Lowell Nesbitt
1933 - 1993
Nesbitt was
often classified as a Photorealist artist,
though, he fought inclusion with this group
of artists throughout his career. Lowell
Nesbitt quickly established himself as an
artist who could employ both diversity of
technique and subject matter while creating
paintings, drawings and prints using studio
interiors, articles of clothing, piles of
shoes, x-ray figures (Nesbitt was the first
highly recognized artist to use this subject
matter since the artists of the New Zealand
region unknowingly painted "x-ray style"
figures at the early portion of the last
millennium), caverns, ruins, landscapes,
flowers, groupings of fruits and vegetables,
and electronic components (he is credited
for being the first artist to use computer
parts as subject matter for his artwork). He
also used his pet dogs in addition to birds,
reptiles, various mammals and the
Neoclassical facades of SoHo's 19th century
cast-iron buildings and several of
Manhattan's major bridges, in addition to a
number of series in which he incorporated
numerous Victorian staircases, and other
interior scenes as subject matter for his
artwork. His last series in the 1980‘s,
titled the “impossible series” was a
grouping of surrealistic landscapes
paintings and drawings.