The quality and popularity of the work of David Armstrong (1947-1998) places
him in company among America's greatest realist painters. For three
decades his original work has been represented by Hammer Galleries (33 W.
57TH ST. New York, NY), where he completed nine sold-out one-man
exhibitions. Museum exhibitions include a major 30-year retrospective held
at The Butler Institute of American Art. Reproductions of Armstrong's
work have been in the print marketplace for over 20 years with over 60 sold
out editions.
David Armstrong is highly regarded as one of America's foremost realist painters. Acclaimed for their unusual luminosity and color
Armstrong's watercolors reflect the artist's life and his concerns for the environment.
Born in 1947, David grew up on his family's sheep farm in Kent, Connecticut, on the banks
of the Housatonic River.
He began painting in watercolor at an early age and studied at the Taft School and Bucknell
University. After completing graduate work in painting at Indiana University in Bloomington,
Armstrong returned to his farm in Unityville, Pennsylvania.
The simple life of the people there,
his love of family, and the endless beauty of the American
landscape have continued to provide the artist with
inspiration and subject matter. His work is imbued with a kind
of optimistic spirit in which there exists a harmony between
man and nature.
In addition to his having been honored
by his home state of Pennsylvania with major retrospective
exhibitions at the William Penn State Museum in 1978
and the
Southern Alleghenies Museum of Art in 1985, David Armstrong
has exhibited his work in museums throughout the country. He
is represented in museums and in corporate and private
collections across America. His first one-man exhibition of
watercolors was in 1974 at the Hammer Galleries.