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Very few artists are as legendary for their studios as for their paintings, but New York artist Hunt Slonem's workspace on 34th Street is a Wunderkammer worth seeing firsthand. Since moving into a ...
Since 1977, the work of American artist Hunt Slonem has been celebrated at more than 350 exhibitions in galleries and museums worldwide, and more than 250 museums—from the Met to the Whitney to the ...
The tropical forest sound effects are always there. Call Hunt Slonem at any time, and you’ll hear them. Birds singing, whistling, squawking. Then again, why not call them Louisiana sound effects?
Hunt Slonem feels at home these days at the LSU Museum of Art. And that’s the idea behind the new exhibit, “Hunt Slonem: Antebullum: Pop!,” which runs through Aug. 5 in the museum’s main ...
Hunt Slonem has ridden camels in the Middle East, grown orchids in Nicaragua, and bought an entire armory in Scranton, Pa. He’s explored palaces in India, visited bird sanctuaries in the ...
You don’t have to be Hugh Hefner to get excited about Hunt Slonem’s bunnies. Each day, the artist warms up by painting rabbits even Beatrix Potter would envy. Now, just in time for Easter ...
About 40 tropical birds, some uncaged, live in Hunt Slonem’s New York studio, so the bird paintings in his show at Jean Albano may be more realistic than they seem. In Habitat Hyacinths red ...
Painting with Diamond Dust. Rabbits are one of the main motifs of the US artist. Hunt Slonem wakes up every morning and captures rabbits on canvas. These warm-up exercises are what John Berendt calls ...