Michael Parkes
Michael Parkes had his first one-man show at Steltman
Galleries back in 1977.
Steltman Galleries made one-man exhibitions of Michael Parkes
at Basel Art in Switzerland, Art Chicago,
Art Fair NY, Frankfurt Bookfair, Amsterdam Art Fair, Tefaf Art
and Antiques Fair Maastricht and numerous exhibitions in
their galleries in Amsterdam and New York from 1977 onwards.

Michael Parkes is America's leading Magic Realist
painter and printmaker.
Though he studied graphic art and painting at the University of
Kansas, his unique style evolved very much in isolation, after
a period in which he gave up the practice of art altogether and
went off to India in search of philosophical illumination: born
in 1944, he was very much of the hippie generation.
Earlier on, he had painted in the generally Abstract Expressionist style
normal among his teachers, but after his pause for reflection he began to draw and paint in
a meticulous style of detailed representation which would enable him to give
full expression to his inner world of images.
The style was in principle realistic, the subject matter magical, and Magic Realism
has characterised his work ever since.
He has studied deeply in esoteric doctrine of the East and the West, and his imagery
is drawn from a range of wisdoms including the Cabalistic and the Tantric, but embodied in forms
from his own imagination which are immediately accessible. Here strange beasts encounter mysterious
winged women, good and evil fight out their immemorial conflict (though who can be perfectly
sure which is which?), and in this weightless environment worlds are unmade and remade
nearer to the heart's desire.
Even as a student Parkes was fascinated by various graphic processes, and in recent years he
has become highly proficient in the difficult medium of the colour stone lithograph.
John Russell Taylor, art critic for The London Times
(Author of the book: Michael Parkes
Stone Lithographs - Bronze Sculptures)
Illustrations from the book :
'Michael Parkes Stone Lithographs & Bronze Sculptures 1982-1996'
Published by Steltman Galleries in 1996.