James Aponovich, a Nashua native and a UNH
alumnus, is a renowned painter whose distinctive style is marked by technical
perfection. After graduating from UNH in 1971, his early works of exquisitely
rendered large figure paintings set in interiors gained him recognition
throughout New Hampshire.
He was soon exhibiting his work in galleries in Boston,
New York, Beverly Hills,
and San Francisco.
After a 1995 trip to Italy, Aponovich
began to produce richly colored still-life paintings, filled with a sensual
array of objects, textures, light, and atmosphere. He is well known for these
compositions, often set against landscapes of the Italian countryside that are
reminiscent of paintings of the Renaissance. He paints his objects with a
heightened sense of light, texture, and reflection, preferring pristine radiant
light to the drama of chiaroscuro. The artist has said he has no interest in
iconography or narrative; rather his paintings evoke a question of
reality—what seems factual is actually invented. He conceives still-life
elements from his mind, a “mental data bank, itself the culmination of
years of meticulous observation.”
Self-Portrait with
Cyclamen is typical of his early works, in which Aponovich
plays down perspective in favor of a flat linear composition in which the space
is read through a sequence of planes from front to back. Harmony and balance
are achieved through his strong and simple composition and his refusal to
overwork the painting. Aponovich’s work has
been shown and collected by major museums (including a 2005 retrospective at
the Currier Museum of Art), as well as by corporations and private collectors
throughout the United States.