"Late Afternoon Light at Artist's Point, Yosemite Valley" by Thomas Kinkade (1958-2012)
For years, a hand-retouched, signed and numbered, Thomas Kinkade 1992 cotton-fiber artist’s canvas print of “Late  Afternoon Light at Artist’s Point, Yosemite Valley”
 hung in our hallway.  With its dark location and short viewing 
distance, I often passed it by without  notice. When some filigree 
scrollwork on the Brandy frame required repair, for  the first time in 
almost a decade, I brought the 18" X 24" canvas into the  light.
Regarding
 the original painting, Thomas Kinkade wrote, “Nowhere on Earth am I  
more aware of the sheer awesomeness of God’s handiwork than Yosemite 
Valley.  This painting depicts the valley as seen from the little known 
place called  ‘Artist’s Point’, named in tribute to the many 19th 
century artists who favored  it as a sketching ground. In 1989, the 
National Park System selected ‘Yosemite  Valley’ as their official 
print. I was thrilled with the honor, but after all,  God alone deserves
 the credit for the beauty and majesty of Yosemite Valley”.
On the back of our frame, I found a Collector Fact Sheet and a 
Certificate of  Authenticity. Our Kinkade is “No. 533/980 sn Canvas”. On
 the lower right corner  of the print is the lithographed signature of 
Thomas Kinkade (1958-2012).  Below that, hand-signed is the 
unintelligible signature of the artist who  highlighted our canvas in 
oil. The net effect is a canvas print that looks like  an original 
Kinkade oil painting. 
Although
 a Master’s Canvas Edition of twenty hand retouched, signed and numbered
  prints was available in 1992, Kinkade’s own retouch and signature in 
oil made  them too expensive for us at that time. In comparing our “sn” 
print with a Master’s Canvas Edition, the two look uncannily alike. That
 was part of  Kinkade’s appeal. Through the economy of scale, and with 
added handiwork,  Kinkade marketed “original art” at affordable prices. 
Since Kinkade personally  trained all of his retouch artists, each of 
them retouched within the master’s  concept. Thus, a well-kept “sn” can 
look every bit as good as Kinkade’s highest  price offering at the time.
With Kinkade’s original art often retained in his 
own collection, lithographs  and canvas prints are the only way for most
 of us to own a “Thomas  Kinkade Original” painting. With its customary 
dryness, Wikipedia describes  Thomas Kinkade thus: “Thomas Kinkade was 
an American painter of popular  realistic, bucolic,
 and idyllic subjects. He is notable for the mass marketing  of his work
 as printed reproductions and other licensed products via The  Thomas Kinkade Company”.
After examining our own Thomas Kinkade “Yosemite Valley”, I could see 
both sides  of the Thomas Kinkade legacy. Upon close examination, our 
Kinkade is indeed a  hand retouched canvas print. Yet, when I 
photographed the print in natural  light, it became a painting before my
 eyes. In the warm light of afternoon, the  canvas shone with yellow, 
orange and brown. In later light, the sunlight faded  and the Alpenglow 
of sunset displayed upon the clouds behind. With fuller light,  the 
painting exhibits "morning light".
How
 one canvas could take on so many different visual aspects was at first a
  mystery to me. Then I remembered that early in his career, Thomas 
Kinkade had  dubbed himself, “The  Painter of Light”. Although the 
moniker had sounded pretentious to me at  that time, my story is 
different now. I realize now that even a reproduction of  Kinkade’s work
 can reflect light in interesting ways. With my renewed interest,  our 
Thomas Kinkade now hangs lighted, in a place of honor on our walls.
With a collection of other paintings now crowding our wall space, we  
decided to sell our Thomas Kinkade to an appreciative new owner. With 
only nine  hundred eighty original canvas prints of the “sn” type ever 
produced,  our “Late Afternoon Light at Artist’s Point” has since moved 
to grace the walls of a happy new owner.
   
By James McGillis at 05:57 PM | Fine Art | Comments (0) | Link

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