PETER SHOSTAK
Peter Shostak was born in 1943 and raised on a farm north of Bonnyville, Alberta.  His early interest in art inspired him to major in art in the Faculty of Education at the University of Alberta. He began a teaching career as a junior and senior high school teacher in 1965 and taught in Grand Centre and Edson, Alberta before continuing with his post-graduate work at the University of Alberta. In 1969, he obtained a graduate degree in Art Education and then took a teaching position at the University of Victoria.  He remained there as Associate Professor of Art Education until 1979, when he decided to leave teaching and pursue a career as a full-time artist.

      Much of Shostak's art reflects his memories of growing up on the prairies during the late forties and fifties.  Two best-selling publications When Nights Were Long and Saturday Came But Once a Week reveal some of his personal history.

    
Unlike any other painting technique, painting
en plein air (in the open air) challenges artists to concentrate every sensory nerve on the scenery that surrounds them. Sight, sound, temperature, atmosphere and feelings all must be absorbed and then transferred from head to hand; from open air to artist's canvas.

  This plein air painting is done on prepared birch panel in a small format. It allows an experience of nature to be brought inside
and into the studio.
'Outgoing Tide, Dunlop Point, Hornby Island'
10"x10" oil on wood panel
A coffee table book, For Our Children, consisting of paintings portraying early pioneer settlement in Western Canada, was published in 1991.  Working from stories told by the pioneers and from archives, Shostak tried to honestly bring some of the events and experiences to life, not necessarily as they happened, but more how they might have been.  Although much research was done, supported by the fact that he himself grew up in pioneering circumstances, the paintings still are his interpretation of events.

  In 1997, he collaborated with Victoria writer David Bouchard on the book Prairie Born (Orca Books).  His latest publication, Hockey Under Winter Skies, was released in the fall of 2000.

Over the past twenty-five years, galleries in most major cities in Canada have repeatedly hosted solo exhibitions of Shostak's work and he has completed many commissioned paintings and editions of silkscreen prints for individuals, organizations and major corporations. Collectors from all over the world have purchased his paintings. The Province of Alberta recognized Peter Shostak's achievements in 1983, when it bestowed upon him the status of Honorary Alberta Artist. Four large works were featured in the Alberta Pavilion at World Expo 1986 in Vancouver, British Columbia.

       Peter Shostak has become known for his portrayal of figures in the landscape, particularly under dark winter skies.  Like the painting selected by Mr. and Mrs. Bob Hope, "Maybe I will get new skates for my birthday", his provocative titles enhance the narrative of his paintings.

In 2005, he and his wife Geraldine moved from Victoria to Courtenay, BC to be closer to their son and Peter's studio on Hornby Island. While the area where he lives frequently shows up in his landscape paintings, his true inspiration still comes from the farmlands of northeastern Alberta, where he spent his childhood.


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