Chuck Forsman was born in Idaho in 1944 and raised in eastern Oregon and northern California. He received his B.A. in art in 1967 and his M.F.A. in painting 1971 from the University of California at Davis. Forsman was drafted into the U.S. Army in 1967 and sent to Vietnam in 1968–1969, where he served as an illustrator and photo correspondent and earned a Bronze Star Medal. After Vietnam he attended the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture in Maine in 1970 and in 1971 began to teach painting at the University of Colorado at Boulder, where he received three Faculty Fellowships and retired in 2008 as a professor of art. He has also received three National Endowment for the Arts grants, an American Academy of Arts and Letters Award, and numerous other awards and honors. Forsman's work is included in more than twenty permanent collections, including the Colorado Springs Fine Arts Center, Denver Art Museum, Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art, Knoxville Museum of Art, Metropolitan Museum of Art, Nevada Museum of Art, Phoenix Art Museum, Princeton University Museum of Art, University of Wyoming Art Museum, Wichita Art Museum, and Yellowstone Art Museum, among others. He has three published books: Arrested Rivers (University Press of Colorado, 1994), a book of his paintings that are critical of the over-damming of the West; Western Rider: Views from a Car Window (Center for American Places, 2003), a book of black-and-white photographs taken throughout the West; and Along Buddha's River (2011), a self-published book of color photographs taken by Forsman and his daughter, Shannon Forsman, while they followed the Mekong River from near its source on the Tibetan Plateau to the South China Sea. Chuck Forsman continues to produce paintings and photographs from his home in Boulder, Colorado, based on travels primarily in the American West and Southeast Asia. Mr. Forsman is credited with being among the first artists to link landscape painting and environmental issues. ERIC PADDOCK since 2008, has been Curator of Photography at the Denver Art Museum, where he has organized solo exhibitions by Edward Ranney, Robert Benjamin, Garry Winogrand, Laura Letinsky, and Chuck Forsman, among others. From 1982 to 2008 he was Curator of Photography and Film at the Colorado Historical Society, where he curated more than two dozen exhibitions of seminal historical photographs. He is the author of Belonging to the West, and his photographs are held in the permanent collections of the Amon Carter Museum, Bibliothèque Nationale de France, Museum of Modern Art, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, and Smithsonian American Art Museum.
"Walking Magpie: On and Off the Leash is a 136-page compendium
showcasing the black-and-white photography of Chuck Forsman.
Enhanced with an informative introduction by Eric Paddock, Walking
Magpie: On and Off the Leash presents visual imagery focused on
what a dog sees, smells, and is drawn by canine curiosity to
investigate. The premise of the project was quite simple, take a
camera along when Chuck Forsman walked his dog in the neighborhood
and surrounding hills near where they live, along with adventures
in other parts of the country ranging from Alaska and the Northwest
Territories of Canada, to Florida, Ohio, and New York City. The
result is a compilation of truly impressive and occasionally
meditative images. Walking Magpie: On and Off the Leash is a highly
recommended photographic study"-- "Midwest Book Review"
"Between the wild and the domestic, there is the dog. Chuck
Forsman's mutt, Magpie, lets us enter that betweenness where people
and the environment cooperate and collide, a raggedy border where
only a four-legged guide could walk unselfconsciously and an
unmarked territory where only an artist could catch the complex
scent."--Rev. Gary Kowalski, author of Blessings of the Animals:
Celebrating Our Kinship with All Creation
"Dogs by nature take indiscriminate interest. We cannot as their
companions fully share in this, for reasons of social propriety and
intellect and conscience, but their openness reignites by example
the potential in us to feel affection for the world. Chuck
Forsman's dog ranges enthusiastically through the often seedy
little landscapes of a compromised America, but as we watch we
escape a measure of our boredom and embarrassment with the country.
Saved by a nose."--Roberts Adams, photographer and author of The
Place We Live, A Retrospective Selection of Photographs,
1964-2009
"For more than forty years, Chuck Forsman has been a pioneering
landscape artist whose paintings and photographs have engaged us
and helped us to focus on environmental and land-use issues. Here,
in Walking Magpie, Forsman shows us a layered continental landscape
that is banal and beautiful, gentle and terrifying by turns. His
eye for form, detail, and the occasional quiet joke―combined with
Magpie's canine exploration and acceptance of the world as he finds
it―challenge ordinary perceptions of 'landscape' and of 'community'
and awaken in us a new sense of where and how we live."--Eric
Paddock, Curator of Photography, Denver Art Museum
"Walking Magpie is a magnificent book in which renowned
artist/photographer Chuck Forsman and his cool companion-dog,
Magpie, take us on a wonderful and beautifully illustrated journey
into a wide variety of landscapes, with which many readers will be
unfamiliar or surprised by, from parking lots, construction sites,
and the spaces between dumpsters to spectacular wilderness, urban
parks, and city streets. Far too many people today are alienated
from nature, and this remarkable book, which could easily be
subtitled 'Travels With a Man and His Dog, ' will help us all to
'rewild' our hearts and reconnect with our incredibly interesting
and breathtaking world. I love this book and find myself constantly
going back to the superlative pictures and taking off on my own
imagined journeys."--Marc Bekoff, co-founder (with Jane Goodall) of
Ethologists for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, author of
Nature's Life Lessons (with Jim Carrier), The Emotional Lives of
Animals, and Wild Justice: The Moral Lives of Animals (with Jessica
Pierce)
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