Jenness Cortez Fine Art

Jenness Cortez Fine Art http://www.perlmuttergallery.com For twenty years (1977-1996), she skillfully portrayed horses--most notably, thoroughbred racehorses.

Jenness Cortez
Master American Realist

Jenness Cortez was born in Indiana and as a teenager studied with the classically trained Dutch painter Antonius Raemaekers. She further developed her solid fine arts background as a graduate of the Herron School of Art in Indianapolis and student of Arnold Blanch at the Art Students League of New York. Early in her career she worked as an editorial illustra

tor, then returned to her love of painting, with animals as her primary subject matter. In the mid-1990s a growing interest in again broadening the challenges of her work inspired Cortez to move from horses to landscapes, then to cityscapes and at last to interiors and still life painting where her focus remains today. Since 2003 the "Homage to the Creative Spirit" series has been her primary mode of expression. She continues to produce these superbly conceived and executed images. Each of her works touches upon important questions about the nature of painting and the significance of art objects, and presents subtle shades of meaning that invite contemplation. The artist has been exhibiting in New York since 1975 and has had more than 40 solo shows there and in Florida, California, Maryland and Virginia. Her work is in numerous public and private collections including those of the New York State Museum, Skidmore College, SUNY Empire State College, Presidents Ronald Reagan and Bill Clinton, and HRH Queen Elizabeth, II. Jenness Cortez lives and works in rural upstate New York with her husband, educator, author and founder of the American Meditation Institute, Leonard Perlmutter. Museum Exhibitions
Waterford Museum, Waterford, NY
NY Historical Society, New York, NY
Waterford Museum, Waterford, NY
Schenectady Museum, Schenectady, NY
Albany Institute of History and Art, Albany NY, A PBS Exhibition
Burroughs Chapin Museum, Myrtle Beach, SC
New York State Museum, Albany, NY (Permanent collection)

My painting, "Homage to Sargent," honors the work of the great portrait painter, John Singer Sargent. In it I focus as m...
01/04/2021

My painting, "Homage to Sargent," honors the work of the great portrait painter, John Singer Sargent. In it I focus as much on the theme of girlhood as on the life and work of the artist. Join me as I look at both of these subjects and explain how they interact in my painting. View episode 12 featuring "Demystifying the Masters" at https://bit.ly/2GQ1xbm

After you watch this segment, please take time to view the other interesting episodes in my “Demystifying the Masters” series in which I honor and discuss the works of many wonderful painters including , and .

More paintings at www.jennesscortez.com

If you were unable to attend last Sunday's presentation, I will be holding one more exhibition online this year. Please ...
12/04/2020

If you were unable to attend last Sunday's presentation, I will be holding one more exhibition online this year. Please join this Sunday, December 6, 2020 at 7pm ET/4pm PT RSVP at bit.ly/3lNgbQ9 The paintings I'll present at this special show relate to traditional, contemporary and western art, and include a new series of New York City paintings. Some of the pieces will surprise you, and I hope all will delight you. When we're together on Zoom, I will share interesting thoughts on each of my paintings as I discuss their back stories and their journeys to completion. Through this experience, you'll also gain greater insight into the lives and careers of many important painters including and . Please share this invitation with your friends or anyone you feel may be interested in attending.
To see more of my paintings, go to www.jennesscortez.com

Don't forget to sign up for this free event!Please join me for this Private Online Exhibition on Sunday, November 29, 20...
11/28/2020

Don't forget to sign up for this free event!
Please join me for this Private Online Exhibition on Sunday, November 29, 2020 at 7pm ET/4pm PT RSVP at bit.ly/3lNgbQ9 The paintings I'll present at this special show relate to traditional, contemporary and western art, and include a new series of New York City paintings. Some of the pieces will surprise you, and I hope all will delight you. When we're together on Zoom, I will share interesting thoughts on each of my paintings as I discuss their back stories and their journeys to completion. Through this experience, you'll also gain greater insight into the lives and careers of many important painters including and . Please share this invitation with your friends or anyone you feel may be interested in attending.
To see more of my paintings, go to www.jennesscortez.com

Please join me for this Private Online Exhibition on Sunday, November 29, 2020 at 7pm ET/4pm PT RSVP at bit.ly/3lNgbQ9  ...
11/16/2020

Please join me for this Private Online Exhibition on Sunday, November 29, 2020 at 7pm ET/4pm PT RSVP at bit.ly/3lNgbQ9 The paintings I'll present at this special show relate to traditional, contemporary and western art, and include a new series of New York City paintings. Some of the pieces will surprise you, and I hope all will delight you. When we're together on Zoom, I will share interesting thoughts on each of my paintings as I discuss their back stories and their journeys to completion. Through this experience, you'll also gain greater insight into the lives and careers of many important painters including and . Please share this invitation with your friends or anyone you feel may be interested in attending.
To see more of my paintings, go to www.jennesscortez.com

