Suvarna Garge (Editor)

Brendan O'Connell (artist)

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Nationality
  
American

Movement
  
Impressionism

Website
  
brendanoconnell.com

Period
  
Impressionism

Known for
  
Walmart Series

Spouse(s)
  
Emily Buchanan

Education
  
Emory University

Brendan O'Connell (artist) Brendan O39Connell39s Art of the Supermarket

Born
  
September 18, 1968
New York City

Books
  
Financial Management, Sundust

Brendan O'Connell (September 18, 1968, New York City) is a contemporary American artist known for his paintings of Walmart interiors. He was nicknamed America's "Brand Name Painter" by TIME because of his impressionist paintings of America's most popular brands.

Contents

Brendan O'Connell (artist) Walart The New Yorker

Early life

Brendan O'Connell (artist) Brendan O39Connell Art Installation at Emory University

O’Connell was born in New York City and raised in Tucker, Georgia. After graduating from Emory University in 1990 with degrees in philosophy and Spanish literature, he moved back home where he worked in a grocery store. He later moved to Paris to write a novel.

Career

Brendan O'Connell (artist) httpspbstwimgcomprofileimages5026741109633

Without formal art training, O’Connell began painting at the age of 22. He supported himself in Paris as a sidewalk caricaturist while working on abstract paintings. According to O'Connell, influences on his painting were French Abstract-Expressionist artists including Pierre Soulages and Nicolas de Staël.

Brendan O'Connell (artist) The Abstract View of American Painter Brendan O39Connell Happening

O'Connell became known for his large impressionist paintings of the aisles of Walmart supermarkets. The initial works were created from photographs of people shopping at Walmart. According to art critic Joe Fyfe, the works are an "idiosyncratic" combination of "kitschy decorative art, almost tourist painting" and high art. O'Connell's canvasses have been exhibited in New York; Boston; Atlanta, Georgia; Turin, Italy and Shanghai, China.

Brendan O'Connell (artist) Brendan O39Connell39s Art of the Supermarket

National interest in Brendan began after he was profiled by Susan Orlean in the New Yorker. This was followed by his first television appearance on The Colbert Report. Brendan continues to do live paintings for the local media in Walmarts around the United States, garnering him the nickname the "Warhol of Walmart."

He was the subject the 2013 documentary and Vimeo staff pick, "Blocking the Bread Aisle" by Julien Lasseur and Jamie Thalman. And was one of three artists interviewed on the Colbert Report.

Everyartist.me

In 2012, O'Connell helped organize the Wal-Art Project in which more than 8,400 children gathered in a stadium in Bentonville, Arkansas, the location of Walmart’s headquarters, to display their artwork. According to O'Connell, the purpose of the project was to inspire the artistic creativity of everyone. Brendan used the Wal-Art Project as a springboard for Everyartist.me, a social enterprise that creates the annual Everyartist Live! art event. In November 2013, Brendan organized a national, collaborative painting event with 230,000 children across 46 states with Everyartist Live!

Awards and grants

  • Eben Demarest Trust grant 2003
  • S.D. Rubin Foundation 2012
  • References

    Brendan O'Connell (artist) Wikipedia