
22 x 44 inches
Price: 4,000.
Employee parking on Hastings Street in Detroit; as seen on a Sunday morning, so hopefully these workers are making double-time.
Twilight in the Wilderness
oil on canvas
36 x 58 inches
SOLD
The Mittal Steel Works in the Flats, Cleveland Ohio. Shortly after I visited this location, I was stopped by their security and escorted off the property. The title is an homage to another, much different "Twilight in the Wilderness" by Frederic Church which resides in the Cleveland Museum of Art.
South Branch Chicago River
oil on panel
24 x 32 inches
SOLD
[A view of the Chicago River from the Loomis Ave. bridge.]