Dana Hart-Stone: Coming This September
In my work, I appropriate vintage, vernacular American snapshots that traverse themes of friendship, community, pride, democracy, patriotism, race, memory, remembrance, and hard-scrabble wisdom in my attempt to reveal the vast topography of our shared human experience. My intent is to create paintings that invite the viewer to engage in a developing American identity. - Dana Hart-Stone
Drawing from a personal archive of tens of thousands of American vernacular photographs, Dana Hart-Stone transforms anonymous moments into large-scale digital paintings where figures repeat, mirror, and accumulate until a single forgotten face becomes a chorus. The result is what he calls "a bountiful body of evidence of the development of our country," a visual archaeology of the American spirit, a spirit filled with laughter and hardship.
Hart-Stone grew up in Culbertson, Montana, nestled between the Fort Peck Reservation of the Assiniboine and Sioux Nations and the rattlesnake badlands beyond. Summers meant long walks into the countryside and abandoned homesteads scattered with the quiet relics of vanished lives. That childhood curiosity for untold stories has never left him.