Pierre-Auguste Renoir’s, “Luncheon of the Boating Party” is a celebration of a real life phenomenon. In 1881, Renoir was...
11/13/2020

Pierre-Auguste Renoir’s, “Luncheon of the Boating Party” is a celebration of a real life phenomenon. In 1881, Renoir was part of a group of young artists and writers who lived, worked and played in the suburbs of Paris. He chose one of their favorite gathering spots, the balcony of the Maison Fournaise––a hotel on the river Seine––to host his imagined luncheon. View episode 11 Renior "Demystifying the Masters" at https://bit.ly/2GQ1xbm

After you watch this segment, please take time to view the other interesting episodes in my “Demystifying the Masters” series in which I honor and discuss the works of many wonderful painters including , and .

More paintings at www.jennesscortez.com

Have you received my latest newsletter? To make sure you get it via email as soon as it's published, sign up at bit.ly/2...
10/09/2020

Have you received my latest newsletter? To make sure you get it via email as soon as it's published, sign up at bit.ly/2UwXzGo

I worked on creating this painting for over two years. It documents exactly 200 years of the American West’s history––fr...
10/02/2020

I worked on creating this painting for over two years. It documents exactly 200 years of the American West’s history––from 1804 when Jefferson dispatched Lewis and Clark’s expedition, to 2004 and the passing of our first truly western president, Ronald Reagan. After you watch this video segment, please take a few minute to watch the other interesting episodes in my “Demystifying the Masters” series in which I honor more artists of the American West, like and .
View episode 10 Window on the West "Demystifying the Masters" bit.ly/2GjmeMG
More paintings at www.jennesscortez.com

Here’s the first mystery I investigate in explaining my painting “Splash:” What exactly IS David Hockney’s “Paper Pool 1...
09/25/2020

Here’s the first mystery I investigate in explaining my painting “Splash:” What exactly IS David Hockney’s “Paper Pool 18”? Is it a drawing? A painting? A collage? Maybe sculpture? There’s no easy answer now, and the artist had none in 1978 when he completed this mural-size, paintless “painting.” His picture, simultaneously amusing and mysterious in both subject and technique, is composed completely of mounds of colored paper pulp, pressed in 12 separate sheets, which together form one large image. Now, if you’d like to find out why Hockney chose such a cumbersome medium, that seems at first to so at odds with his artistic gifts, please watch this video. View episode 9 Hockney "Demystifying the Masters" bit.ly/33YyTfF
More paintings at www.jennesscortez.com

When forty-five-year-old, unhappily married Picasso saw the seventeen-year-old school girl, Marie-Therese Walter on the ...
09/18/2020

When forty-five-year-old, unhappily married Picasso saw the seventeen-year-old school girl, Marie-Therese Walter on the busy sidewalk outside a Paris department store in January,1927, he stopped her, saying that she had “an interesting face,” and that he wanted to do a portrait of her. She was charmed and flattered, and she said, “Yes.” In that moment one of the most creative muse/artist relationships in the history of modern art was forged, and its impact on Picasso’s work is the subject of my painting. View episode 8 Picasso "Demystifying the Masters" bit.ly/2RFRwQ0
More paintings at www.jennesscortez.com

In considering titles for this Vermeer painting it occurred to me that the real subject of this master’s works is light....
09/12/2020

In considering titles for this Vermeer painting it occurred to me that the real subject of this master’s works is light. In my own painting I wanted to honor his mastery of that light, and did so by choosing to display three examples of it. I present them as objects––three framed paintings against a wall. View episode 7 Vermeer "Demystifying the Masters" bit.ly/32clrVO
More paintings at www.jennesscortez.com

In my painting, “Battle of Brandywine,” I pay tribute to Vanderlyn, but I also pay homage to two great masters of milita...
09/04/2020

In my painting, “Battle of Brandywine,” I pay tribute to Vanderlyn, but I also pay homage to two great masters of military science, to a fabled “father and son” relationship, and to the spirit of the American Revolution. View episode 6 Vanderlyn "Demystifying the Masters" videobit.ly/31VW7Dj
More paintings at www.jennesscortez.com

Andy Warhol predicted that “In the future everyone will be famous for fifteen minutes.” My composition is more about fam...
08/28/2020

Andy Warhol predicted that “In the future everyone will be famous for fifteen minutes.” My composition is more about fame than it is about Andy. View episode 5 Warhol "Demystifying the Masters" video at bit.ly/3aZP5k6
More paintings at www.jennesscortez.com

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60 Garner Road
Averill Park, NY
12018

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