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Daniel Hauben
Oil Paintings, Stained Glass and Works on Paper

Reception: S aturday September 20 from 1:00 to  5 PM
Exhibition ends Saturday, October 25, 2008

  

The New York Times said it best when they wrote: “The Bronx is to Hauben what Giverny was to Monet”.

Hauben is an urban scene painter, and has traveled and painted world- wide, always with his easel at the ready.

He has won the prestigious BRIO award seven times, and is acclaimed as the borough’s most versatile and prolific painter.

His commission, in 2007, to design and implement six stained glass windows, for the Freeman Street Station of the IRT White Plains Avenue line, by the New York MTA, was voted by the American’s For The Arts Organization of Washington D.C., as one of the best public art-works in the United States.

Hauben’s newest commission is an ambitious undertaking for Bronx Community College, to be completed in 2011. There will be forty-one panoramic paintings depicting life in the Bronx, permanently adorning the walls of the new library.

Reception:
Saturday September 20 from 1:00 to  5 PM
Duration:
September 20 through October 25 2008
Contact:
Helmut and Barbara Zitzwitz
Telephone:
(914) 964 – 0401    e-mail: zitzwitz@mac.com

Yonkers art show celebrates urban painter's street life views

By Ernie Garcia
The Journal News • September 18, 2008

Helmut Zitzwitz, co-owner of the Hudson River Gallery and Conservators in Yonkers, points out a detail in a painting by Daniel Hauben, whose works will go on display at the gallery Saturday. (Ernie Garcia/The Journal News)

Helmut Zitzwitz, co-owner of the Hudson River Gallery and Conservators in Yonkers, points out a detail in a painting by Daniel Hauben, whose works will go on display at the gallery Saturday.
(Ernie Garcia/The Journal News)

YONKERS - A downtown exhibition celebrates elevated subway tracks winding through New York City's outer boroughs, without the deafening din of passing trains.

Starting Saturday, the Hudson River Gallery and Conservators will exhibit 28 works by urban painter Daniel Hauben, whose show depicts street scenes from Manhattan, the Bronx and other parts of New York City. Hauben's works capture sidewalk panoramas that he mostly painted between 1995 and this year.

"He paints life," said Helmut Zitzwitz, noting that New York City's quirky street personalities sometimes force themselves into Hauben's work while he's painting in the streets. "Some bum will ask: 'Can I be in your painting?' and he says sure, and the bum will come back every day."

There is only one person who appears to be a vagrant in Hauben's works. Other works depict life along streets familiar to many, such as Broadway in upper Manhattan near the bridge to the Bronx or the Yankee Stadium stop of the 4 train at 161st Street and River Avenue.

Helmut Zitzwitz said that Hauben's paintings, though recent, are historical artifacts because New York City is constantly changing. Indeed, his paintings with the old Yankee Stadium will soon be outdated.

"Many of these scenes will change," he said. "In 50 years, you won't see them."

Westchester residents who ride the 2 and 5 trains through the Bronx to Manhattan are already familiar with Hauben's work.

Last year New York City's transit authority commissioned Hauben to create six stained glass windows for the Freeman Street Station at Freeman Street and Southern Boulevard in the Bronx. Hauben memorialized his interest in elevated subway tracks with images of local Bronx streets set in the glass.

Hauben's latest commission is for Bronx Community College, where he will create 41 paintings depicting life in the Bronx.

One example of Hauben's glass work, "Banana Blossom," is included in the Hudson River Gallery's show, with a reception from 1 to 5 p.m. Saturday. The gallery is located at 86 Main St. on the third floor.

Reach Ernie Garcia at elgarcia@lohud.com or 914-696-8290.

____________________________________________________

By Megan James
When Daniel Hauben looked out his window as a child growing up in the Bronx, he was drawn to the geometry of the city.

