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Why did this man give up riches and fame to start all over?
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ORGANIC: Carpenter paints multiple layers, tosses water on still-wet canvases to add crevices, and sands the dried surface: "It's like nature." | ||||
I had a lot of friends in different parts of Europe and I go back every year. But I'd rather dip in there, come back here. This is really a place where you can rebuild your strength. I'm as happy as I've ever been. I just love it here"He arrived here by taking roads less traveled-a penchant for risk-taking that he partly attributes, to not having parents telling him what he could or couldn't do. Carpenter was 8 living in Portland, 0re., when his father abandoned him, his older brother and his mother. His mother had trouble coping, and Carpenter was put in an orphanage. He was in and out of foster homes all the way through high school. He had to earn his own money, sometimes hawking newspapers on street corners or busing restaurant tables. He also developed a talent for drawing, that he parlayed into pocket money. He entered any art contest he could find, sometimes winning $10, other times $20. When he was 12, Carpenter won a two-week scholarship to the Portland Art Museum, where he was introduced to impressionists and art history. Carpenter was hooked. He immersed himself in his painting and drawing and, as a high school senior, won a scholarship to the Chicago Academy of Fine Arts. He stayed in Chicago only a year, though, because he felt school wasn't serious enough. He returned to the West coast, got a scholarship to the Art Center College of Design in Los Angeles and realized he had a dream: to become a painter and go to Europe to visit the museums and study the masters. Two years later he quit school again and went to work for Walt Disney Company as an illustrator, working on such projects as the rooftop scene for the movie Mary Poppins and Disneyland's Pirates of the Caribbean ride when it was a concept. He also delivered for a fast-food restaurant at night to save up money. After about a year at Disney, the 20-year-old adventurer strapped on a backpack. He started at the steps of the Disney Studio in Burbank and hitchhiked to New York City to catch a boat to France. For a year he painted and hitchhiked throughout southern Europe before landing a job with an ad agency in Paris. He continued to paint, his passion for the masters reflected in his lyrical abstract works, mixing organic and human forms to suggest a unity of life. "You let the painting paint itself'', says. Carpenter, who tosses water at wet canvases and sands his surfaces when dry to introduce nature's effect on his works. In his mid-20's, Carpenter married a Frenchwoman and lived in Paris, but eventually he wanted out of the city. "I was getting fed up with Paris," He says."It's such a difficult town. The people are so aggressive. I didn't want to become like the Parisians. But I was getting more and more aggressively Carpenter and his wife left for Monaco, where he got a job teaching at the American School in Monte Carlo. He opened a gallery and was an immediate hit, selling. all 15 pieces at his first show. "It was amazing," Carpenter says. "I thought, maybe I can make a living at this.'" On his own, he drew a poster of Monte Carlo and took it to the local tourism office. The officials liked it and bought it for "a song." But it brought great exposure. Even Princess Grace saw the poster and extended an invitation to meet the artist. Carpenter had arrived. He says he became somewhat famous in Monaco, appearing on TV hanging out with the in-crowd, rubbing elbows with the royal family and A-listers such as Cary Grant, Ringo Starr and Michael Douglas. And his artwork was being shown in galleries throughout Europe. Eventually, though, Carpenter tired of that life. "In Monaco, if you're at a party, they're looking at your clothes while they're talking to you. Then they see someone else in the room and they're looking over there.''
The original article appeared in the January - February 2007 issue of Rochester Magazine and was written by Richard Zitrin.
176 Anderson Avenue Rochester, NY 14607 585-758-1410 scarpenter43@yahoo.com www.stevecarpenterstudio.com
Copyright 2000 - Steve Carpenter . All contents are copyrighted. All rights reserved. | ||||