"I saw other buildings just like mine, buildings encased in even rows of bricks, punctuated by windows, doors and fire escapes, and fringed on top with the haphazard intersecting patterns of antennae and chimneys," he wrote on his Web site.

The Kingsbridge artist has been painting that landscape ever since, capturing not just the details of buildings and landmarks, but the bustling feel of the neighborhood.

"It's not that pretty but, darn it, that is the Bronx," said Helmut Zitzwitz, curator of the Hudson River Gallery & Conservators, which will host an exhibition of Mr. Hauben's work.

Mr. Zitzwitz is right about one thing: that is the Bronx. But the paintings have a strange beauty about them, too.

Mr. Hauben's landscape, overgrown with metal and brick, is crisscrossed with elevated subway tracks and train trestles, sunlight slicing through the tracks and slats.

In a painting called "Kingsbridge Heights, Late Afternoon," the view of Broadway from above is serene. The rooftops seem warm to the touch and the road below gleams in the setting sun, almost like water in a river.

In "Broadway Car Wash," the metal towers of the Broadway Bridge look like a great drawbridge rising in the background as the shadows of signposts and passersby play with cracks in the sidewalk.

Mr. Hauben's one-man show at the Hudson River Gallery & Conservators, in Yonkers, opens Sept. 20 and runs until Oct. 25. The gallery will host a reception on the first day, from 1 to 5 p.m., with Mr. Hauben - who will have just wrapped up another one-man show in Germany - on hand to talk about his work.

"He's still one of the few painters who paints life," Mr. Zitzwitz said. "In other words, he doesn't go out and take a photograph and go back to the studio and do his work."

People approach Mr. Hauben at his easel on the street and often ask to be included in the painting. Some will come back every day to make sure they make the cut.

On his Web site - www.artistwing.com - Mr. Hauben recalls painting a group of men playing dominoes on 182nd Street and Southern Boulevard, when a 13-year-old boy on his way home from school asked where he could stand to be included in the painting.

"While I was directing him as to where to stand, another kid complained, 'He isn't even from this block. Why should he be in the picture and not us?'" Mr. Hauben wrote.

So he gave in and put all the kids in the painting, not telling them that once back in his studio he had to remove some of them for the sake of composition.

Mr. Zitzwitz's wife, Barbara, who serves as gallery director, has always loved Mr. Hauben's work for t

"I've lived in the Bronx all my life," she said. "When I look at it, it reminds me of home."

In a city whose landscape can turn on a dime, Mr. Hauben captures a moment frozen in time.

In his gallery, Mr. Zitzwitz pointed to a painting of the intersection of 96th Street and Amsterdam Avenue in Manhattan, in which a man leans out of his top-floor window to peer down at the traffic below.

"Nothing in America looks the same after 100 years," he said. "Somebody will come up and say I can make a heck of a lot more money if we put another Trump Tower here; let's tear this building down. I love his work for that reason. A hundred years from now, this will not look like this."

Mr. Hauben, who has won the Bronx Council on the Arts' Bronx Recognizes Its Own Award seven times, was recently commissioned to complete 41 panoramic paintings for Bronx Community College's new library, which is scheduled for completion in about three years.

"I kid him and say this is going to make him immortal," Mr. Zitzwitz said.

In his Hudson River Gallery & Conservators show, one painting stands out from the rest. It's a self-portrait, depicting Mr. Hauben's face centered below a tangle of warped buildings, teetering against a blue sky.

It isn't indicative of the artist's work, Mr. Zitzwitz said, but it captures something about the way he sees the world he paints.

"That's the Bronx," he said. "Everything's thrown together in one pot and stirred. And there he is, thinking, 'What am I going to do with this stuff?'"

Hudson River Gallery & Conservators is located at 86 Main St., in Yonkers. The exhibit can be seen Wednesday through Saturday, from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. For more information, call 914-964-0401 or go to www.hudsonrivergallery-conservators. com.

This is part of the September 18, 2008 online edition of The Riverdale Press.

 

 

 

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